HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL PUBLISHING | ONLINE SIMULATIONS 1
ONLINE SIMULATION SCENARIO INTRODUCTIO N
Change Management: Power and Influence
Scenario 4: CEO
You are the CEO and founder of Spectrum Sunglass Company. As Spectrum enters its second decade of
operations, its immediate future is looking bright. Externally, the consumer sunglass market is growing
again, and competitive pricing pressures have subsided. Spectrum recently rehired some of the workers
laid off during the last recession, and many departmental budgets have been restored to well-funded,
pre-recession levels. A potential new product design has received positive focus group feedback after the
first phase of development; furthermore, some exciting branding deals with Hollywood celebrities are
under negotiation. Everyone at Spectrum is looking forward to growth and enhanced earnings.
While you generally feel good about the state of the business, you just turned 60 years old, and are
beginning to think about your legacy. You are reading more and more professional articles emphasizing
the importance of sustainable development for business and linking the themes of sustainability and
innovation, such as “Why Sustainability Is Now the Key Driver of Innovation.” At work, you are
frustrated that you don’t have any new sunglass products to offer to the vocal customers who
increasingly express concerns about Spectrum’s environmental impact. Not only does sustainable
development make sense to you personally, from both a moral and an economic standpoint, but you also
see this as an opportunity to differentiate Spectrum’s products and overall company from your
competitors, who focus primarily on price and design. Fortunately, something happens at a trade show
that enables you to act.
At a Spectrum executive strategy retreat in October, you ask for a special, unplanned session to discuss
the conversations you recently had with the company’s largest retail customer, BigMart, which has more
than 1,000 locations across the continental United States. Sales to BigMart constitute 30% of Spectrum’s
annual revenues, representing the company’s top account. Recently, at the annual sunglass-industry
trade show in Las Vegas, a BigMart vice president approached Spectrum’s booth. The executive
explained that he was now in charge of national sunglass procurement for BigMart and that BigMart
Online Simulation Foreground Reading—Change Management Simulation: Power and Influence
2 ONLINE SIMULATIONS | HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL PUBLISHING
recently started an in-house labeling program whereby products that received a "Green Stamp"
manufacturing certification for environmental friendliness would get special promotion. BigMart’s in-
house market research revealed that even its most price-sensitive consumers were starting to prefer green
products within their price range. The VP explained that BigMart was now considering recommending
that all its suppliers go through the Green Stamp certification process.
As your colleagues at the Spectrum retreat listen to your presentation, they become increasingly agitated.
To the CFO’s question of what BigMart’s specific terms are, you reply that Big Mart wants Spectrum to
reduce its dependence on petrochemical raw materials (such as polycarbonate plastics) in the sunglass
manufacturing process from 90% to 50% within two years. The company has also given Spectrum a