Why Jeff Bezos is our greatest living CEO

The Harvard Business Review recently published its list of the 100 Best Performing CEOs.  This list is better than most because it looks at long-term performance of the CEO during his or her time in the job – with many on the list in service more than a decade.

#1 was Steve Jobs.  #2 is Jeff Bezos – making him the greatest living CEO.  It is startling just how well these two CEOs performed.  During Jobs' tenure Apple investors achieved a return of 66.8 times their money.  During Mr. Bezos' tenure shareholders achieved a remarkable 124.3 times return on their money.  In an era when most of us are happy to earn 5-10%/year – which equates to doubling your money about once a decade – these CEOs exceeded expectations 30-60 fold!

Both of these CEOs achieved greatness by transforming an industry.  We all know the Apple story.  From near bankruptcy as the Mac company Mr. Jobs led Apple into the mobile devices business, and created a transformation from Walkmen, Razrs and PCs to iPods, iPhones and iPads – to the detriment of Sony, Motorola, Nokia, Microsoft, HP and Dell. 

The Amazon story is all the more remarkable because it has been written in the far more mundane world of retail – not known for being nearly as fast-changing at tech.

Lest we forget, Amazon started as an on-line seller of books frequently unavailable at your local bookstore.  "What's a local bookstore?" you may now ask, because through continuous upgrading of its capability to build on the advances in internet usage – across machines, browsers, wi-fi and mobile – Amazon drove into bankruptcy such large booksellers as B.Dalton and Borders – leaving Barnes & Noble a mere shell of its former self and on tenous footing.  And the number of small bookshops has dropped dramatically.

But Amazon's industry transformation has gone far beyond bookselling.  Amazon was one of the first, and by most users considered the best, at offering a complete on-line storefront for any retailer who wants to sell goods through Amazon's site.  You can set up your inventory, display products, provide user information, manage a shopping cart and handle check out all through Amazon – with minimal technical skill.  This allowed Amazon to bring vastly more products to customers; and without adding all the inventory or warehousing cost.

As digital uses grew, Amazon moved beyond the slow-paced publishers to launch the Kindle and give us eReaders displacing paper books and periodicals.  But this was just the first salvo in the effort to promote additional on-line buying, as Amazon next launched Kindle Fire which at remarkably low cost gave people a tablet already set up for doing retail shopping at Amazon.

As Amazon launched its book downloads and on-line services, it built its own cloud services business to aid businesses and people in using tablets, and doing more things on-line; which further reinforced the digital retail world in which Amazon dominates.

And make no doubt about it, Kindle Fire – and the use of all other tablets – is the WalMart and other traditional brick-and-mortar retail killer.  Amazon is now a player in all pieces of the transition which is happening in retail, from traditional shopping to on-line. 

Demand for retail space in the USA began declining in 2009 and has not stopped.  Most analysts blamed it on the great recession.  But in retrospect we can now see it was the watershed year for customers to begin looking more, and buying more, on-line.  Now each year growth in on-line retail continues, while demand at traditional stores wanes.

Just look at this last holiday season.  To (hopefully) drive revenue stores were opening on Thanksgiving, and doing 24 and 48 hours of non-stop staffing and promotions to drive sales.  But it was mostly in vain, as traditional retail saw almost no gains.  Despite doing more and more of what they've always done – trying to be better, faster and cheaper – they simply could not change the trend away from shopping on-line and back into the stores.

For the last year the #1 trend in retailing has been "showrooming" where customers stand in a store with a smartphone comparison pricing on-line (most frequently Amazon) to the product on the shelf.  Retailers were forced to match on-line prices, despite their higher overhead, or lose the business.  And now Target has implemented a policy of price-matching Amazon for all of 2013 in hopes of slowing the trend to on-line purchasing.

Circuit City went bankrupt, which saved Best Buy as it picked up their lost business.  But now Best Buy is close to failure.  Same store sales at WalMart have been flat.  JCPenney recruited Apple's retail store wizard as CEO – but he's learned when you have to compete with Amazon life simply sucks.  Nobody in traditional retail has found a way to reverse the on-line shopping trend, which is still dominated by Amazon.

We all can learn from these two CEOs and the companies they built.  First, and foremost, is understand trends and align with them.  If you help people move in the direction they want to go life is easy, and growth can be phenomenal.  Trying to slow, stop or reverse a trend doesn't work, and is expensive. 

