INIMA

View Original

A Transformation in the South Pacific.

Situation.

This case involves an interim management assignment for a postal services operator. The publicly held company provides a range of services including postal, financial, telecommunications and retail, through a network of 85 branches and 450 employees. When I was brought in, the organization was dealing with severe financial deficits and significant social tensions, operating more like a public administration. The key challenge was to modernize the organization and transform it into a financially balanced enterprise, focused on quality, innovation, and a global outlook. The primary objectives were: restoring financial balance, driving digital transformation, improving customer experience through omnichannel services, rebuilding a positive social climate, and modernizing the IT systems and branch network. The project spanned three years, with two contract renewals, and involved key stakeholders such as the government (as shareholder), employees, and business partners.

Tasks.

Cultural approach: The mission's double complexity represented for me both adaptation to territorial public service challenges and understanding cultural nuances. The local culture can be paradoxical, combining a particularly warm sense of hospitality with the preservation of ancestral warrior traditions like the high respect of the “leader”. Being accepted as an attentive "leader" was the key lever to gaining influence both with public authorities and within the teams.

Corporate approach: the diagnostic was conducted and shared, then I set the strategic direction. The transformation was built around three core pillars: Proximity, Digitalization, and Logistics.

  1. Creating an Innovation Hub: A team of internal talent, specializing in IT and digital marketing, was formed to lead the transformation across three areas: Retail, Operations, and Commerce. This hub became the driving force behind all major changes.

  2. .Restructuring Support Functions: Human Resources, Finance, and other support functions were redefined to align with the new customer-focused, market-driven strategy. This restructuring streamlined operations and improved efficiency.

  3. Customer-Centric Reorganization: The entire organization was restructured to prioritize customers and market needs, ensuring that the transformation was led by the demands of the end-users, rather than internal processes alone.

Results.

Despite operating in a postal market facing structural decline, financial balance was achieved by year 3, with results improving by more than €30 million. The company successfully initiated 14 projects simultaneously, combining quick wins with medium-term strategic investments.

Key accomplishments include:

  • Achieving financial balance within three years.

  • Transforming the company’s public image to one of innovation, quality, and customer focus.

  • Engaging in numerous societal and environmental projects, which boosted the company’s corporate image.

  • Significant digital advancements: a mobile app for digital postal services was downloaded by 20% of the population, the region’s first marketplace was launched, and a new ERP system was co-developed with a local IT services provider.

  • Branch network upgrade: 20% of the branches were renovated, and the company diversified into new logistics services.

Key Learnings.

Several important lessons were learned and applied during this assignment:

  1. Strategic Alignment with Stakeholders.

  2. Customer-Centric Transformation.

  3. Long-Term Investment Evaluation.

  4. Collective Intelligence.

  5. Agile Management.

  6. Cost Reduction through Effective Procurement.

  7. Commercial Revitalization.

  8. Skills Development.

  9. Process Efficiency.

  10. Enhanced Customer Experience.

This mission’s success relied also on swiftly building local influence networks and embodying the "leader" role without cognitive bias, earning team respect through attentive stakeholder engagement.

Conclusion.

This transformation demonstrates how a traditional public-sector organization can evolve into a financially balanced, innovative, and customer-driven company with a clear mission for the future, by adapting and integrating myself into the local specifics.

Bruno Arbonel

Member of the French Interim Manager Association (AE-CMT)