There is an ancient Greek fable called "The Fox and the Hedgehog": the fox knows many things, while the hedgehog knows only one. The fox is a cunning animal, capable of designing countless complex strategies to launch attacks on the hedgehog. It often waits silently at the crossroads, while the hedgehog, focused on its own affairs, may inadvertently wander into the fox's path. The fox lunges with lightning speed, but the hedgehog quickly senses the danger and rolls into a ball, its sharp quills pointing in all directions. Faced with this defense, all of the fox's varied strategies fail, forcing it to abandon the attack.
In the daily battles of the forest, although the fox may seem smarter, it is often the hedgehog that emerges victorious.
British thinker Isaiah Berlin was inspired by this fable and categorized people into two fundamental types: foxes and hedgehogs. Foxes pursue many different goals and view the world as a complex whole, never consolidating their thoughts into a single theory or unified perspective. Hedgehogs, however, simplify the complex world into a single organized viewpoint, guided by one fundamental principle or concept. No matter how complex the world becomes, hedgehogs condense all challenges and dilemmas into a simple "hedgehog concept."
Walgreens, a retail pharmacy chain, embodies this hedgehog quality: simplifying goals and moving forward with determination. They implemented a systematic project to relocate all inconvenient stores to more accessible locations. They believed the best locations are corners where customers can easily enter from multiple directions. To secure these prime corner spots, Walgreens would even close an existing, stable store nearby to establish a new one at the better location.
Walgreens also pioneered the convenience of drive-up pharmacy services. Finding that customers preferred this method, they established hundreds of such stores, clustering them closely so that a customer would never have to walk several blocks to find a Walgreens. This dense clustering promoted local economies of scale, which provided the capital for further expansion, attracting even more customers. More customers brought more funds, allowing them to build more convenient pharmacies. Stores connected to stores, neighborhoods to neighborhoods, and cities to cities, Walgreens thus became a "hedgehog" with an incredibly simple concept.
The decision-makers at Walgreens leveraged their hedgehog nature to establish a "hedgehog concept" for the company. Between 1975 and 20xx, the company's cumulative stock returns outperformed the index by 15 times, surpassing other high-performers like GE, Merck, Coca-Cola, and Intel. In contrast, its competitor, Eckerd, lacked a consistent concept. It acquired numerous pharmacies scattered across different locations, resulting in a disorganized mess. Ultimately, Eckerd's performance was left far behind by Walgreens, and it was eventually acquired by another company.
Successful entities are often hedgehogs. This quality is not merely about superficial simplification, but about having penetrating insight into goals—the ability to see through complexity and identify hidden patterns. Looking at businesses from this perspective, different pictures emerge: Disney's business includes movies, parks, and merchandise, but everything revolves around the consistent core concept of "bringing happiness to the masses." Tech giants Microsoft and Intel both recognized that "Personal Computers (PC) are the future." Bill Gates famously dreamed of a PC on every desk. These two companies achieved decades of success by focusing on this singular goal—one through operating systems and the other through CPUs. Similarly, Google's products are all built around the core idea of helping people easily access all the world's information.
In short, for any company, the most important thing is to find a consistent concept that strikes at the essence of the industry, and then operate and expand around that core. Therefore, the challenge for any enterprise is: How to find this core concept? How to avoid being tempted by opportunities outside that concept? And how to adjust the core concept as the environment changes?