Second, don't ask customers what they want, instead give them what they need.  Customers may be on a trend, but they will frame their requests in the old paradigm.  By creating new trend-promoting products and solutions you can capture the customer and avoid head-to-head competition with the "old guard" titans selling the increasingly outdated solutions.  Don't build better brick-and-mortar, make brick-and-mortar obsolete.

So, what's stopping you from growing your business like Apple or Amazon?  What keeps you from being the next Steve Jobs, or Jeff Bezos?  Can you spot trends and provide trend-supporting solutions for customers?  Or are you stymied because you're spending too much time trying to defend and extend your old business in the face of game changing trends.

Microsoft Win8 Tablet Is Not a Game Changer

While there is an appropriately high interest in the Win8 Tablet announcement from Microsoft today, there is no way it is going to be a game changer.  Simply because it was never intended to be.

Game changers meet newly emerging, unmet needs, in new ways.  People are usually happy enough, until they see the new product/solution and realize "hey, this helps me do something I couldn't do before" or "this helps me solve my problem a lot better."  Game changers aren't a simple improvement, they allow customers to do something radically different.  And although at first they may well appear to not work too well, or appear too expensive, they meet needs so uniquely, and better, that they cause people to change their behavior.

Motorola invented the smart phone.  But Motorola thought it was too expensive to be a cell phone, and not powerful enough to be a PC.  Believing it didn't fit existing markets well, Motorola shelved the product.

Apple realized people wanted to be mobile.  Cell phones did talk and text OK – and RIM had pretty good email.  But it was limited use.  Laptops had great use, but were too big, heavy and cumbersome to be really mobile.  So Apple figured out how to add apps to the phone, and use cloud services support, in order to make the smart phone fill some pretty useful needs – like navigation, being a flashlight, picking up tweets – and a few hundred thousand other things – like doctors checking x-rays or MRI results.  Not as good as a PC, and somewhat on the expensive side for the device and the AT&T connection, but a whole lot more convenient.  And that was a game changer.

From the beginning, Windows 8 has been – by design – intended to defend and extend the Windows product line. Rather than designed to resolve unmet needs, or do things nobody else could do, or dramatically improve productivity over all other possible solutions, Windows 8 was designed to simply extend Windows so (hopefully) people would not shift to the game changer technology offered by Apple and later Google. 

The problem with trying to extend old products into new markets is it rarely works.  Take for example Windows 7.  It was designed to replace Windows Vista, which was quite unpopular as an upgrade from Windows XP.  By most accounts, Windows 7 is a lot better.  But, it didn't offer users anything that that made them excited to buy Windows 7.  It didn't solve any unmet needs, or offer any radically better solutions.  It was just Windows better and faster (some just said "fixed.")

Nothing wrong with that, except Windows 7 did not address the most critical issue in the personal technology marketplace.  Windows 7 did not stop the transition from using PCs to using mobile devices.  As a result, while sales of app-enabled smartphones and tablets exploded, sales of PCs stalled:

PC shipments stalled 6-2012
Chart reproduced with permission of Business Insider Intelligence 6/12/12 courtesy of Alex Cocotas

People are moving to the mobility provided by apps, cloud services and the really easy to use interface on modern mobile devices.  Market leading cell phone maker, Nokia, decided it needed to enter smartphones, and did so by wholesale committing to Windows7.  But now the CEO, Mr. Elop (formerly a Microsoft executive,) is admitting Windows phones simply don't sell well.  Nobody cares about Microsoft, or Windows, now that the game has changed to mobility – and Windows 7 simply doesn't offer the solutions that Apple and Android does.  Not even Nokia's massive brand image, distribution or ad spending can help when a product is late, and doesn't greatly exceed the market leader's performance.  Just last week Nokia announced it was laying off another 10,000 employees.

Reviews of Win8 have been mixed.  And that should not be surprising.  Microsoft has made the mistake of trying to make Win8 something nobody really wants.  On the one hand it has a new interface called Metro that is supposed to be more iOS/Android "like" by using tiles, touch screen, etc.  But it's not a breakthrough, just an effort to be like the existing competition.  Maybe a little better, but everyone believes the leaders will be better still with new updates soon.  By definition, that is not game changing.

Simultaneously, with Win8 users can find their way into a more historical Windows inteface.  But this is not obvious, or intuitive.  And it has some pretty "clunky" features for those who like Windows.  So it's not a "great" Windows solution that would attract developers today focused on other platforms.

