Will Meg Whitman’s Layoffs Turn Around HP? Nope

Things are bad at HP these days.  CEO and Board changes have confused the management team and investors alike.  Despite a heritage based on innovation, the company is now mired in low-growth PC markets with little differentiation.  Investors have dumped the stock, dropping company value some 60% over two years, from $52/share to $22 – a loss of about $60billion. 

Reacting to the lousy revenue growth prospects as customers shift from PCs to tablets and smartphones, CEO Meg Whitman announced plans to eliminate 27,000 jobs; about 8% of the workforce.  This is supposedly the first step in a turnaround of the company that has flailed ever since buying Compaq and changing the company course into head-to-head PC competition a decade ago.  But, will it work? 

Not a chance.

Fixing HP requires understanding what went wrong at HP.  Simply, Carly Fiorina took a company long on innovation and new product development and turned it into the most industrial-era sort of company.  Rather than having HP pursue new technologies and products in the development of new markets, like the company had done since its founding creating the market for electronic testing equipment, she plunged HP into a generic manufacturing war.

Pursuing the PC business Ms. Fiorina gave up R&D in favor of adopting the R&D of Microsoft, Intel and others while spending management resources, and money, on cost management.  PCs offered no differentiation, and HP was plunged into a gladiator war with Dell, Lenovo and others to make ever cheaper, undifferentiated machines.  The strategy was entirely based upon obtaining volume to make money, at a time when anyone could buy manufacturing scale with a phone call to a plethora of Asian suppliers.

Quickly the Board realized this was a cutthroat business primarily requiring supply chain skills, so they dumped Ms. Fiorina in favor of Mr. Hurd.  He was relentless in his ability to apply industrial-era tactics at HP, drastically cutting R&D, new product development, marketing and sales as well as fixating on matching the supply chain savings of companies like Dell in manufacturing, and WalMart in retail distribution. 

Unfortunately, this strategy was out of date before Ms. Fiorina ever set it in motion.  And all Mr. Hurd accomplished was short-term cuts that shored up immediate earnings while sacrificing any opportunities for creating long-term profitable new market development.  By the time he was forced out HP had no growth direction.  It's PC business fortunes are controlled by its suppliers, and the PC-based printer business is dying.  Both primary markets are the victim of a major market shift away from PC use toward mobile devices, where HP has nothing.

HPs commitment to an outdated industrial era supply-side manufacturing strategy can be seen in its acquisitions.  What was once the world's leading IT services company, EDS, was bought in 2008 after falling into financial disarray as that market shifted offshore.  After HP spent nearly $14B on the purchase, HP used that business to try defending and extending PC product sales, but to little avail.  The services group has been downsized regularly as growth evaporated in the face of global trends toward services offshoring and mobile use.

In 2009 HP spent almost $3B on networking gear manufacturer 3Com.  But this was after the market had already started shifting to mobile devices and common carriers, leaving a very tough business that even market-leading Cisco has struggled to maintain.  Growth again stagnated, and profits evaporated as HP was unable to bring any innovation to the solution set and unable to create any new markets.

In 2010 HP spent $1B on the company that created the hand-held PDA (personal digital assistant) market – the forerunner of our wirelessly connected smartphones – Palm.  But that became an enormous fiasco as its WebOS products were late to market, didn't work well and were wholly uncompetitive with superior solutions from Apple and Android suppliers.  Again, the industrial-era strategy left HP short on innovation, long on supply chain, and resulted in big write-offs.

Clearly what HP needs is a new strategy.  One aligned with the information era in which we live.  Think like Apple, which instead of chasing Macs a decade ago shifted into new markets.  By creating new products that enhanced mobility Apple came back from the brink of complete failure to spectacular highs.  HP needs to learn from this, and pursue an entirely new direction.

But, Meg Whitman is certainly no Steve Jobs.  Her career at eBay was far from that of an innovator.  eBay rode the growth of internet retailing, but was not Amazon.  Rather, instead of focusing on buyers, and what they want, eBay focused on sellers – a classic industrial-era approach.  eBay has not been a leader in launching any new technologies (such as Kindle or Fire at Amazon) and has not even been a leader in mobile applications or mobile retail. 

