Why Tesla Beats GM, Ford, Nissan

The last 12 months Tesla Motors stock has been on a tear.  From $25 it has more than quadrupled to over $100.  And most analysts still recommend owning the stock, even though the company has never made a net profit. 

There is no doubt that each of the major car companies has more money, engineers, other resources and industry experience than Tesla.  Yet, Tesla has been able to capture the attention of more buyers.  Through May of 2013 the Tesla Model S has outsold every other electric car – even though at $70,000 it is over twice the price of competitors! 

During the Bush administration the Department of Energy awarded loans via the Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Program to Ford ($5.9B), Nissan ($1.4B), Fiskar ($529M) and Tesla ($465M.)  And even though the most recent Republican Presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, called Tesla a "loser," it is the only auto company to have repaid its loan. And did so some 9 years early!  Even paying a $26M early payment penalty!

How could a start-up company do so well competing against companies with much greater resources?

Firstly, never underestimate the ability of a large, entrenched competitor to ignore a profitable new opportunity.  Especially when that opportunity is outside its "core." 

A year ago when auto companies were giving huge discounts to sell cars in a weak market I pointed out that Tesla had a significant backlog and was changing the industry.  Long-time, outspoken industry executive Bob Lutz – who personally shepharded the Chevy Volt electric into the market – was so incensed that he wrote his own blog saying that it was nonsense to consider Tesla an industry changer.  He predicted Tesla would make little difference, and eventually fail.

For the big car companies electric cars, at 32,700 units January thru May, represent less than 2% of the market.  To them these cars are simply not seen as important.  So what if the Tesla Model S (8.8k units) outsold the Nissan Leaf (7.6k units) and Chevy Volt (7.1k units)?  These bigger companies are focusing on their core petroleum powered car business.  Electric cars are an unimportant "niche" that doesn't even make any money for the leading company with cars that are very expensive!

This is the kind of thinking that drove Kodak.  Early digital cameras had lots of limitations.  They were expensive.  They didn't have the resolution of film.  Very few people wanted them.  And the early manufacturers didn't make any money.  For Kodak it was obvious that the company needed to remain focused on its core film and camera business, as digital cameras just weren't important. 

Of course we know how that story ended.  With Kodak filing bankruptcy in 2012.  Because what initially looked like a limited market, with problematic products, eventually shifted.  The products became better, and other technologies came along making digital cameras a better fit for user needs. 

Tesla, smartly, has not  tried to make a gasoline car into an electric car – like, say, the Ford Focus Electric.  Instead Tesla set out to make the best car possible.  And the company used electricity as the power source.  By starting early, and putting its resources into the best possible solution, in 2013 Consumer Reports gave the Model S 99 out of 100 points.  That made it not just the highest rated electric car, but the highest rated car EVER REVIEWED!

As the big car companies point out limits to electric vehicles, Tesla keeps making them better and addresses market limitations.  Worries about how far an owner can drive on a charge creates "range anxiety."  To cope with this Tesla not only works on battery technology, but has launched a program to build charging stations across the USA and Canada.  Initially focused on the Los-Angeles to San Franciso and Boston to Washington corridors, Tesla is opening supercharger stations so owners are never less than 200 miles from a 30 minute fast charge.  And for those who can't wait Tesla is creating a 90 second battery swap program to put drivers back on the road quickly.

This is how the classic "Innovator's Dilemma" develops.  The existing competitors focus on their core business, even though big sales produce ever declining profits.  An upstart takes on a small segment, which the big companies don't care about.  The big companies say the upstart products are pretty much irrelevant, and the sales are immaterial.  The big companies choose to keep focusing on defending and extending their "core" even as competition drives down results and customer satisfaction wanes.

Meanwhile, the upstart keeps plugging away at solving problems.  Each month, quarter and year the new entrant learns how to make its products better.  It learns from the initial customers – who were easy for big companies to deride as oddballs – and identifies early limits to market growth.  It then invests in product improvements, and market enhancements, which enlarge the market. 

Eventually these improvements lead to a market shift.  Customers move from one solution to the other.  Not gradually, but instead quite quickly.  In what's called a "punctuated equilibrium" demand for one solution tapers off quickly, killing many competitors, while the new market suppliers flourish.  The "old guard" companies are simply too late, lack product knowledge and market savvy, and cannot catch up.

