Where’s the Rug?

I’ve lived in Chicago many years.  And anyone who’s ever worked in the Loop (that’s the downtown area) is familiar with the guys running around in the brightly colored sport coats.  You see them on the street every week day, impervious to hot, cold and rain, usually (it seemed) with a cigarette.  These were the floor traders from the Board of Trade.  "Heart attack job," most of us would think, and say to our colleagues, as we watched these runners dealing with customers and their orders.

But these folks are disappearing quicklyComputer trading has practically replaced the pits for a preponderence of trading volume.  And the rug was pulled out from under people who practiced what was a very skilled, but very limited, occupation.  What do you do when you have a highly specialized Success Formula and suddenly there’s no need for it?

You can read about what some of these former traders are now doing here.  Market Challenges don’t just affect companies and industries.  Technology and new competitors don’t just hit businesses.  Individuals, and their personal Success Formulas are impacted by Challenges as well.  And when that happens, what’s critical is that we use personal Disruptions to find White Space for our future.

Very few of these old traders have turned into "screen traders."  The skills for success are very different trading on a computer versus a pit.  And for most of these people, their identity was tied to more than a title – it was tied to the strategies and tactics used in the activity of being a pit trader.  Their Success Formula suddenly had a lot less value.  For some, this signaled retirement – the personal equivalent of shutting down operations.  Others have taken up screen trading, but at far lower volumes and with less satisfaction (monetarily and personally.)  They are trying to find a way to Defend & Extend their old Success Formula – but it isn’t going too well (as we might expect).  And others have Disrupted themselves and moved on to roles as salespeople and restauranteurs.  It’s this latter group that is now finding the most fulfillment in their lives, because they have moved themselves into personal White Space and are developing a new Success Formula.

It’s personally rough when your Success Formula needs changing.  But we are no more immune to the impacts of a dynamic world, and the affect it has on labor, than are businesses.  Succeeding in this dynamic world increasingly requires that we keep our eyes scanning for Challenges, that we practice Disrupting our lives to make sure we don’t become too "comfortable and cozy," and finding ways to insert White Space in our lives.  Places to experiment with new ideas that we can potentially use to keep our careers, and lives, in our control and flourishing – instead of waking up wondering "Where’s the Rug"?

When was the last time you took a college class?  The last time you explored how to turn your hobby into a job?  Interviewed someone who walked away from a job to something totally different for insights on how she did it?  Discussed with your spouse squirreling away significant funds as "walk away money"?  Checked on the value of your house not to get more spending money, but to finance a career change?  Attended a networking meeting not looking for a job, but just to hear about what other people do?  Where’s the White Space in your life?

Follow-up on Tribune

The Chicago Tribune on-line published an interview with new owner Sam Zell.  You can see full article here, but parts are worth repeating:

Q: How do you get your information? Do you read newspapers? Do you read online?

Zell: I’ve never read online. I don’t have a Blackberry. I read five newspapers a day, Chicago Tribune, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, LA Times, Financial Times. And I read everything. I read Forbes, Fortune, Business Week.

The new leader of a business who’s very viability is threatened by a new technology does not use it.  And we’re to expect he’s prepared for the Market Challenge facing Tribune?

Q: Is it OK for a (top) manager to say, ‘I don’t want to do what you want me to do?’

Zell: No. He has the opportunity. He has the job. Whatever the terms of the job are, he has to live by them. All I can tell you is that, I am your boss and I tell you to do something that is not unethical, but is in line with some big corporate program or directive or philosophy, you’ve got a choice. You can play or you can go work for somebody else…Everybody’s entitled to an opinion. But once you’ve chosen to work with somebody and the lines of the story are clear, I don’t know how you could operate a business if you lay out a strategic plan and then have 20,000 people opt out.

Does this sound like a leader prepared to use White Space in order to find a solution to the thorny market Challenges which have led the Tribune into a 5 year slide?