Win8 tries to be the old, and the new, without being great at either, and without offering anything that solves new problems, or creates breakthroughs in simplicity or performance.

Do you know the story about the Ford Edsel?

By focusing on playing catch up, and trying to defend & extend the Windows history, Microsoft missed what was most important about mobility – and that is the thousands of apps.  The product line is years late to market, short on apps, short on app developers and short on giving anyone a reason to really create apps for Win8.

Some think it is good if Microsoft makes its own tablet – like it has done with xBox.  But that really doesn't matter.  What matters is whether Microsoft gives users and developers something that causes them to really, really want a new platform that is late and doesn't have the app base, or the app store, or the interfaces to social media or all the other great thinks they already have come to expect and like about their tablet (or smartphone.) 

When iOS came out it was new, unique and had people flocking to buy it.  Developers could only be mobile by joining with Apple, and users could only be mobile by buying Apple.  That made it a game changer by leading the trend toward mobility. 

Google soon joined the competition, built a very large, respectable following by chasing Apple and offering manufacturers an option for competing with Apple. 

But Microsoft's new entry gives nobody a reason to develop for, or buy, a Win8 tablet – regardless of who manufactures it.  Microsoft does not deliver a huge, untapped market.  Microsoft doesn't solve some large, unmet need.  Microsoft doesn't promise to change the game to some new, major trend that would drive early adopters to change platforms and bring along the rest of the market. 

And making a deal so a dying company, on the edge of bankruptcy – Barnes & Noble – uses your technology is not a "big win."  Amazon is killing Barnes & Noble, and Microsoft Windows 8 won't change that.  No more than the Nook is going to take out Kindle, Kindle Fire, Galaxy Tab or the iPad.  Microsoft can throw away $300million trying to convince people Win8 has value, but spending investor money on a dying businesses as a PR ploy is just stupid.

Microsoft is playing catch up.  Catch up with the user interface.  Catch up with the format.  Catch up with the device size and portability.  Catch up with the usability (apps).  Just catch up. 

Microsoft's problem is that it did not accept the PC market was going to stall back in 2008 or 2009.  When it should have seen that mobility was a game changing trend, and required retooling the Microsoft solution suite.  Microsoft dabbled with music mobility with Zune, but quickly dropped the effort as it refocused on its "core" Windows.  Microsoft dabbled with mobile phones across different solutions including Kin – which it dropped along with Microsoft Mobility.  Back again to focusing on operating systems.  By maintaining its focus on Windows Microsoft hoped it could stop the trend, and refused to accept the market shift that was destined to stall its sales.

Microsoft stock has been flat for a decade.  It's recent value improvement as Win8 approaches launch indicates that hope beats eternally in some investors' breasts for a return of Microsoft software dominance.  But those days are long past.  PC sales have stalled, and Windows is a product headed toward obsolescence as competitors make ever better, more powerful mobile platforms and ecosystems.  If you haven't sold Microsoft yet, this may well be your last chance above $30.  Ever.

Creative Destruction is not inevitable – Kodak, Hostess, Microsoft

A lot of excitement was generated this week when Mitt Romney said the words "I like to fire people."  I'm sure he wishes he could rephrase his comment, as he easily could have made his point about changing service providers without those words.  Nonetheless, the aftermath turned to a discussion of job losses, and why Bain Capital has eliminated jobs while simultaneously creating some. 

Surprisingly, a number of economists suddenly started saying that firms like Bain Capital are justified in their job eliminations because they are merely implementing "creative destruction."  Although the leap is not obvious, the argument goes that some businesses are made inefficient and unprofitable by new technologies or business processes – so buyers (like Bain Capital) of hurting businesses often cannot "fix" the situation and have no choice but to close them.  Bain Capital inevitably will be stuck with losers it has no choice but to shutter – eliminating the jobs with the company.

Unfortunately, that argument is simply not true. The only thing that allows "creative destruction" to kill a company is a lack of good leadership.  Any company can find a growth path if its leaders are willing to learn from trends and steer in the growing direction.

Start by looking at recent events surrounding Kodak and Hostess, both quickly heading for Chapter 11.  Neither needed to fail. Management made the decisions which steered them into the whirlpool of failure. 

Kodak watched the market for amateur photography shrink for 30 years – drying up profits for film and paper.  Yet, management consistently – quarter after quarter and year after year – made the decision to try defending and extending the historical market rather than move the company into faster growing, more profitable opportunities.  Kodak even invented much of the technology for digital photography, but chose to license it to others rather than develop the market because Kodak feared cannibalizing existing sales – as they became increasingly at risk! 

