Are you a player, or a spectator? – Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Intel


Things are changing pretty fast in the “tech” world.  PCs are losing market share to fast growing platforms like smartphones and tablets.  New competitors are becoming a lot stronger as data and applications move from corporate servers and laptops/desktops to cloud computing.  Erudite journal The Economist has declaredThe End of Wintel.”  It’s now considered a foregone conclusion by experts globally that how we interact with digital information is moving into a new era that will not be dominated by the old Microsoft Windows + Intel platform that practically monopolized the last 15 years.

So, what are you doing to prepare?  Some people will choose to react when they are forced to.  Unfortunately, that will allow faster moving competitors to gain an advantage.  Those that adopt these new technologies will reach customers faster, and more accurately for their needs, than businesses that delay.  It’ll be hard to compete blasting out ads on billboards, or even computer browsers, when your competition reaches out and tells a customer, on their cellphone using technology from a company like Foursquare that if they stop in – just around the corner – the customer can get a free product. 

According to The Wall Street Journal this is already happening in “Getting Customers to ‘Check In’ with Foursquare.”  All a customer has to do is offer a review on the mobile site, possibly bringing in one of their friends that is a block away.  While you’re waiting for customers to read your ad (traditional media or internet), the competition might well have reached 100 new users!

The next option is to begin using the technology.  And that would be a great start!  Develop some future scenarios, figure out how to beat your competition, Disrupt your old spending and behavior patterns and set up a White Space team charged with figuring out how to update your Success Formula.

But the really big winners go even further.  Take for example Amazon.com.  This less than 20 year old company started as an on-line book retailer.  They’ve gone a lot further, building a $44B revenue stream selling more than books.  In fact, selling stuff for other people as well as themselves.  But beyond that, Amazon is revolutionizing publishing by developing and selling the Kindle as a digital toolkit.  As people go further along the trail of moving to mobile devices and the cloud, Kindle has begun offering a range of web services to host data and applications.

Amazon web services revenue 8.10
Source: Business Insider

Amazon will achieve $500M revenue this year in web services – after just 4 years of business.  And could achieve $1B in a year or two!  By participating aggressively in the marketplace, Amazon is creating significant revenue that other retailers – such as WalMart, Target, Home Depot or Sears – isn’t even touching.  While this has nothing to do with what others might call Amazon’s “core business,” this will continue to build insight to the marketplace, allowing Amazon to further grow all aspects of its revenue!  What could be more important than being knowledgeable about web services?

You may not think of yourself as an electronics firm, so you shy away from implementing computer-like hardwareBut you shouldn’t think that way.  Today mobile chips from ARM, and soon from Intel, will be so cheap you can include them in any item over $100.  Soon any item over $20.  How much better could you connect with your customers if the product you sold had the equivalent of a cheap smartphone installed?  You could learn how your product is used very quickly, and develop new solutions before customers even think to ask for them!  

Too often, as I wrote in my Forbes column (Stop Focusing on Your Core Business), we think about our “core business” in such a way that it keeps us from doing new things.  As a result, less constrained competitors figure out how to provide more powerful solutions that are more profitable.  Focusing on your “core” can keep you from doing the things that are most important for future growth!

The change in technology is not an “if” proposition.  Just like we moved away from mainframes, and then minicomputers, eventually to PCs we are going toward a fully connected world of cheap hardware hooking into the cloud where everyone can access data and applications.  How will you participate?  You won’t be able to compete if you “opt out.”  If you are a spectator you can expect the Amazon-like competitors to build a big leg-up.  The winners will be those who really become players. And that means pushing your scenarios to really discuss what the year 2015 could bring, study how you can leapfrog competitors, and see how you can disrupt your approach – then implement with White Space teams – to be a big winner.

“Enterprise Customer” risk – RIM Blackberry and Apple iPhone

The second step of The Phoenix Principle is "Obsess about Competitors."  This doesn't rile people up much.  But when I tell them "I want you to dramatically cut the time you talk to and listen to customers – and invest that investigating competitors" then LOTS of people get riled up.  When I wrote a Forbes column on the topic ("Listen to Competitors – Not Customers") I was inundated with comments – most of them not too kind.  People were upset that I would attack the widely held notion that you can't spend enough time listening to customers.

There are lots of examples of companies led down the primrose path to disaster by listening to customers.  One of my favorites is that IBM got out of the PC business by the latter half of the 1980s because their customers – data center managers – told them that they could see no need for PCs and the product was a waste of resources.  IBM needed to renew its focus on data center (real computing!) needs and quit playing with that toy! 

We have another great example emerging right now in mobile devices. RIM (Research in Motion) has focused on the "enterprise marketplace" by selling hard to corporations that they should have Blackberry servers and Blackberry corporate applications which can be supported well and have the "right kind" of security and features for a typical "enterprise" IT department.  Because of this, RIM has really put all of its money into supporting "enterprise" customers, doing what they want.  But meanwhile, Apple has been busy changing the game – by giving the market what it wants and targeting the destruction of Palm rather than doing what the "enterprise customers" have asked for.

