Imagine you bought stock in a small restaurant concept in 1993 (12 years ago) with a handful of restaurants.  Today, that chain has expanded to 450 locations, profits have grown five-fold since turning profitable in 2004 and sales are up 33 percent in the first six months of this year after doubling between 2002 and 2004.  Would you want to sell that stock?

I wouldn’t either.  But that’s what McDonald’s is doing, by selling off ownership in Chipotles.  Chipotles is growing faster, and more profitably than McDonald’s.  But McD is saying they can’t afford to invest in Chipotle, they need to sell their ownership to have others pay for continuing to grow this skyrocketing opportunity.  Why?  Because McD wants to focus on their 37,000 stagnant hamburger restaurants.

The urge to Defend & Extend the hamburger business is greater than the urge to grow at McDonald’s.  McDonald’s shareholders and franchisees would all benefit from McD getting behind expanding Chipotles.  The growth and profit opportunities in the new business are multiples of the hamburger business.  Yet, even though the data is clear, the Lock-in to perpetuating its outdated Success Formula keeps McDonald’s from taking advantage of its own opportunity.  Instead of migrating McDonald’s Success Formula toward this overwhelmingly successful White Space project, they are sending it out the door.

McDonald’s is horribly Locked-in.  Leadership doesn’t understand how to Disrupt that Lock-in in order to move the company from the Swamp back into the Rapids.  They only difference between McD and GM is that McD hasn’t moved far enough into the Swamp.  But time will tell. 

For employees and investors, now’s the time to run, not walk, toward Chipotle.  It’s always better to be in the Rapids of Growth than stuck in the Swamp of mediocre performance.