THE CIPUTRA GROUP: SHAPING THE CITY IN ASIA
“If you have the will, and the spirit, and you have confidence, you
follow up with forecast, all will happen.” Mr. Ciputra
Mr. Ciputra, founder of the Ciputra Group, looked back on his long
career as one of Indonesia’s most prominent entrepreneurs. As a
developer in the real estate sector, he had provided modern and
comfortable spaces for millions of Indonesians to live, recreate,
shop and work. Ciputra’s courage, vision and expertise led to
extraordinary successes in the 1990s. But the Ciputra Group also
went through a particularly difficult period during the Asian
Crisis of 1998, a crisis that exposed the vulnerabilities of the
Ciputra Group’sbusiness model. Ciputra had felt relieved when the
last debt restructuring agreement was signed in 2005.
Yet, right at the moment when the Ciputra Group was gearing up for
a new era of growth, a globaleconomic crisis struck in late 2008.
Ciputra, who was now 77 years old and planning to retire, was
againforced to reassess the Ciputra Group’s strategy. He thought
about the appropriate balance between his
many ideas for innovative real estate projects and the level of
risk the company could manage. Theongoing transfer of leadership
toward his children and children-in-law also required his
attention. Howcould the business continue the tradition of
entrepreneurship while also building a professionally managed
family business group? The Ciputra family needed to work out a
comprehensive strategy to prepare thefamily business for the next
decades.
AWAKENING THE SPIRIT OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP
His father passed away in prison in 1943,when Ciputra was only 12
years old. Ciputra, then a fatherless child, was raised in poverty,
but he was ableto continue his schooling after the war. After
completing high school, he subsequently went to the famousInstitute
of Technology Bandung (ITB) in Java, where he studied architecture.
His career would be onethat showed, as he himself explained, his
“spirit of entrepreneurship.”
Because the allowance he received from his mother during his
university days was not sufficient, he startedhis first venture as
a student in 1957. He established an architecture consulting agency
with two friends,Budi Brasali (who passed away in 2006) and Ismail
Sofyan. After graduating in 1960, Ciputra decided that,rather than
working as a consultant for others, he wanted to implement his own
ideas as a developer.
Ciputraworked and subsequently became the chief executive officer
of Pembangunan Jaya, a developer partly ownedby the Jakarta
provincial government, where he stayed for 35 years and worked
closely with several ofJakarta’s former governors. In this
capacity, he shaped Jakarta, including building or renovating
severalprominent markets, a recreation park and various housing
projects.
Aside from this job, he and his friends also established the
Metropolitan Group after graduation, whereCiputra became the
president commissioner, a non-executive role in which he actively
provided guidanceand facilitated the development of this expanding
group. Other investors, such as the Salim Group, werealso involved
in a subsidiary of the Metropolitan Group, which developed the
first privately built satellitecity of Jakarta. The group also had
investments abroad. In 2009, his long-term partner, Ismail Sofyan,
wasstill playing an active role within the Metropolitan
Group.
In the 1980s, the three friends, who had hitherto shared their
projects, decided that they could now starttheir own groups once
their children grew up. So, when Ciputra’s children graduated and
returned fromtheir university studies overseas, Ciputra started his
own family group, the Ciputra Group, in which his
children, children-in-law, wife and brother were active. The new
Ciputra Group was created for hischildren, whom he hoped would grow
as professionals and continue his entrepreneurial spirit in
theproperty sector.
Ciputra was considered the pioneer of the Indonesian property
sector, and was often credited and awardedfor his visionary ideas.
One of his achievements was to think big. He could see
opportunities where otherscould not. In the late 960s, while
heading Pembangunan Jaya, he transformed a swampland, infested
with
mosquitoes and monkeys, intothe now popular Jakarta seaside,Taman
Impian Jaya Ancol, re-positioning Jakarta as a beach city.According
to Ciputra: “Every problem is an opportunity. The more difficult
the problem, the moreopportunity: that is entrepreneurship.”
When his colleagues were thinking mere buildings, he was thinking
new towns. The development of entiresatellite cities, or new towns,
was a business model that became one of the trademarks of Ciputra,
althoughit was gradually copied by other players in the market. His
first project, while still with Pembangunan Jaya,was a project
called Bintaro Jaya. Since the 1960s, Jakarta, like many other
Asian cities, witnessed a largeinflux of people from the rural
areas
While infrastructure was often officially the task of the
government, the latter frequentlylacked the skills or budget to
actually construct and maintain it. Especially after 1985, a period
ofderegulation in Indonesia, the government warmed up to the idea
of using the private sector to develophousing and public
infrastructure. It was in this vacuum that Ciputra saw commercial
opportunities.
With a keen eye for promising new business models, Ciputra moved
into these large-scale propertyprojects, and provided middle- and
upper-class citizens with living conditions that the government
couldnot provide.
TheCiputra Group targeted the upper middle class for its
large-scale property projects, and offered services andfacilities
beyond what other areas offered, including healthcare, security,
maintained roads and greenery.
Middle-class Indonesians were willing to pay for much more pleasant
and convenient living conditions.