Q: In the newspaper business, raising revenue means either raising advertising rates or raising circulation or a combination of both. At first blush, which of those makes more sense. How do you do that?

Zell: This is for sure an amateur guess at this point. But I would think the biggest single issue is circulation and circulation penetration. And I think the issue is what if, how do we do this, what’s our cpm? And how can we lower that cpm to make us more competitive with other forms of media. Those are the kinds of questions that I think are relevant. I think the answer is probably we have to find ways to increase circulation and to increase penetration.

Let’s see, the biggest issue is circulation, and that is down because more people, especially young people, are getting news from places other than newspapes (especially the web).  And the new leader doesn’t use the web, or even a Blackberry.  So how’s he planning to increase circulation?  Does he think Tribune has been ignoring this problem the last 5 years?  Is he aware of some "silver bullet" for newspaper circulation problems that isn’t known to people at Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Washington Post, et.al.?

Q: But the ESOP isn’t going to have a seat on the board. Why not?

Zell: The idea was that two of the independents would be run by the ESOP. But in the end, it was all about alignment of interests, and nothing else matters. I’m putting $315 million into this deal, cash.

Sounds pretty clear who’s in charge here.  The 65 year old guy that reads 5 newspapers a day (how many people do that? how many under 40?) and doesn’t use the web.  And he’s not exactly open to ideas from the employees, who ostensibly own the company but have no representation. 

Sam Zell has hooked his wagon to the Tribune management team that has not addressed the market Challenges for the last several years.  He is comfortably blind to these Challenges.  He’s going to use $7.2billion of other people’s money (bond holders) to try and get a return on his $315million.  As a real estate magnate, such use of leverage fits his personal Success Formula.  But the Tribune is not just a building on Michigan Avenue.  Customers and revenues are falling, and there’s not a limited amount of news availability – like there is land. 

Defend & Extend Management is planned at Tribune Company.  And that means more cost cuts and further erosion in the business.  Where’s Steve Case (former CEO of AOL) when you most need him?  At least he knows how to use the internet.

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Not So Easy Ride(r)

One of the greatest brands in all of marketing is Harley Davidson.  One claim to fame is that Harley images are the #1 most tattooed logo in the world.  Now, that takes a dedicated customer – or even a non-customer!  But Harley is in some trouble, and in fact deeper trouble than many folks realize.

Harley’s latest rise came after being repurchased by family of the founders from the conglomerate AMF in the 1970s.  These leaders refocused Harley on its roots as an "outlaw biker" brand, and Harley recaptured the position as the #1 manufacturer of large motorcycles.  Today it’s not only the "outlaw" buying and riding a Harley, but in fact people from many walks of life who want the "motorcycle experience."  Harley’s problem today is that it has positioned itself so strongly with its big "V-Twin" (referring to the type of engine used) bikes that its appeal is almost exclusively with buyers who are old enough to remember seeing the movie Easy Rider.  Every year that’s a shrinking number.  It shows in the average age of a new Harley buyer.  From about 42 ten years ago, the average age is now 47.  These are the people who both seek recapturing the image of "outlaw" and can afford $28,000 for a new motorcycle (about 3 times the price of similar motorcycles made by Honda, Suzuki and Kawasaki.)

Today’s younger motorcycle riders have been able to avoid Harley’s in droves.  They are much more captured by what some people call "crotch rocket" motorcycles.  Built off the racing style frames used in high speed racing, these motorcycles are far faster off the line than a Harley, often have higher top speeds, usually require less maintenance and start as low as $6,000 – with the top racers costing only $14,000.  Ripping off an old Oldsmobile ad phrase (a brand now retired at GM), my sons look at a big V-Twin and say "Yep, that’s my dad’s motorcycle".