Hostess is making a return trip to Chapter 11 this decade.  But it's not like the trend away from highly processed, shelf stable white bread and sugary pastry snacks is anything new.  While 1960s parents and youth might have enjoyed the vitamin enriched Wonder Bread "helping grow bodies 12 ways" the trend toward fresher, and healthier, staples has been happening for 40 years.  In the 1980s when the company was known as Continental Baking profits were problematic, and it was clear that to keep what was then the nation's largest truck fleet profitable required new products as consumers were shifting to fresher "bake off" goods in the grocery store as well as brands promising more fiber and taste.  But despite these obvious trends, leadership continued trying to defend and extend the business rather than shift it.

These stories weren't "creative destruction."  They were simply bad leadership.  Decisions were made to do more of the same, when clearly something desperately different was needed! At the Harvard Business School Working Knowledge web site famed strategiest Michael Porter states "the granddaddy of all mistakes is competing to be the best, going down the same path as everybody else and thinking that somehow you can achieve better results."  Failure happened because the leaders were so internally focused they chose to ignore external inputs, trends, which would have driven better decisions!

In the 1980s Singer realized that the sewing machine market was destined to decline as women left homemaking for paying jobs, and as textile industry advances made purchased clothing cheaper than self-made.  Over a few years the company transitioned out of the traditional, but dying, business and became a very successful defense industry contractor!  Rather than letting itself be "creatively destroyed" Singer identified the market trends and moved from decline to growth!

Similarly, IBM almost failed as the computer market shifted from mainframes to PCs, but before all was lost (including jobs as well as investor value) leaders changed company focus from hardware to services and vertical market solutions allowing IBM to grow and thrive. 

The failure of Digital Equipment (DEC) at the same time was not "creative destruction" but company leadership unwillingness to shift from declining mini-computer and high priced workstation sales into new businesses.

More recently, over the last decade a nearly dead Apple resurrected itself by tying into the large trend for mobility, rather than focusing on its niche Mac product sales.  Company leaders took the company into consumer electronics (ipod, ipod touch,) tablet computing and cloud-based solutions (iPad) and mobile telephony with digital apps (iPhone.)  Apple had no legacy in any of these markets, but by linking to trends rather than fixating on past businesses "creative destruction" was avoided.

There are many businesses today that are in trouble because leaders simply won't pay attention to trends.  Avon, Sears and Barnes & Noble are three companies with limited futures simply because leaders seem unable to pull their heads out of the internal strategic planning sand and look at environmental trends in order to shift.

My favorite target is, of course, Microsoft.  Nobody thinks we will be carrying laptop PCs around in 5 years.  Yet, Microsoft has been unable to recognize the trend away from PCs and do anything effective.  Its efforts in music (Zune) and mobile handsets have been indifferent, insufficiently supported and mostly dropped.  Mr. Ballmer continues to speak about a long future for PC sales even as Q4 volume dropped 1.4% according to IDC and Gartner.  Even though everyone knows this trend is due to limited PC innovation and rapidly accelerating mobile-based solutions, Microsoft blamed the problem on, of all things, floods in Thailand that restricted manufacturing output.  Really.

We'll learn soon enough just how many jobs Bain Capital created, and killed.  But those lost were not due to "creative destruction."  They were due to leadership decisions to discontinue the business rather than invest in trends and transitioning to new markets.  Creative destruction is an easy excuse to avoid blaming leaders for failures caused by their unwillingness to recognize trends and take actions to invest in them which will create winning businesses.

Grow like (the) Amazon to Succeed – Invest outside your “core”


“It’s easier to succeed in the Amazon than on the polar tundra” Bruce Henderson, famed founder of The Boston Consulting Group, once told me.  “In the arctic resources are few, and there aren’t many ways to compete.  You are constantly depleting resources in life-or-death struggles with competitors.  Contrarily, in the Amazon there are multiple opportunities to grow, and multiple ways to compete, dramatically increasing your chances for success.  You don’t have to fight a battle of survival every day, so you can really grow.”

Today, Amazon(.com) is the place to be.  As the financial markets droop, fearful about the economy and America’s debt ceiling “crisis,” Amazon is achieving its highest valuation ever.  While the economy, and most companies, struggle to grow, Amazon is hitting record growth:

Amazon sales growth July 2011
Source: BusinessInsider.com

Sales are up 50% versus last year! The result of this impressive sales growth has been a remarkable valuation increase – comparable to Apple! 