While CEO at eBay Ms. Whitman purchased PayPal.  But rather than build that platform into the next generation transaction system for web or mobile use, Paypal was used to defend and extend the eBay seller platform.  Even though PayPal was the first leader in on-line payments, the market is now crowded with solutions like Google Wallets (Google,) Square (from a Twitter co-founder,) GoPayment (Intuit) and Isis (collection of mobile companies.) 

Had Ms. Whitman applied an information-era strategy Paypal could have been a global platform changing the way payment processing is handled.  Instead its use and growth has been limited to supporting an historical on-line retail platform.  This does not bode well for the future of HP.

HP cannot save its way to prosperity.  That never works.  Try to think of one turnaround where it did – GM? Tribune Corp? Circuit City? Sears?  Best Buy? Kodak?  To successfully turn around HP must move – FAST – to innovate new solutions and enter new markets.  It must change its strategy to behave a lot more like the company that created the oscilliscope and usher in the electronics age, and a lot less like the industrial-era company it has become – destroying shareholder value along the way.

Is HP so cheap that it's a safe bet.  Not hardly.  HP is on the same road as DEC, Wang, Lanier, Gateway Computers, Sun Microsystems and Silicon Graphics right now.  And that's lousy for investors and employees alike.

OOPS! 5 CEOs that Should Have Already Been Fired (Cisco, GE, WalMart, Sears, Microsoft)

This has been quite the week for CEO mistakes.  First was all the hubbub about Scott Thompson, CEO of Yahoo, inflating his resume to include a computer science degree he did not actually receive.  According to Mr. Thompson someone at a recruiting firm added that degree claim in 2005, he didn't know it and he's never read his bio since.  A simple oversight, if you can believe he hasn't once read his bio in 7 years, and he didn't think it was ever important to correct someone who introduced him or mentioned it.  OOPS – the easy answer for someone making several million dollars per year, and trying to guide a very troubled company from the brink of failure. Hopefully he is more persistent about checking company facts.

But luckily for him, his errors were trumped on Thursday when Jamie Dimon, CEO of J.P.MorganChase notified the world that the bank's hedging operation messed up and lost $2B!!  OOPS!  According to Mr. Dimon this is really no big deal. Which reminded me of the apocryphal Senator Everett Dirksen statement "a billion here, a billion there and pretty soon it all adds up to real money!" 

Interesting "little" mistake from a guy who paid himself some $50M a few years ago, and benefitted greatly from the government TARP program.  He said this would be "fodder for pundits," as if we all should simply overlook losing $2B?  He also said this was "unfortunate timing."  As if there's a good time to lose $2B? 

But neither of these problems will likely result in the CEOs losing their jobs.  As obviously damaging as both mistakes are, which would naturally have caused us mere employees to instantly lose our jobs – and potentially be prosecuted – CEOs are a rare breed who are allowed wide lattitude  in their behavior.  These are "one off" events that gain a lot of attention, but the media will have forgotten within a few days, and everyone else within a few months.

By comparison, there are at least 5 CEOs that make these 2 mistakes appear pretty small.  For these 5, frequently honored for their position, control of resources and personal wealth, they are doing horrific damage to their companies, hurting investors, employees, suppliers and the communities that rely on their organizations.  They should have been fired long before this week.

#5 – John Chambers, Cisco Systems.  Mr. Chambers is the longest serving CEO on this list, having led Cisco since 1995 and championed much of its rapid growth as corporations around the world began installing networks.  Cisco's stock reached $70/share in 2001.  But since then a combination of recessions that cut corporate IT budgets and a market shift to cloud computing has left Cisco scrambling for a strategy, and growth.

Mr. Chambers appears to have been great at operating Cisco as long as he was in a growth market.  But since customers turned to cloud computing and greater use of mobile telephony networks Cisco has been unable to innovate, launch and grow new markets for cloud storage, services or applications.  Mr. Chambers has reorganized the company 3 times – but it has been much like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.  Lots of confusion, but no improvement in results.

Between 2001 and 2007 the stock lost half its value, falling to $35.  Continuing its slide, since 2007 the stock has halved again, now trading around $17.  And there is no sign of new life for Cisco – as each earnings call reinforces a company lacking a strategy in a shifting market.  If ever there was a need for replacing a stayed-in-the-job too long CEO it would be Cisco.