Harley tried to address this problem about 6 years ago by launching what it called the V-Rod.  This was a totally new design, using an engine made by Porsche.  It was intended to bring in the younger rider.  But dealers took one look at the bike and said "It’s not a Harley."  They didn’t like the style, and they didn’t  like the lower price.  They wanted to keep selling the big, old-style bikes with the big, fat profit margins.  So they turned thumbs-down on the V-Rod, and Harley let them.  And their chance to reverse the trend of a dying off customer base was lost (does this remind you at all of Apple walking away from the Newton – the first successful PDA – because it wasn’t a Mac back in the late 1990s?).

Now Harley’s suffering from a recent strike (see article here).  But the word around Milwaukee (Chicago’s neighbor) is that Harley took the strike because it had more bikes in inventory than needed.  And some analysts are predicting that tighter credit will hurt Harley sales (see Marketwatch Herb Grennberg blog here.)  Harley’s market capitalization is down about 20% in 2007.  As more folks realize that the brand is at risk of soon dying off (literally), the risk is that its value will fall further.  Like I said, my sons (college and high school) want jackets that say Honda – not Harley.

Locking in on a Success Formula can produce spectacular results.  Harley Davidson demonstrated just how long and how powerfully a good Success Formula can operate.  Harley, its suppliers, its dealers and its customers have had a tremendous 30 year run, with equity value going up 60x just since 1987.  But, like all markets, the market for motorcycles is changing.  And Harley is at great risk of once again lapsing into declining sales.  The company’s sales of bikes have stalled, and already dealerships achieve between 40% and 60% of revenue through paraphernalia (t-shirts, jackets, and other logo gear).  Harley management forgot to Disrupt when they launched the V-Rod, and they let the organization push away their breakout product for the future.  Since then, there has been no White Space producing innovation at Harley.  The company is horribly Locked-in to its old market position, and the fuse is lit on what is going to eventually be a very unpleasant surprise when the brand starts retrenching.

Fleet of Foot

You probably never heard of Glunz.  Profiled recently in The Chicago Tribune (see article here), Glunz is a beer distributor.  What makes the company interesting is how this 120 year old family owned-and-operated business has succeeded despite severe market Challenges.  And it’s due to keeping White Space alive continuously, not just looking for solutions when problems develop.

Founded in 1888, Glunz has overcome a series of market Challenges.  Just imagine facing these:

in 1930 their business was outlawed by the passage of prohibition in the 13th ammendment to the Constitution.  Rather than giving up, the company found opportunities in medicinal alcohol, sacramental wine and home brewing kits.

– After building a business as the national distributor of Schlitz, that brand collapsed in the 1970s due to a raft of articles on production errors and bad quality.  But the company had already started distributing Stroh’s – a local beer out of Wisconsin – and they expanded Stroh’s in Schlitz place.

– But then Stroh’s was bought out, and disappeared.  Yet again, years of effort had already been put in place to develop a relationship with Coors to distribute their beer and Glunz was ready to move when the Challenge came. 

– But then Coors, being a big company, decided one day to drop Glunz and predicted the company would be dead within 6 months.  Only Louis Glunz had already begun preparing for such a scenario and he had developed a relationship with Rolling Rock, a Pennsylvania beer with east coast cache but no market in the midwest.  And so Glunz rolled out Rolling Rock to great success in stores and bars. 

Only to have Rolling Rock acquired by Annheuser-Busch last year – yet another Challenge.  But again, Glunz had already started looking at beer imports they could grow as a replacement for Rolling Rock.  Now Glunz distributes Stiegl, Stella Artois, Becks and Tecate

2007 sales are expected to reach $30M, more than double sales of $13M in 1992 when Coors yanked their beer from Glunz distribution.

Any one of these market Challenges could have been a compeny-ending act.  But Glunz has thrived because the leadership constantly maintains White Space.  Instead of putting all their "focus" on the business at hand, and putting everything at risk on that one business, Glunz constantly maintains openness to new opportunities.  Each of these might have grown Glunz into a much bigger business had the setbacks not occurred.  But instead, they allowed Glunz to thrive very nicely despite horrific Challenges.