  • The integrated steel companies were killed by upstart mini-mill manufacturers like Nucor Steel.  
  • Healthier snacks and baked goods killed the market for Hostess Twinkies and Wonder Bread. 
  • Minolta and Canon digital cameras destroyed sales of Kodak film – even though Kodak created the technology and licensed it to them. 
  • Cell phones are destroying demand for land line phones. 
  • Digital movie downloads from Netflix killed the DVD business and Blockbuster Video. 
  • CraigsList plus Google stole the ad revenue from newspapers and magazines.
  • Amazon killed bookstore profits, and Borders, and now has its sites set on WalMart. 
  • IBM mainframes and DEC mini-computers were made obsolete by PCs from companies like Dell. 
  • And now Android and iOS mobile devices are killing the market for PCs.

There is no doubt that GM, Ford, Nissan, et. al., with their vast resources and well educated leadership, could do what Tesla is doing.  Probably better.  All they need is to set up white space companies (like GM did once with Saturn to compete with small Japanese cars) that have resources and free reign to be disruptive and aggressively grow the emerging new marketplace.  But they won't, because they are busy focusing on their core business, trying to defend & extend it as long as possible.  Even though returns are highly problematic.

Tesla is a very, very good car. That's why it has a long backlog. And it is innovating the market for charging stations. Tesla leadership, with Elon Musk thought to be the next Steve Jobs by some, is demonstrating it can listen to customers and create solutions that meet their needs, wants and wishes.  By focusing on developing the new marketplace Tesla has taken the lead in the new marketplace.  And smart investors can see that long-term the odds are better to buy into the lead horse before the market shifts, rather than ride the old horse until it drops.

 

 

You Should Love, and Buy, Netflix – the next Apple or Google


Summary:

  • Most leaders optimize their core business
  • This does not prepare the business for market shifts
  • Motorola was a leader with Razr, but was killed when competitors matched their features and the market shifted to smart phones
  • Netflix's leader is moving Netflix to capture the next big market (video downloads)
  • Reed Hastings is doing a great job, and should be emulated
  • Netflix is a great growth story, and a stock worth adding to your portfolio

"Reed Hastings: Leader of the Pack" is how Fortune magazine headlined its article making the Netflix CEO its BusinessPerson of the Year for 2010.  At least part of Fortune's exuberance is tied to Netflix's dramatic valuation increase, up 200% in just the last year.  Not bad for a stock called a "worthless piece of crap" in 2005 by a Wedbush Securities stock analyst.  At the time, popular wisdom was that Blockbuster, WalMart and Amazon would drive Netflix into obscurity.  One of these is now gone (Blockbuster) the other stalled (WalMart revenues unmoved in 2010) and the other well into digital delivery of books for its proprietary Kindle eReader.

But is this an honor, or a curse?  It was 2004 when Ed Zander was given the same notice as the head of Motorola.  After launching the Razr he was lauded as Motorola's stock jumped in price.  But it didn't take long for the bloom to fall off that rose. Razr profits went negative as prices were cut to drive share increases, and a lack of new products drove Motorola into competitive obscurity.  A joint venture with Apple to create Rokr gave Motorola no new sales, but opened Apple's eyes to the future of smartphone technology and paved the way for iPhone.  Mr. Zander soon ran out of Chicago and back to Silicon Valley, unemployed, with his tale between his legs.

Netflix is a far different story from Motorola, and although its valuation is high looks like a company you should have in your portfolio. 

Ed Zander simply took Motorola further out the cell phone curve that Motorola had once pioneered.  He brought out the next version of something that had long been "core" to Motorola.  It was easy for competitors to match the "features and functions" of Razr, and led to a price war.  Mr. Zander failed because he did not recognize that launching smartphones would change the game, and while it would cannibalize existing cell phone sales it would pave the way for a much more profitable, and longer term greater growth, marketplace.