#4 – Jeffrey Immelt, General Electric (GE).  GE has only had 9 CEOs in its 100+ year life.  But this last one has been a doozy.  After more than a decade of rapid growth in revenue, profits and valuation under the disruptive "neutron" Jack Welch, GE stock reached $60 in 2000.  Which turns out to have been the peak, as GE's value has gone nowhere but down since Mr. Immelt took the top job.

GE was once known for entering and changing markets, unafraid to disrupt how the market performed with innovation in products, supply chain and operations.  There was no market too distant, or too locked-in for GE to not find a way to change to its advantage – and profit.  But what was the last market we saw GE develop?  What has Mr. Immelt, in his decade at the top of GE, done to keep GE as one of the world's most innovative, high growth companies?  He has steered the ship away from trouble, but it's only gone in circles as it's used up fuel. 

From that high in 2001, GE fell to a low of $8 in 2009 as the financial crisis revealed that under Mr. Immelt GE had largely transitioned from a manufacturing and products company into a financial house.  He had taken what was then the easy road to managing money, rather than managing a products and services company.  Saved from bankruptcy by a lucrative Berkshire Hathaway, GE lived on.  But it's stock is still only $19, down 2/3 from when Mr. Immelt took the CEO position. 

"Stewardship" is insufficient leadership in 2012.  Today markets shift rapidly, incur intensive global competition and require constant innovation.  Mr. Immelt has no vision to propel GE's growth, and should have been gone by 2010, rather than allowed to muddle along with middling performance.

#3 – Mike Duke, WalMart.  Mr. Duke has been CEO since 2009, but prior to that he was head of WalMart International.  We now know Mr. Duke's business unit saw no problems with bribing foreign officials to grow its business.  Just on the basis of knowing about illegal activity, not doing anything about it (and probably condoning and recommending more,) and then trying to change U.S. law to diminish the legal repurcussions, Mr. Duke should have long ago been fired. 

It's clear that internally the company and its Board new Mr. Duke was willing to do anything to try and grow WalMart, even if unethical and potentially illegal.  Recollections of Enron's Jeff Skilling, Worldcom's Bernie Ebbers and Hollinger's Conrdad Black should be in our heads.  How far do we allow leaders to go before holding them accountable?

But worse, not even bribes will save WalMart as Mr. Duke follows a worn-out strategy unfit for competition in 2012.  The entire retail market is shifting, with much lower cost on-line companies offering more selection at lower prices.  And increasingly these companies are pioneering new technologies to accelerate on-line shopping with easy to use mobile devices, and new apps that make shopping, paying and tracking deliveries easier all the time.  But WalMart has largely eschewed the on-line world as its CEO has doggedly sticks with WalMart doing more of the same.  That pursuit has limited WalMart's growth, and margins, while the company files further behind competitively. 

Unfortunately, WalMart peaked at about $70 in 2000, and has been flat ever since.  Investors have gained nothing from this strategy, while employees often work for wages that leave them on the poverty line and without benefits.  Scandals across all management layers are embarrassing. Communities find Walmart a mixed bag, initially lowering prices on some goods, but inevitably gutting the local retailers and leaving the community with no local market suppliers.  WalMart needs an entirely new strategy to remain viable – and that will not come from Mr. Duke.  He should have been gone long before the recent scandal, and surely now.

#2 Edward Lampert, Sears Holdings.  OK, Mr. Lampert is the Chairman and not the CEO – but there is no doubt who calls the shots at Sears.  And as Mr. Lampert has called the shots, nobody has gained.

Once the most critical force in retailing, since Mr. Lampert took over Sears has become wholly irrelevant.  Hoping that Mr. Lampert could make hay out of the vast real estate holdings, and once glorious brands Craftsman, Kenmore and Diehard to turn around the struggling giant, the stock initially took off rising from $30 in 2004 to $170 in 2007 as Jim Cramer of "Mad Money" fame flogged the stock over and over on his rant-a-thon show.  But when it was clear results were constantly worsening, as revenues and same-store-sales kept declining, the stock fell out of bed dropping into the $30s in 2009 and again in 2012. 