Apple v RIM apps
Source: Silicon Alley Insider

RIM's focus on its "core customer" the "enterprise customer" has been intended to make sure the Blackberry Defends & Extends its leadership position.  But that has not yielded many apps.  Even Adroid has 6x the RIM apps (and a likely launch an attack on "enterprise customers" soon.) Meanwhile, by focusing on the marketplace, and discovering unmet and underserved needs in order to wipe out Palm, Apple has developed 34X the number of RIM apps.

Alpple V RIM market share march 2010
Source:  Silicon Alley Insider

As we can see, this difference in applications has let Apple blow right by Palm – and almost catch RIM.  And of course, that will now be the next market Apple will attack.  Just like the PC attacked the old data center, the iPhone (and iPad) and all its users will drive these products into every day business useWhile RIM was "listening to its customer" it missed a major change in the marketplace.  The requirement for multiple apps.  While RIM was attempting to Defend & Extend its market position – and probably bragging about holding share while Palm was getting creamed – it was letting Apple create the market shift that is soon going to overtake RIM and Blackberry.  Don't forget, you can obtain a Blackberry from almost any network provider – so what will happen when the iPhone and iPad become move beyond limited distribution to all network providers?

This customer-centric problem is most pronounced in "enterprise" solutions.  Like IBM, which was the #1 "enterprise" vendor for corporate computing.  The notion of selling to the "enterprise" connotes big sales, with big revenues to big companies – and it is assumed big profits will result.  Yet, what really happens is that often supporting the "enterprise" marketplace ends up being a never ending effort to make small improvements to existing products in order to help the "core customer" do one more small thing – making their life easy.  While the "enterprise" vendor is busy with this work, he ends up Defending & Extending his "base" product for his "base" customers – and the customers are trying to Defend & Extend their historical investment.  But eventually these "enterprise" customers shift – usually very fast.

Meanwhile Apple is in the marketplace, paying all kinds of attention to the weaknesses of competitors and picking them off – one by one.  First Palm, then RIM.  We spend too much time listening to customers, letting them convince us to Defend & Extend our products and solutions.  We need to spend a LOT MORE time focused on competition – figuring out how to ruin their day while developing fringe opportunities that change the marketplace and drive growth!

Looking for Winners – Dell

It's easy to recognize a company in the winner's circle.  Like Apple or Google.  Most of us want to know how to spot the winners early.  And that can be hard, because often the reported information will make an emerging winner sound horrible.  Like the expected demise of Apple in 2000.

Last week Dell reported sales and earnings, and valuation fell (Marketwatch.com "Dell Shares Fall as Company Net Slips").  The article notes that sales were "surprisingly strong," but claims that a dip in profits was bad news sending the stock price downward.  Of particular concern was a lack of growth in desktop PCs.  Many analysts are expecting (I should say hoping) that System 7 is going to spur additional desktop sales and are upset that Dell isn't getting "its fair share" versus Hewlett Packard.

This is entirely the wrong way to evaluate Dell's results.  Simultaneously, the Mobile unit had very strong performance.  As did Services, greatly aided by the Perot acquisition.  As I blogged months ago, Dell has started moving in a new direction.  Toward the growth markets of mobile devices and the need to build out applications using Cloud computing architectures.  These markets are certain to grow in the future.  Meanwhile, desktop PC sales are destined to decline.  There is no doubt about this.

Dell has been undertaking some Disruptions, and using White Space to develop and go to market with new products in these newer, growing markets.  Amidst this effort, it has put less money into the hotly contested and profit-margin-declining old fashioned PC business.  This is clearly the right move.  If Dell is the first and strongest to transition to new markets it has the best chance of regaining old growth rates.  For Dell, the best thing possible is to see it growing beyond anticipation in these markets. 

Some analysts complained that both mobile and services are too small as businesses at Dell, and therefore the company needs to put more resources (meaning price actions) into traditional PCs.  These same analysts will lambaste Dell when the market shift is completely pronounced and the traditionalist (which now appears to be HP) is left in decline.  Dell has used White Space to begin launching products.  If it uses these White Space efforts to learn the company can become smart, faster than other competitors, and "jump the curve" from its old business/market to the new one.  Isn't that what every business needs to do?

What we want to see now is ongoing investment in these growth markets,
with breakout products that can make a big revenue difference.
  White
Space is good, but it is critical that Dell invest fast and smart to
replace old revenues as quickly as possible.

I was encouraged by Dell's results.  The company is growing where it needs to, and de-emphasizing businesses that can become slaughterhouses.  For investors, employees and suppliers this is a good thing.  When companies are using White Space it is easy to beat them up and ask them to "refocus" on traditional markets.  It also can kill them.  Here's hoping Dell stays on track.