Business of all sizes and ages get Locked-in to their Success Formula.  The Lock-in creates blinders have them moving too late when Challenges develop.  Glunz is an example that even very old companies with tremendous heritage, and small companies that aren’t sitting on billions in resources, can be open to new opportunities.  These small and older companies can, in fact, seek out new opportunites on a constant basis so as to be prepared no matter how the market shifts and turns.  By keeping White Space constantly alive your chances for success greatly improve.

Tough Week in White Space

Readers of this blog know I’ve been a real fan of Motorola.  I’ve waxed eloquently about the Disruptions implemented by the new CEO when he came to the company in 2004.  And likewise I’ve been an endorser of the multiple White Space projects he implemented (see previous blogs on Motorola for details.)  But this week, lots went the wrong direction at Motorola.

Motorola reported that it would have a loss for the first quarter of 2007 (see article here.)  That means the clock is now ticking on what might be a growth stall.  As previously written here, companies that hit growth stalls have only a 7% chance of really ever growing again.  Motorola stalled badly in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and they were rebounding when this loss hit.  The risks are great here – and there should be no doubt about it.  If the company posts another down quarter next, the odds are getting slim on success.

What went wrong at MOT (see chart here)?  Firstly, White Space must be managed toward success.  While the company implemented a lot of White Space, and the impact showed in a dramatic turnaround from the situation in 1999, management did not hold White Space accountable for results.  White Space is not an excuse to let results falter.  Rather, management should have been aware of the precarious predicament in the large mobile phone business and PUSHING White Space to produce rapid results.  As recently as this week, the very week that the bad results were reported, Motorola was expected to be announcing plans to buy PALM in yet another expansion of White Space to grow the company.  But this looks much less likely now, because leadership opened White Space but did not manage it effectively.

Secondly, Ed Zander failed to Disrupt himself while Disrupting Motorola.  When arriving at Motorola he moved fast to Disrupt.  Of course, Disruption was "normal" at Sun Micrososystems where he used to work.  Chronic Disruptions were part of the Success Formula at Sun, and became part of his Success Formula.  But Sun got into big trouble when it became overly committed to a single market in network servers.  Unfortunately, Motorola was allowed to be too committed to a dependence on mobile phones.  What we now see is that while Mr. Zander was OK with Disrupting and opening White Space, he did not actually Disrupt his personal Success Formula and change the way he believed a business should be managed

Once confronted with the threat posed by Mr. Icahn, Mr. Zander approved a quick $4.5billion stock buyback.  And now he’s agreed to an even larger $7.5 billion buyback (see article here) – representing 75% of Motorola’s cash reserves.  And he’s put in place a President and COO from inside the company – a sign of creating distance from the Disruptions and White Space he implemented (see article here) . 

These are not good signs.  I’ve had high hopes for the White Space at Motorola.  If we recognize where the company was just 3 years ago, it has traveled a very successful road.  The question now will be does leadership have the will to continue its road of Disruption and White Space to create a more successful Motorola?  Will it follow through on the acquisition of PALM, given the current Challenges?  If it does, and management holds the White Space leaders to business demands for results, Motorola can become again a great company.  If it keeps following its recent trends – retrenching to Defending and Extending its mobile phone business and acting to protect management – then recent gains will be quickly unwound.

 

Short Wins, Long Losses

In the early 1980’s Roger Smith took on the market Challenges facing General Motors. (see chart here) In bold strokes, he expanded GM beyond its old Success Formula including the acquisition of a high tech information company (EDS), a high tech electronics company (Hughes Electronics) and creating an entirely new auto company built on a clean sheet of paper (Saturn).  These actions created the opportunity for GM to escape its past and become something entirely new.