  • Since 2009, valuation is up 5.5x
  • Over 5 years valuation is up 8x
  • Over the last decade Amazon’s value has risen 15x

How did Amazon do this?  Not by “sticking to its knitting” or being very careful to manage its “core.”  In 2001 Amazon was still largely an on-line book seller.

The company’s impressive growth has come by moving far from its “core” into new markets and new businesses – most far removed from its expertise.  Despite its “roots” and “DNA” being in U.S. books and retailing, the company has pioneered off-shore businesses and high-tech products that help customers take advantage of big trends.

Amazon’s earnings release provided insight to its fantastic growth.  Almost 50% of revenues lie outside the U.S.  Traditional retailers such as WalMart, Target, Kohl’s, Sears, etc. have struggled in foreign markets, and blamed poor performance on weak infrastructure and complex legal/tax issues.  But where competitors have seen obstacles, Amazon created opportunity to change the way customers buy, and change the industry using its game-changing technology and capabilities.  For its next move, according to Silicon Alley Insider, “Amazon is About to Invade India,” a huge retail market, in an economy growing at over 7%/year, with rising affluence and spendable income – but almost universally overlooked by most retailers due to weak infrastructure and complex distribution.

Amazon’s remarkable growth has occurred even though its “core” business of books has been declining – rather dramatically – the last decade.  Book readership declines have driven most independents, and large chains such as B. Dalton and more recently Borders, out of business. But rather than use this as an excuse for weak results, Amazon invested heavily in the trends toward digitization and mobility to launch the wildly successful Kindle e-Reader.  Today about half of all Amazon book sales are digital, creating growth where most competitors (hell-bent on trying to defend the old business) have dealt with stagnation and decline. 

Amazon did this without a background as a technology company, an electronics company, or a consumer goods company.  Additionally, Amazon invested in Kindle – and is now developing a tablet – even as these products cannibalized the historically “core” paper-based book sales.  And Amazon has pursued these market shifts, even though these new products create a significant threat to Amazon’s largest traditional suppliers – book publishers. 

Rather than trying to defend its old core business, Amazon has invested heavily in trends – even when these investments were in areas where Amazon had no history, capability or expertise!

Amazon has now followed the trends into a leading position delivering profitable “cloud” services.  Amazon Web Services (AWS) generated $500M revenue last year, is reportedly up 50% to $750M this year, and will likely hit $1B or more before next year.  In addition to simple data storage Amazon offers cloud-based Oracle database services, and even ERP (enterprise resource planning) solutions from SAP.  In cloud computing services Amazon now leads historically dominant IT services companies like Accenture, CSC, HP and Dell.  By offering solutions that fulfill the emerging trends, rather than competing head-to-head in traditional service areas, Amazon is growing dramatically and avoiding a gladiator war.  And capturing big sales and profits as the marketplace explodes.

Amazon created 5,300 U.S. jobs last quarter.  Organic revenue growth was 44%.  Cash flow increased 25%.  All because the company continued expanding into new markets, including not only new retail markets, and digital publishing, but video downloads and television streaming – including making a deal to deliver CBS shows and archive. 

Amazon’s willingness to go beyond conventional wisdom has been critical to its success.  GeekWire.com gives insight into how Amazon makes these critical resource decisions in “Jeff Bezos on Innovation” (taken from comments at a shareholder meeting June 7, 2011):

  • “you just have to place a bet.  If you place enough of those bets, and if you place them early enough, none of them are ever betting the company”
  • “By the time you are betting the company, it means you haven’t invented for too long”
  • “If you invent frequently and are willing to fail, then you never get to the point where you really need to bet the whole company”
  • “We are planting more seeds…everything we do will not work…I am never concerned about that”
  • “my mind never lets me get in a place where I think we can’t afford to take these bets”
  • “A big piece of the story we tell ourselves about who we are, is that we are willing to invent”

If you want to succeed, there are ample lessons at Amazon.  Be willing to enter new markets, be willing to experiment and learn, don’t play “bet the company” by waiting too long, and be willing to invest in trends – especially when existing competitors (and suppliers) are hesitant.