Looking at classic "S Curve" theory, Mr. Zander and Motorola kept pushing the wave of cell phones, but growth was plateauing as the technology was doing less to bring in new users (in the developed world):

Slide1
Meanwhile, Research in Motion (RIM) was pioneering a new market for smartphones, which was growing at a faster clip.  Apple, and later Google (with Android) added fuel to that market, causing it to explode.  The "old" market for cell phones fell into a price war as the growth, and profits, moved to the newer technology and product sets:

Slide2
The Motorola story is remarkably common.  Companies develop leaders who understand one market, and have the skills to continue optimizing and exploiting that market.  But these leaders rarely understand, prepare for and implement change created by a market shift.  Inability to see these changes brought down Silicon Graphics and Sun Microsystems in 2010, and are pressuring Microsoft today as users are rapidly moving from laptops to mobile devices and cloud computing.  It explains how Sony lost the top spot in music, which it dominated as a CD recording company and consumer electronics giant with Walkman, to Apple when the market moved people from physical CDs to MP3 files and Apple's iPod.

Which brings us back to what makes Netflix a great company, and Mr. Hastings a remarkable leader.  Netflix pioneered the "ship to your home" DVD rental business.  This helped eliminate the need for brick-and-mortar stores (along with other market trends such as the very inexpensive "Red Box" video kiosk and low-cost purchase options from the web.)  Market shifts doomed Blockbuster, which remained locked-in to its traditional retail model, made obsolete by competitors that were cheaper and easier with which to do business.

But Netflix did not remain fixated on competing for DVD rentals and sales – on "protecting its core" business.  Looking into the future, the organization could see that digital movie rentals are destined to be dramatically greater than physical DVDs.  Although Hulu was a small competitor, and YouTube could be scoffed at as a Gen Y plaything, Netflix studied these "fringe" competitors and developed a superb solution that was the best of all worlds.  Without abandoning its traditional business, Netflix calmly moved forward with its digital download business — which is cheaper than the traditional business and will not only cannibalize historical sales but make the traditional business completely obsolete!  

Although text books talk about "jumping the curve" from one product line to another, it rarely happens.  Devotion to the core business, and managing the processes which once led to success, keeps few companies from making the move.  When it happens, like when IBM moved from mainframes to services, or Apple's more recent shift from Mac-centric to iPod/iPhone/iPad, we are fascinated.  Or Google's move from search/ad placement company to software supplier.  While any company can do it, few do.  So it's no wonder that MediaPost.com headlines the Netflix transition story "Netflix Streams Its Way to Success."

Is Netflix worth its premium?  Was Apple worth its premium earlier this decade?  Was Google worth its premium during the first 3 years after its Initial Public Offering?  Most investors fear the high valuations, and shy away.  Reality is that when a company pioneers a growth business, the value is far higher than analysts estimate.  Today, many traditionalists would say to stay with Comcast and set-top TV box makers like TiVo.  But Comcast is trying to buy NBC in order to move beyond its shrinking subscriber base, and "TiVo Widens Loss, Misses Street" is the Reuters' headline. Both are clearly fighting the problems of "technology A" (above.)

What we've long accepted as the traditional modes of delivering entertainment are well into the plateau, while Netflix is taking the lead with "technology B."  Buying into the traditionalists story is, well, like buying General Motors.  Hard to see any growth there, only an ongoing, slow demise.

On the other hand, we know that increasingly young people are abandoning traditional programing for 100% entertainment selection by download.  Modern televisions are computer monitors, capable of immediately viewing downloaded movies from a tablet or USB drive – and soon a built-in wifi connection.  The growth of movie (and other video) watching is going to keep exploding – just as the volume of videos on YouTube has exploded.  But it will be via new distribution.  And nobody today appears close to having the future scenarios, delivery capability and solutions of Netflix.  24×7 Wall Street says Netflix will be one of "The Next 7 American Monopolies."  The last time somebody used that kind of language was talking about Microsoft in the 1980s!  So, what do you think that makes Netflix worth in 2012, or 2015?

Netflix is a great story.  And likely a great investment as it takes on the market leadership for entertainment distribution.  But the bigger story is how this could be applied to your company.  Don't fear revenue cannibalization, or market shift.  Instead, learn from, and behave like, Mr. Hastings.  Develop scenarios of the future to which you can lead your company.  Study fringe competitors for ways to offer new solutions. Be proactive about delivering what the market wants, and as the shift leader you can be remarkably well positioned to capture extremely high value.