But Roger Smith did not change the Lock-ins at GMHe did not Disrupt the organization and attack Lock-ins based on old biases related to what many employees thought GM should be.  He did not change the company’s decision processes, its core metrics, its information architecture, its dependence upon a common prototypical GM manager, its relationship with labor nor its hoarding of knowledge in isolated silos.  As a result, the White Space projectes survived only a few years after his retirement.  EDS and Hughes are once again stand-alone companies, and Saturn has been "integrated" into GM causing it to lose its cache and much of its early loyal fan base.

As a result, GM today is much like it was in the 1970s – and much to our chagrin. (a look at the referenced chart will show that the company today is worth what it was in 1971).  The company is a perennial low-player on the return-on-capital pole.  It’s market share has steadily lost ground in the traditional auto market to imports.  And P&L losses have mounted to the point that in 2005 and 2006 some questioned the very survivability of GM.

Similarly, a decade ago Jack Greenberg took on the market Challenges facing McDonald’s (see chart here).  In the early 1990s he began acquiring Boston Market, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Donato’s Pizza as well as equity interests in Fazoli’s and Pret-a-Manger.  Some of these were breakout performers, not only doing well in restaurant sales but even in the frozen food case at the grocer (particularly Boston Market).  But Jack Greenberg did not Disrupt McDonald’s, nor did he attack its Lock-ins.  Then he retired.

In January, 2007 executives at McDonald’s told the leadership of Boston Market they intend to sell the company (see full article here.)  Once completed, this will completely reverse the White Space projects previously implemented.  McDonald’s will once again be a "focused" franchisor and operator of hamburger establishments.  The company is pinning its future hopes on yet another hamburger – the $3.99 Angus Third Pounder (see full article here).  The old Success Formula – sell sandwiches -is once again dominating all activity at McDonald’s.

In the short-term, management is bragging about how its back-to-basics "Plan to Win" campaign has improved profits at McDonald’s.  In reality, management has captured huge gains from the earlier diversification moves, in operating profits and in one-time gains from selling the businesses, which have all been booked to the bottom line in support of Defending & Extending the old McDonald’s Success Formaula.

But long-term, we know what to expect.  This is the GM story, only with ketchup on it.  Within a few years McDonald’s will be back again to fending off predators in its "core market."  McDonald’s is in fact late with this latest burger, coming over 2 years after Burger King launched its Angus Steak Burger and after more than 8 variations of such products have been launched at Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. since 2003.  And the company is still vulnerable to the kinds of Challenges which sent them spiraling downward 6 years ago – potentially a renewed Mad Cow illness, or another attack on trans-fats or other health concerns, or franchisees complaining about no growth, or simply from the in-kind competitors it recently sold off grabbing a larger share of market.

We can’t predict the issue that will next stumble Big Mac.  But we can be sure that the old Success Formula has already proven it has hit diminishing returns – and the future for McDonald’s looks a lot like GM’s.  And that should scare a lot of people.

Driving with the Rear View Mirror

When companies Lock-in they quit looking at the marketplace, instead focusing on running their Success Formula.  In a very real way, if markets were highways and companies were autos we could say management starts driving the car looking in the rear view mirror rather than looking out the windshield.

A great example of this is at Ford (see chart here).  Ford has been Challenged for several years.  Like GM, Ford sales have struggled as the marketplace has shifted away from their great trucks and large SUVs (top sellers, and considered great products in their categories) toward less expensive to operate vehicles.  Several years ago customers found higher mileage vehicles preferable, and began looking at hybrids and other innovations rather than more size and more towing capacity.

During this market shift Ford "retired" the Taurus.  In the early 1980s Ford was swimming in red ink (much like today) when the company launched the revolutionary aerodynamic Taurus.  The design changes, in body shape as well as transverse-mounted engine, front wheel drive and high-mileage overdrive transmission met customer desires and the Taurus became the #1 selling car in the world (right – not just hte U.S. but the world.)  Ford had to open new plants to meet demand, and losses turned to substantial profits.