Internally, the company sought to stimulate an entrepreneurial
spirit. All employees — from directors toadministrative staff —
were encouraged to develop their sales qualities, and one executive
spoke highly ofCiputra’ssecretary, who had already sold several
apartments. The group held competitions betweendifferent project
teams, and the winning project teams would go abroad on trips
together. Ciputra explainedthat all project staff would be
rewarded: “Yes, until servants and security people go there. All go
there.
One group went to Paris — the Citra Garden team — they chose where
they wanted to go. We gave theman extra bonus of 3-8 months.”
Ciputra liked to involve staff at all levels in projects, and he
regularlyinteracted with younger staff members and stimulated them
to express their views. All employees lookedup to Ciputra, and
several insiders remarked that “he is so outstanding.”
NEW GENERATIONS
Ciputra had four children: the eldest two were daughters, and the
youngest two male twins. Because heconsidered them all talented,
the eldest two daughters with their spouses (respectively, Rina
CiputraSastrawinata and BudiarsaSastrawinata; and Junita Ciputra
and Harun Hajadi) each led one division of the
Ciputra Group, while the twins (Cakra and Candra Ciputra) led
another. Budiarsa focused on theinternational projects, including
the new town in Vietnam, and had built contacts with officials in
thatcountry. Harun, amongst others, ran several large projects in
Surabaya, another large city in Indonesia. Thetwins were mainly
active in commercial buildings like offices in Jakarta. Although
the official structure ofthe group and its listed companies did not
reflect this, informally the projects were divided amongst
thechildren, who were engaged in subtle competition.There were
differences in style between the children. An executive of the
Ciputra Group commented that“Candra is only involved in the
strategy, not in the daily operations. Harun is involved in
everything, he ismore in the details. He also has an architect
background, so he is also involved in the design. Budiarsa is inthe
middle. Candra is more interested in the financial aspects, such as
the stock market.” The division led
by Rina and Budiarsa had become reluctant to borrow after the
crisis, and tried to avoid this at all costs,instead choosing to
work with partners who provided financing and land. Harun, however,
thought that thismight be too conservative, and took a slightly
different approach. As such, within one company, there wasa
diversity of managerial styles and project preferences. One of the
insiders remarked: “Are the subholdingsgoing to go on their own or
is it one person that will succeed Ciputra?
Now was a good time to plan the strategy for the firm and for the
family and to strengthen the business forthe coming decades.
Whereas the group had been designed along the way by the founder,
as it grew larger,a more systematic view of the progress of both
the business and the family in different stages could supportits
future development.
1. As a future leader :
a. What kind of changes do you think you need to do to yourself. Please start with awareness of reality where you are today including your self concept, values, attitude, behavior, trait, leadership style, influencing tactics, motivating and inspiring people
b. What kind leadership improvement you need to go through to be able to lead a company like Ciputra Group as a great CEO
Answer a.
I am a person who likes to get involved in details and take too much stress to handle all aspects of a work. This style of micro-management will not be viable when I run a large corporation. I will have to build trust with people and delegate them work so that I can direct the overall company whereas my trusted people can run the day-to-day operations. I need to learn to motivate people to achieve their best. I need to nurture people and help them achieve what they themselves could not achieve alone. Therefore, I would like to delegate tasks and involve people in the decision-making process. I would also need to empower people so that they can take risks and independent decisions without the fear of being reprimanded or without the need of taking my approval before every decision.
In addition, I often get overwhelmed while thinking the overall picture or the larger picture. I find it difficult to have a complete view. While leading a company, I need to have a clear view of the entire business and the position of the company in the entire industry. I need to be able to think strategically and be able to focus on the larger context in which the business is operating.
Answer. b.
Ciputra Group has been traditionally managed in a top-down way as Ciputra has acted as a charismatic leader to direct the business in his individualistic way. A new CEO can either maintain the status quo and run the business as it has been traditionally run or take a new management style to run the business as per his/her own style and the condition of the current market. The first approach might be detrimental to innovation and the company may fail to hold its market position. This is because changing market environment and competitive landscape make it inevitable for companies to be more flexible and adapt strategies to the current reality. However, when the new CEO wants to implement a new management style, people might create resistance. Change is not easily welcome by employees and other stakeholders. Therefore, the new CEO needs to learn effective change management, which needs clear direction setting, clear communication, building trust and confidence among people, etc.
In addition, the new CEO needs to be able to have a clear view of the market development and take a flexible approach to respond to the market changes.
THE CIPUTRA GROUP: SHAPING THE CITY IN ASIA “If you have the will, and the spirit,...
THE CIPUTRA GROUP: SHAPING THE CITY IN ASIA “If you have the will, and the spirit, and you have confidence, you follow up with forecast, all will happen.” Mr. Ciputra Mr. Ciputra, founder of the Ciputra Group, looked back on his long career as one of Indonesia’s most prominent entrepreneurs. As a developer in the real estate sector, he had provided modern and comfortable spaces for millions of Indonesians to live, recreate, shop and work. Ciputra’s courage, vision and expertise...
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