 

 

“Another one bites the dust” (or 2) – Blockbuster, Nokia, Movie Gallery/Hollywood video


Summary:

  • Video retailer Blockbuster (and competitor Hollywood Video) are now bankrupt
  • Video rentals/sales are at an all time high – but via digital downloads not DVDs
  • Nokia, once the cell phone industry leader, is in deep trouble and risk of failure
  • Yet mobile use (calls, texts, internet access, email) is at an all time high
  • These companies are victims of locking-in to old business models, and missing a market shift
  • Commitment to defending your old business can cause failure, even when participating in high growth markets, if you don’t anticipate, embrace and participate in market shifts
  • Lock-in is deadly.  It can cause you to ignore a market shift. 

According to YahooNews,Blockbuster Video to File Chapter 11.”  In February, Movie Gallery – the owner of primary in-kind competitor Hollywood Video – filed for bankruptcy.  It’s now decided to liquidate.

The cause is market shift.  Netflix made it possible to rent DVDs without the cost of a store – as has the kiosk competitor Red Box.  But everyone knows that is just a stopgap, because Netflix and Hulu are leading us all toward a future where there is no physical product at all.  We’ll download the things we want to watch.  The market is shifting from physical items – video cassettes then DVDs – to downloads.  And both Blockbuster and Hollywood Video missed the shift. 

Blockbuster (or Hollywood) could have gotten into on-line renting, or kiosks, like its competition.  It even could have used profits to be an early developer of downloadable movies.  Nothing stopped Blockbuster from investing in YouTube.  Except it’s commitment to its Success Formula – as a brick-and-mortar retailer that rented or sold physically reproduced entertainment. Lock-in.  And for that commitment to its historical Success Formula the investors now will get a great big goose egg – and employees will get to be laid off – and the thousands of landlords will be left in the lurch, unprepared. 

As predictable as Blockbuster was, we can be equally sure about the future of former powerhouse Nokia.  Details are provided in the BusinessWeek.com article “How Nokia Fell from Grace.” As the cell phone business exploded in the 1990s Nokia was a big winner.  Revenues grew fivefold between 1996 and 2001 as people around the globe gobbled up the new devices.  Another example of the fact that when you enter a high growth market you don’t have to be good – just in the right market at the right time.

But the cell phone business has become the mobile device business.  And Nokia didn’t anticipate, prepare for or participate in the market shift.  From market dominance, it has become an also-ran.  The article author blames the failure, and decline, on complacent management.  Weak explanation.  You can be sure the leadership and management at Nokia was doing all it possibly could to Defend & Extend its cell phone business.  The problem is that D&E management doesn’t work when customers simply walk away to a new technology.  It may take a few years, and government subsidies may extend Nokia’s life even longer, but Nokia has about as much chance of surviving its market shift as Blockbuster did.

When companies stumble management sees the problems.  They know results are faltering.  But for decades management has been trained to think that the proper response is to “knuckle down, cut costs, defend the current business at all cost.”  Yet, there are more movies rented now than ever – and Blockbuster is failing despite enormous market growth.  There are more mobile telephony minutes, text messages, remote emails and mobile internet searches than ever in history – yet Nokia is doing remarkably poorly.  It’s not a market problem, it’s a problem of Lock-in to a solution that is now outdated.  When the old supplier didn’t give the market what it wanted, the customers went elsewhere.  And unwillingness to go with them has left these companies in tatters.

These markets are growing, yet the purveyors of old solutions are failing primarily because they stuck to defending their old business too long. They did not embrace the market shift, and cannibalize historical product sales to enter the new, higher growth markets.  Because they chose to protect their “core,” they failed.  New victims of Lock-in.

Adopt Market Shifts – Television, Telephone, Apple’s new products


Summary:

  • Market shifts create losers, and winners
  • Demand doesn’t decline, it just changes form – and usually grows!
  • We want more entertainment and communcation – but not the old fashioned way
  • Losers keep trying to sell what they have, and know
  • Winners supply solutions aligned with market needs regardless of old competencies

How would you react if your customers said your product really wasn’t something they needed?  Would you work hard to convince them they are wrong?  Maybe try to add some features hoping it would regain their attention?  Or would you start looking for what they really do need/want?

Pew Research Center, at PewSocialTrends.org headlines “The Fading Glory of the Television and Telephone” describing how quickly people are walking away from what were very recently considered absolute necessities. As a “boomer” and member of the “TV generation” I was surprised to read that only 42% of Americans now think a television is a necessity!  This has been a rapid, dramatic decline from 52% last year and 64% in 2006!  1 in 5 Americans have changed their point of view about television as a necessity in just 4 years!  And TV as a necessity is in an accelerating decline!  I can remember when my generation went from 1 TV in the house to 1 in every room!  This trend does not bode well for broadcast television networks, affiliates, advertisers, traditional production companies, television newscasters, manufacturers of TV sets and TV equipment – or many other businesses linked to TV as we know it.