But as time passed Ford Locked-in on its #1 selling, and very profitable F-Series trucks and the SUVs spun off that platform.  Few enhancements were made to the Taurus, and as the Toyoty Camry grew in sales eventually Ford stopped the Taurus.  The car had a great 20 year run.  But ,of great importance, Ford did not replace the Taurus with another revolutionary passenger car.  Instead, they remained Locked-in to their trucks and SUVs.

Then the market shifted, and Ford was caught flat footed.  Sales dropped, and the fortunes at Ford turned as bleak (possibly worse) than GM.

Now Ford has announced its solution.  The company will rename an existing vehicle, the Five Hundred, the Taurus (see article here).  The company hopes that better name recognition will sell more cars, and help turn around the struggling auto company.

Never has there been a better case of driving the vehicle by looking in the rear view mirror.  Ford isn’t competing for the future, they are firmly trying to recapture the past!  Management is hoping that somehow a name associated with past success will create future success.  Managment isn’t even redesigning the Five Hundred.  They are just renaming and re-launching it.  Instead of looking at the direction the market is going, and driving the company toward future market needs, Ford is looking at what worked 20 years ago and hoping miracles will happen to produce that result again.  Even though the market and competition has completely changed.

That’s what Lock-in to an old Success Formula can do for you.  Make you so fixated on what previously worked that you quit looking forward and start spending your time dreaming about the past.  Bill Ford, Jr. is a young guy.  But he keeps looking at the past – the Mustang, the F-Series truck and now the Taurus – to try and save the company his family founded.  Too bad.  Instead of ripping off the Taurus name he would be better served to capture the spirit of the Taurus by developing and launching a new car that meets new market competitive demands.

Will This Make Any Difference?

Dell Computer has had a rough go the last couple of years.  They’ve had some batteries catch fire – not good for marketing.  And they’ve had some SEC investigators looking through their books – not good for investors.  But neither of these problems are really that unusual or monumental for a company the size of Dell.  The big problem has been that the company isn’t making the money it once did, and it’s sure not growing like it once did.  That has stripped the company of 40-50% of its value, or about $43 billion in market loss for investors (see chart here.)

So what’s the response?  At the beginning of this month the Chairman and namesake, Michael Dell, announced he was removing the CEO and taking back the reigns (see full article here.) Should we now expect a turnaround?

Michael Dell pioneered the Success Formula that made Dell Computer famous.  Simply put, Dell sold directly to customers, outsourced everything they could, used other people’s technology (no R&D), focused on the supply chain to shorten manufacturing and distribution cycles and kept prices low.  And anything that wasn’t part of that Success Formula does not exist at Dell.  This Success Formula produced great results, and Michael Dell locked it in with every conceivable software product, metric and decision process he could.  There was/is no variation at Dell, just execution.

Unfortunately, this Success Formula was not impossible to copyCompetitors not only matched the supply chain expertise of Dell, but added onto it with product innovations, credit terms for corporate buyers, and enhanced peripheral products that expanded the total customer purchase.  They matched Dell, and did the company one better.  So customers migrated to these competitors.  Dell didn’t suddenly lose its Midas touch.  Execution hasn’t faltered.  Competitors just kept getting better in this dynamic market, and execution wasn’t enough to maintain sales growth and margins.

Now the king of execution is returning.  What can we expect?  More of the same, of course.  The implication, and stated objective, of Michael Dell’s return is to get Dell "back on track."  That’s back on track to what they did a decade ago.  Is that likely to turn around their fortunes, in a more competitive marketplace with yet more competitive variables?

Dell doesn’t need more Dell.  They need more innovationThere are no Disruptions at Dell.  And this change of leaders will not create an internal Disruption demanding change.  There is no White Space at Dell.  I blogged on this previously, and a PR employee responded (you can read the comment by going to that blog) that Dell is a great company.  But even he could not identify any White Space in Dell.  Despite my emails to him asking for any examples of White Space he could provide — any at all.  Without White Space, how is Dell to develop a new Success Formula to produce results in 2009 like they had in 1999?