Start Early! Waiting is Expensive – Amazon v. Microsoft


Summary:

  • We like to think we can compete effectively by waiting on others to show us the market direction
  • You cannot make high rates of return with a “fast follower” strategy
  • Companies that constantly take innovations to market grow longer, and make higher rates of return
  • White Space allows you to learn, grow and be smart about when to get out while costs are low

“I want to be a fast follower.  Let somebody else carry the cost of learning what the market wants and what solutions work.  I plan to come in fast behind the leader and make more money by avoiding the investment.”  Have you ever heard someone talk this way?  It sounds so appealing.  Only problem is – it very rarely works!  Fast followers might gain share sometimes, but universally they have terrible margins.  Their sales come at an enormous investment cost.

Those who enter new markets early actually gain a lot, for little cost.  Take for example Amazon.com’s early entry into electronic publishing with Kindle.  Entering early gave Amazon a huge advantage.  Amazon may have appeared to be floundering, potentially “wasting” resources, but it was learning how the technology of e-Ink worked, how costs could be driven down and what users demanded in a solution.  Every quarter Amazon was learning how to find new uses for the Kindle, making it more viable, finding new customers, encouraging repeat purchases and growing.  Now Mediapost.com headlines “Review: New Kindle Kicks (Even Apple’s) B*tt.”

Now there are a raft of “fast followers” trying to catch the Kindle in the eReader market.  But the Kindle is far lighter, easier to use, with greater functionality and available at one of the market’s lowest prices.  While the cost of entry was low, Amazon learned immensely.  That knowledge is not repeatable by companies trying to now play “catch up” without spending multiples of what Amazon spent.  Amazon is so far in front of other eReaders that it’s competition is the vastly more sophisticated (and expensive) mobile devices from Apple (iPhone and iPad).  By entering early, Amazon has lower cost, and considerably more/better market knowledge, than later entrants.

We see this very clearly in Microsoft’s smart phone approach.  Microsoft got far behind in smart phones, losing over 2/3 its market share, as it focused on Windows 7 and Office 2010 the last 3 years while Resarch in Motion (RIM) Apple and Google pioneered the market.  Now the 3 leaders have millions of units in the market, low price point establishment, and between them somewhere between 400,000 and 500,000 mobile apps available. 

As reported in Mediapost.comMicrosoft Gets Serious with Windows 7 Phone” entering now is VERY expensive for Microsoft.  Microsoft spent almost $1billion on Kin, which it dropped after only a few months because the product was seriously unable to compete.  So now Microsoft is expecting to spend $500million on launch costs for a Windows 7 mobile operating system.  But it faces a daunting challenge, what with 350,000 or so iPhone apps in existence, and Google giving Android away for free (as well as sporting some 100,000 apps itself). 

The cost of entry, ignoring Microsoft’s technology development cost, to get the mindshare of developers for app development (so Windows 7 mobile doesn’t slip into the Palm or Blackberry problem of too few apps to be interesting) as well as minds of potential buyers will more likely cost well over $1B – just for communications!!  Microsoft now has to take share away from the market leaders – a very expensive proposition!  Like XBox marketing, these exorbitant marketing costs could well go on for several years.  XBox has had only 1 quarter near break-even, all others showing massive losses.  The same is almost guaranteed for the Windows 7 phone.  And it’s entering so late that it may never, even with all that money being spent, catch the two leaders!  Who are the new users that will come along, and what is Microsoft uniquely offering?  It’s expensive to buy mind and market share.

Clearly Apple and Android entered the smart phone market at vastly lower cost, and have developed what are already profitable businesses.  Microsoft will lose money, possibly for years, and may still fail – largely because it focused on its core products and chose to undertake a “fast follower” strategy in the high growth smart phone business.

We like to believe things that reinforce our behaviors.  We like to think that tortoises can outrun hares.  But that only happens when hares make foolish decisions.  Rarely in business are the early entrants foolish.  Most learn – a lot – at low cost.  They figure out where the early customers are with unmet needs, and how to fulfill those needs.  They learn how to identify ways to grow the business, manage costs and earn a profit.  And they learn at a much lower cost than late followers.  They capture mind and market share, and work hard to grow the business with new customers keeping them profitable and maintaining share.

We want to think that innovators bear a high risk.  But it’s simply not true.  Innovators take advantage of market learning to create revenues and profits at lower cost.  Companies that keep White Space projects flourishing, entering new markets generating growth, earn higher rates of return longer than any other strategy.  Just look at Cisco, Nike, Virgin, J&J and GE (until very recently).  The smart money gets into the game early, developing a winning approach — or getting out before the costs get too high!