Simultaneously, demand for a land line telephone  has declined.  Again, my generation remembers the days with one phone in the house – in some areas on a shared “party” line where multiple families shared a single phone line.  The phone was in a central area so it could be shared.  In the 1970s we saw things change as telephones were added to every room!  Now, according to Pew, folks who consider a land-line phone a necessity has declined to only 62%, a 10% decline from just last year (68 to 62) and barely 3 in 5 Americans!  Wow! 

Of course, for every decline there’s a winner.  47% see the cell phone as a necessity – that’s 5 percentage points greater than the TV score, indicating mobile phones are seen as more of a necessity than television by the general population.  And 34% see high speed internet as a necessity – only 9 percentage points fewer than the TV number – and more than half who see the need for a land-line phone. 

Demand for entertainment and communication have not declined!  If you are in television or land lines you might think so.  Rather, that demand is accelerating.  But it is just shifting to a different solution.  Instead of the old technology, and supplier industry, people are changing to something new.  First with video cassetttes, then digital video recorders (DVRs), then the plethora of available cable channels and on-demand TV, and now with on-line entertainment from YouTube to Hulu people have been changing the way they consume entertainment.  Demand has gone up, but not from traditional consumption of TV, especially as viewing has switched from the TV to the computer monitor – or the hand held device.

Clearly, access to the internet (facebook, twitter, et.al.), texting and anytime/anywhere calling has increased both our access and use of one-way (such as reading web pages) and two way communication.  Communication is continuing to grow, but it will be in a different way.  No longer do we need a “dial tone” to communicate – and in most instances people are finding a preference to asynchronous rather than real-time communication.

These are the kind of industry transitions that threaten so many businesses.  What Clayton Christensen calls “The Innovator’s Dilemma” as new solutions increase demand while making old solutions obsolete.  The tendency is for the supplier of traditional solutions to say “my market is in decline.”  But really, the market is growing!  Just like Kodak said the demand for film was declining, when demand for photography – now in digital format – was (and is) escalating!  When market shifts happen, incumbents have to resist the temptation to try “keeping” the “old customers” by undertaking Defend & Extend efforts – like adding features and functionality, while cutting price.  This inevitably leads to disaster!  Instead, they have to understand the shift is only going to accelerate, and develop an approach to entering the new market.

As this research comes out, Apple launched a series of new products to augment its set-top box and iPod/iTouch product lines. (San Francisco Chronicle, SFGate.comSteve JobsUnveils Upgraded Apple TV, New iPods“)  by doing so Apple recognizes that people still want entertainment – but they are a whole lot less likely to accept sitting in front of a communal television, serially deploying programming at them.  They want their entertainment to be on-demand, and personalized.  Why should we all watch the same thing?  And why watch what some programmer at CBS, HBO or TMC wants to deliver? 

Apple is bringing out products that align with the direction the market is now heading. Ping is designed to help people share program information and identify the entertainment you would like to receive.  iTunes is upgrading to bring you in bite-size chunks exactly the entertainment you want, as you want it, aurally or visually.  These are products which will grow because they are aligned with what the market says it wants — even more entertainment.  Those who are hidebound to the old supply mechanism will simply find themselves fighting for declining revenue as demand shifts – and grows – in the new solutions

Shift Happens – Fast – telephony


Summary:

  • Trends happen much faster than we expect
  • Old solutions disappear much faster than we anticipate
  • Early adopters are big winners, suppliers who expect markets to last longer are killed in end-stage price wars
  • We can anticipate the failure of land line phones in just a few years (as declining demand makes infrastructure maintenance too costly)
  • There are a lot of other changes coming very quickly, more quickly than many of us anticipate – putting those who are late to change at risk of survival

How long do you think you’ll keep a land-line based telephone?  From the looks of things, it may be only another year or two.  They may be as popular as an old-fashioned printing press in just 5 years.