Michael Dell and his company was a fantastically successful pioneer.  His vision helped create a Success Formula that greatly assisted putting a PC on nearly every working desk and in nearly every home, not to mention in the hands of most students, salespeople, and other mobile worker in America.  But that Success Formula has already passed the point of diminishing returns.  Unless Dell learns to Disrupt and implement White Space, look for the future to be more of the recent past.  Results included.

BIAS Blindness

Is a Tattoo art?  Can a tattoo style drawing sell a product?  These are two questions I really never asked myself before, but now I’m asking them a lot.

Sometimes we can’t see what’s right in front of our faces.  We all suffer from BIAS – Beliefs, Interpretations, Assumptions and Strategies – that we carry around in our heads.  As we develop our Success Formulas, we Lock them in with our BIAS and we often start missing things.  And some of these can be really big trends.

The Chicago Tribune ran an article in the Business Section (yes the Business section) about the use of tattoo art in mainstream ads (see full article here).  Now, I have to admit that tattoos are not something I think about at all.  But this article pointed out that they are getting to be pretty much everywhere, on everybody.  And, as importantly, the artists are downright cheap compared to typical graphic artists used in ad production.  That really caught my attention.

Then I started to notice, and think.  The images of Anna Nicole Smith all over the TV following her untimely death showed a tattoo on her leg.  Many (maybe most?) of the performer’s at this week’s Grammy award seemed to have visible tattoos.  Then I realized that I see tattoos increasingly on the young people that associate with my high school and college age sons.  I had "seen" these tattoos before.  But my mind hadn’t "seen" them.  Why, it was startling how popular tattoos are.  I noticed last weekend going to run errands that I identified at least a half dozen tattoo parlors within 10 miles of my northwest suburban Chicago home.  No matter what I thought, or better said what I didn’t think, about tattoos they are a lot more popular and part of popular culture than I realized.

My Success Formula had never thought about tattoos.  I have held the top marketing job in a $3B manufacturing company, and worked at PepsiCo a top marketing company, and I am heavily involved in advertising graphics with clients today — and from that I had developed a Lock-in about commercial graphics.  And that Lock-in left me completely BIASed to ignore tattoo art as a commercial graphics product.  The Tribune article showed me a market Challenge – a new art form that is growing in popularity and cheap.  And as a result I’ve had to Disrupt my Lock-in.  Now I’m looking for White Space to explore the possibilities this might open up for advertisers.  (As long as it doesn’t include putting ink into my 50 year old white, less than menacing forearms – lol.)

We all have Success Formulas, and we Lock them in.  We develop a BIAS around them that can blind us to opportunities.  That’s why it is critical that we use external stimuli to help identify market Challenges we otherwise will completely miss.  Don’t become BIAS blinded to opportunities.

Solution Space – Health Care

It’s easier to recognize a problem than it is to find a solution.  I’m sure you’ve noticed this.  In practically everything we do we can see the need for improvement, but we often find that nothing happens to make things better.  Even when a crisis happens,we often see lots of people discussing the problem – and some talk about potential solutions – but not much progress is made.

Take for example the U.S. health care situation.  We now have a country where 20% to 40% of the population has no health care coverage with between 30% and 50% are significantly under-insured (ranges are offered because it depends on what study you read.)  Virtually everyone agrees that this is a big problem, because the U.S. health care system is not designed to deal with the uninsured.  We hear stories of people waiting for hours in hospitals for basic care that is often poorly administered.  We hear about total health care costs rising because the uninsured drive up costs that are then born by insured patients.  And the medicare and medicaid system we are told is nearly bankrupt, unable to meet many basic needs and not providing necessary life-sustaining assistance.   Increasingly, doctors, clinics and even some hospitals refuse to take uninsured patients.