Hope springs eternal in the micro-managing Mr. Lampert.  Everyone knows of his personal fortune (#367 on Forbes list of billionaires.)  But Mr. Lampert has destroyed Sears.  The company may already be so far gone as to be unsavable.  The stock price is based upon speculation of asset sales.  Mr. Lampert had no idea, from the beginning, how to create value from Sears and he surely should have been gone many months ago as the hyped expectations demonstrably never happened.

#1 – Steve Ballmer, Microsoft.  Without a doubt, Mr. Ballmer is the worst CEO of a large publicly traded American company.  Not only has he singlehandedly steered Microsoft out of some of the fastest growing and most lucrative tech markets (mobile music, handsets and tablets) but in the process he has sacrificed the growth and profits of not only his company but "ecosystem" companies such as Dell, Hewlett Packard and even Nokia.  The reach of his bad leadership has extended far beyond Microsoft when it comes to destroying shareholder value – and jobs.

Microsoft peaked at $60/share in 2000, just as Mr. Ballmer took the reigns.  By 2002 it had fallen into the $20s, and has only rarely made it back to its current low $30s value.  And no wonder, since execution of new rollouts were constantly delayed, and ended up with products so lacking in any enhanced value that they left customers scrambling to find ways to avoid upgrades.  By Mr. Ballmer's own admission Vista had over 200 man-years too much cost, and its launch still, years late, has users avoiding upgrades.  Microsoft 7 and Office 2012 did nothing to excite tech users, in corporations or at home, as Apple took the leadership position in personal technology.

So today Microsoft, after dumping Zune, dumping its tablet, dumping Windows CE and other mobile products, is still the same company Mr. Ballmer took control over a decade ago.  Microsoft is  PC company, nothing more, as demand for PCs shifts to mobile.  Years late to market, he has bet the company on Windows 8 – as well as the future of Dell, HP, Nokia and others.  An insane bet for any CEO – and one that would have been avoided entirely had the Microsoft Board replaced Mr. Ballmer years ago with a CEO that understands the fast pace of technology shifts and would have kept Microsoft current with market trends. 

Although he's #19 on Forbes list of billionaires, Mr. Ballmer should not be allowed to take such incredible risks with investor money and employee jobs.  Best he be retired to enjoy his fortune rather than deprive investors and employees of building theirs.

There were a lot of notable CEO changes already in 2012.  Research in Motion, Best Buy and American Airlines are just three examples.  But the 5 CEOs in this column are well on the way to leading their companies into the kind of problems those 3 have already discovered.  Hopefully the Boards will start to pay closer attention, and take action before things worsen.

 

Organize to Disrupt – and Grow – Cisco

Cisco is an admirable company.  In the high tech world, few survive half as long as Cisco.  Even fewer maintain growth and profitability.  Cisco's willingness to obsolete its own products has been a stated objective which has helped the company keep on top of new technologies and products, growing to $36B.  It's Disruptive when you are compelled to obsolete your own products.  Most companies make the mistake of trying to sell products too long, trying to extend profitability by selling the product while winding down development.  They fear launching new products which might "cannibalize" an existing product.  As a result, competitors leapfrog their products and by the company admits things are obsolete it's too late – and the business is in deep trouble.

Now Cisco is working to keep growing by utilizing a Disruptive organization model.  Headlined "Cisco's Extreme Ambition" has BusinessWeek overviewing the distribution of decision-making power to 48 different councils.  Instead of a traditional hierarchy, the councils can make decisions about products themselves, thus shortening the decision process and the time to get new products to market or make acquisitions

Cisco competes in at least 30 marketsStaying on the leading edge in that many businesses requires rethinking how to organize.  Especially when you know it is critical to keep Disrupting your organization to bring forward new products which can keep you competitive.  By distributing decision-making this organizational model overcomes traditional Lock-ins that could slow down Cisco

  • Now strategy can be developed for the markets, built on multiple scenarios (perhaps even competing scenarios), overcoming monolithic strategy processes that are too confining and do too much option narrowing
  • Hiring, including executives, won't require everybody look alike.  Different kinds of people allows for alternative thinking and different sorts of decision processes – as well as different decisions
  • The structure can form to the market needs – rather than being dictated from an insider perspective.  By organizing to the market need each council is more likely to keep close to emerging needs
  • Investments are made at a lower level, reducing the "big bang" investments that Lock-in organizations to monolithic technologies or products
  • Internal experts don't gain too much power, which often limits the technologies and markets pursued.