Land line wireless substitution 6.10
Source:  Silicon Alley Insider from BusinessInsider.com

As the chart shows, already about a third of Americans have discontinued their land lines.  And, we can see the trend is accelerating.  This doesn’t count people that have one, but have quit using it.  From about half of a percent dropping their line each quarter early in 2007, by 2009 the trend had increased to 1.2 to 1.5 percent dropping their land lines quarterly.  And that’s normal – trends accelerate – much faster than incumbent technology suppliers predict.

Mobile phones started out with limited use.  They were big, and had short battery life.  It was sketchy if transmission quality would be good enough to hear or talk.  They were expensive to use, and had limited service areas.  In the early days, only people who had a big need used them.  It took a few years before adoption grew to where most people had one.  But then, in the last 5 years, it has become clear that almost everyone has one.  Even the old and elderly.  And many people have two – one for personal and one for business. 

When trends begin they are easy to discount.  Early versions are less good than the current solution.  Costs are high.  But early adopters have a reason to pick up the new solution.  There is some kind of unmet need that the solution fits.  From that small base, the products improve.  Most incumbent suppliers plot out a linear curve adoption curve, and expect dropping of the old solution to be some time way out in the future.

But improvements to the “fringe” solution come faster than incumbents – and even big users of incumbent technologies – expect.  Adoption starts growing faster.  Yet, the incumbent supplier will listen to big customers and expect people to keep their solutions for a long time as they gradually adopt the new:

  • People will have an automobile, but they’ll hang onto the horse and buggy because roads are so poor
  • He may buy a new copier, but he’ll keep the mimeo machine “just in case”
  • Folks will get a phone, and email, but they’ll keep writing letters and thus need a postman daily
  • People may buy refrigerators, but they’ll keep the icebox and want weekly ice delivery
  • Readers will skim the web for news, but they’ll want to keep reading a daily newspaper
  • PCs will be popular, but folks will hang onto that old typewriter “maybe to type envelopes or something”
  • Installing spreadsheets on company PC’s will not eliminate the need for adding machines “for when we need the tape”
  • Digital cameras will be convenient, but users will want the film camera for picture prints
  • Installing a DVR will not eliminate the videocassette player because people “still may want to watch old tapes some day”
  • People will keep their cassette players, and DVD players, even as they buy a new MP3 player because they will want to listen to the purchased collections

Actually, once someone adopts the new solution, they rapidly find no need for the old solution.  It goes to the closet, and then the trash, quickly.  And from a market perspective, once a third to a half the customers quit using a product it will disappear from use almost overnight.  From that perspective, those who depend upon traditional land line phones have plenty to worry about.  Because we’re near a third.  And smart phones keep adding more capability every month – the iPhone now has almost 300,000 apps, and Android phones have over 100,000!  It’s easy to see where the functionality, ease of use and ubiquitousness of mobile phones could make the old land line a waste of money within just 24 months!

So, what will happen to bill collectors and political phone ads (robocalls), when we quit using land lines?  Along with the loss of land lines is the loss of the traditional phone book to find people.  When will the cost of maintaining the poles and lines become so high, relative to the number of users, that we simply take them down to recycle the material?  Lots of things change when growth begins to decline for land-lines, causing the decline to happen more quickly.  And changing how we all get things done – as consumers and as businesses.  Are you prepared?

The tendency is to think change will happen slowly.  It doesn’t.  When markets shift it happens quickly.  Much more quickly than the entrenched competitor expects.  The “experts” always say the demand for the old will last much longer than happens.  He hopes to have a long life, clipping coupons, across a “maturing” market.  Instead, demand falls rapidly and remaining competitors go into price wars trying to stay alive – hoping the market will some day return to the old way of doing things.  Those who didn’t anticipate the shift rapidly run out of cash, and fail. 

Are you ready for impending market shifts?  How prepared are you for a world where

  • We don’t print anything, because everyone has some kind of on-line digital document reader.  Not just books and magazines, but user instructions, warranty info, etc.
  • We don’t need cash because we can Paypal transact anything using our smartphone
  • Doctors can monitor all your vital statistics real time, remotely, 24x7x365.  Manufacturers can monitor use of their products 24x7x365
  • So much retail is on-line that the amount of retail floor space declines 40%
  • You can regrow a finger, or organ, if it is damaged
  • Television and radio aren’t serially broadcast, you organize what you want when you want it.  There are no “commercials” in content delivery
  • The primary way of communicating with friends and colleagues is Facebook and Twitter – forget text except for only very private communications