The problem has been easy to see.  In America, the system has been based upon employer-provided health care.  But, as employees have changed jobs they have lost insurance due to "pre-existing condition" clauses that deny coverage.  And people who lost jobs to downsizings lost all coverage completely.  Employment has shifted dramatically from manufacturing to services in the U.S., yet a far higher percentage of service employers offer very limited insurance, or no insurance at all.  And the vast army of those who work part-time (under 40 hours per week), have no access to insurance as employers limit their hours and limit access to coverage as a cost saving measure.  Employer-provided health insurance worked in the far more stable employment practices of the 1940s to 1970s, but the program simply isn’t sufficient to meet the needs of nearly half of Americans today. 

Yesterday, Wal-Mart agreed with the largest service union in the USA (their bitter enemy, the Service Employees International Union) that dramatic changes were needed in health care coverage (see article here.)  Obviously, Wal-Mart does not believe it can provide universal coverage to its 1.3 million employees and compete.  But interestingly, the unions which have fought hard to get employees health benefits agree that far too many employers cannot be expected to offer health care and compete in a global economy.  Democrats have easily joined the ranks of those asking for a different system, but interestingly now noteworthy Republicans agree – including Howard Baker former Chief of Staff to Ronald Reagan.

So, what is to be done?  There is no shortage of opinions about the solution (see article here).  Many people want universal coverage from the federal government – but that has many detractors as well.  Some states say a universal program should be implemented state-by-state, and Massachusetts has taken this direction.  The President has offered to push for universal coverage with a series of changes to taxation of health care benefits.  Lots of ideas – but most of these have existed for well over a decade.  So it hasn’t been a lack of ideas that has stopped progress toward a different solution.

What we have with Wal-Mart’s announcement is a Disruption inside the business community.  A Disruption saying "stop, we have to do something different here.  The old way won’t work. We’re Locked-in to an outdated health care solution that must change."  Having the country’s largest employer, in tandem with one of the largest unions, make this admission serves as a Disruption.

But this will make no difference  if we don’t find White Space to actually create, test, pilot, learn, and define a new Success Formula for health care.  Politicians often say "we need a debate on the options."  Debates we’ve had.  What we need is to try new solutions, and see if they work.  We need to begin variations of the multiple scenarios so we can see what works, and what doesn’t.  Massachusetts, for example, is a great experiment in a state-implemented program.  But we also need to experiment with changes to the federal systems (Medicare and Medicaid) to see what they can actually do.  And we need to experiment with subsidies and tax changes in the workplace to see what private programs can be developed.  In the end, only in White Space do we actually test possible answers and thereby develop a new solution to which people migrate.  The best solution is not the one debated to success, but instead the solution which is proven to work – and that is the solution to which people migrate.  Anyone will change when they can see a better result, and that can only happen in White Space.

This is exactly what businesses have to do as well.  The Phoenix Principle has demonstrated that whether a problem needs to be solved at the macro level (like national health care coverage) at an industry level (like national access to broadband telecommunications) or at a company, or function, work team or even an individual level Disruptions must be supplemented with White Space if a solution is actually to be developed and implemented.  New solutions don’t come out of the universities or other "brain trusts".  They come out of White Space where new Success Formulas that include strategies and tactics are actually tested and demonstrated to work.  Then these new Success Formulas don’t have to be foisted upon people, because the better results attract people to them.  Of course there are laggards, but we see that migration to a better result works far better than trying to debate, design, declare and then demand change – a model that almost never gets implemented nor works well.

So, we need White Space for experiments in health care coverage.  And the state programs fit as one example.  Let’s hope this Disruption will lead to more experiments.  And we need more White Space in our companies, our departments and our lives so that we can experiment and find ways to produce better results.  In the end, we can equate long-term success with White Space – and we’ve never needed more of it than we do today.