Maintaining its willingness to remain Disruptive is critical to the ongoing success of Cisco.  This new organization model is allowing Cisco to enter the lower margin server business, for example, which would be (and has been) escewed by a more centralized decision making.  By focusing the organization on markets, Cisco can keep finding new ways to compete — and set new metrics for measuring itself market-by-market.  And Cisco can more quickly and easily set up White Space projects to continue pursuing new market opportunities.  All it has to do is add another council!

Locked-in news leaders – Chris Mathews

The Chris Mathews Show (you can download/view the show at the link) today lamented the failure of newspapers, citing this week's shift to on-line only for the Seattle Post Intelligencer (check my earlier blog on this company for more details.)  Mr. Mathews even went so far as to demonstrate how he, as a boy, folded newspapers to throw them on stoops when growing up in Philadelphia.  The show made a valiant, if completely unsuccessful, effort to Defend the newspaper business.  Maybe because he feels the not breath of on-line competitors himself!

As 2 print journalists and 2 television journalists discussed what was happening with news, the group was notably absent an advocate for on-line newsWhile they discussed the change in behavior of young news readers, all of the panelists were (like me) well over 40.  They talked about how they used a newspaper, but they had no one there to discuss how other news seekers use networking sites or blogs.  There was no blogger on the panel, nor a representative of any notable on-line news sites like Marketwatch.com or HuffingtonPost.com, nor a representative of Google or Yahoo! or any other organization leading the development of on-line content sites.

Mr. Mathews and his guests reminded me of an executive group in a company talking about a new competitor on the scene.  All of them love the existing product, and have processes closely linked to using the current product (they like to get up and read a morning newspaper – but then, they don't have to fulfill an 8:00 to 6:00 job with high productivity requirements).  They talked about "the good old days" when print journalists were the kings.  They discussed how print news used to break stories like the Watergate cover-up (which was 35 years ago).  They guessed at how newspapers might continue to survive, such as by consolidating through mergers and acquisitions, which would allow fewer to survive, but probably thrive – at least that was their hope.  And they confirmed to themselves that if newspapers disappeared it had to be a bad thing – and even threatening to democracy!!  Overall, it was a segment fully dedicated to Defending newspapers, without even the hint of someone who could explain the alternative as a product or a better business model!

By talking to themselves, and their customers, these folks showed their woeful ignorance on the state of on-line news.  Mr. Mathews definitely needs to get more in touch with his (and newspapers') competition.  His panel talked as if those who write about events on-line today don't have or take the time to research their topics — showing his ignorance about how important topics like the delays in producing the Boeing 787 jetliner were ferreted out by bloggers – not traditional media!  And he said that without newspapers you lose "peripheral vision" about the news.  Which ignoredthe role of news consolidation sites and, again, bloggers, and social networks at bringing forward interesting things happening around us to groups with similar interests — things often missed by traditional newspapers with their locked-in reporting methods.

If Mr. Mathews wants to do the topic of failing newspapers justice he should bring on his show people that work in non-traditional newsBloggers and on-line site editors.  His competitionInstead of dismissing them as somehow unqualified (because they aren't like him), he better pay attention to what they do, how they do it, and why they are often able to do his job better than him!  Instead of focusing on his "base" he had better start obsessing about competition. 

And he better start opening some White Space to keep himself and his show relevant – like opening a Twitter account, and creating a web site that's interactive with those in and reading the news (rather than his current vanity site) and blogging himself.  Because if he keeps Defending his current show and position, and the newspapers that are finding themselves too slow and out-of-date in today's market, he's likely to find his show struggling for advertisers faster than he realizes!  His show can fall to the perils of Defend & Extend Management just like any product that pays too little attention to competition and doesn't deploy White Space to evolve its Success Formula.