How this Zebra Changed Its Stripes – Bold Move

How this Zebra Changed Its Stripes – Bold Move

Zebra Technologies is a company most people don’t recognize.  Yet, I bet every product you buy has the product on which they specialize.

Since 1982 Zebra has been the leader in bar code printers and readers.  Zebra was a pioneer in the application of bar codes for tracking pallets through warehouses, items used in a manufacturing line, shipment tracking and other uses for manufacturing and supply chain management.  As the market leader Zebra Technologies developed its own software (ZPL) for printing barcodes, and made robust printing and reading machines that were the benchmark for rugged, heavy duty applications at companies from Caterpillar, to UPS and FedEx, to WalMart.

Although the company dabbled in RFID technology for product tracking, and is considered a leader in that market, the new technology really never “took off” due to higher costs compared with the boring, but effective and remarkably cheap, bar code.  So Zebra plodded away making ever better, smaller, cheaper, faster bar code printers.  It may not have been exciting, like the nondescript headquarters in far-suburban Chicago, but it met the market needs.  Zebra was an excellent operational company that was delivering on its focus.

Even if it was, well …… boring.

But, like all markets, the bar code market began shifting.  Generic software companies, like Microsoft, produced drivers that would work from a cheap PC to allow

cheap generic printers, like those from HP, to print bar codes.  These were cheap enough to be considered disposable.  Not a good thing for the better, but more expensive, market leader.  Competitive, non-proprietary software and hardware leads to lower prices and margin compression.  It’s a differentiation stealer.

Worse, lots of customers stopped caring much about bar codes altogether.  Zebra’s customers realized bar codes were everywhere.  Nothing new was really happening.  When it came to delivering on the promise of really efficient, accurate and low cost supply chain management the bar code had a place.  But no longer an exciting one.  When your product is boring discussions with customers easily slip toward price rather than new products.  And when you’re talking about price, and how to keep existing business, relevancy is at risk.  You become a target for a new competitor to come along and steal your thunder (and profits) by relegating your product to generic-doom while taking the high rode of delivering more value by changing the game.

So hand it to Zebra’s leadership team that they observed the risk of staying focused on their status quo, and took action to change the game themselves.  Today Zebra announced it is buying the enterprise device business of Motorola.  And this is a big bet.  At a price of $3.5B, Zebra is spending an amount nearly equal to its existing net worth. And it is borrowing $3.25B – almost the whole cost – greatly increasing the company’s debt ratios.  That is a gutsy move.

Yet, in this one move Zebra will nearly triple its revenues.

This decision is not without risk. The acquired Motorola business has seen declining revenues – like a $500M decline in the last year (roughly 25%.)  With many products built on Microsoft software, customers have been shifting to other solutions.  Exactly how the old technologies will integrate with new ones in the Motorola lines is not clear. And even less clear is how a combined company will bring together old-line printer/scanners using proprietary software with the diverse, and honestly pricey, products that Motorola enterprise has been selling, to offer more competitive solutions.

Yet, investors should be encouraged.  Doing nothing would spell disaster for Zebra.  It is a company that needs to re-invent itself for today’s pressing business needs — which have little in common with the top needs 30 years ago (or even 10 years ago.)  In October, Zebra launched Zatar, a Web-based software that allows companies to deploy and manage devices and sensors connected to the Internet.  In December Zebra purchased a company (Hart) for its cloud-based software to manage inventory.  Now Zebra is looking to use these integration tools to bring together all kinds of devices the new company will manufacture to help companies achieve an entirely new level of efficiency and capability in today’s real-time manufacturing and logistics world.

We should admire CEO Anders Gustaffson’s leadership team for recommending such bold action.  And the company’s Chairman and Board for approving it.  Of course “there’s many a slip twixt the cup and the lip,” but at least Zebra’s investors, employees, suppliers and customers can now see that Zebra is really holding a viable cup, and that it is putting together a serious effort to provide better delivery to buyers lips.

This is a play to grow the company by following the trend to “the internet of things” with new solutions that are potential game changers.  And there’s no way you can win unless you’re in the game.  With these acquisitions, there is no doubt that what was mostly a manufacturing company – Zebra – is now “in the game” for doing new things with new technologies.

This does beg some questions:  What is your company doing to be a game changer?  Are you resting on the laurels of strong historical sales – and maybe a strong historical market position?  Do you recognize that your market is shifting, and it is undercutting historical strengths?  Are you relying on operational excellence, while new technologies are threatening your obsolescence?

Or — are you thinking like the leaders at Zebra Technologies and taking bold action to be the industry game-changing leader, even if it means stretching your financials, your management team and the technology?

Most of us would rather be in the former, than the latter, I think.

Momentum is a Killer – The Demise of RIM, Yahoo and Dell

Understand your core strength, and protect it.  Sounds like the key to success, and a simple motto.  It's the mantra of many a management guru.  Only, far too often, it's the road to ruin.

The last week 3 big announcements showed just how damning the "strategy" of building on historical momentum can be. 

Start with Research in Motion's revenue and earnings announcement.  Both metrics fell short of expectations as Blackberry sales continue to slide.  Not many investors were actually surprised about this, to be honest.  iOS and Android products have been taking away share from RIM for several months, and the trend remains clear.  And investors have paid a heavy price.

Apple vs rimm stock performance march 2011-12
Source: BusinessInsider.com

There is no doubt the executives at RIM are very aware of this performance, and desperately would like the results to be different.  RIM has known for months that iOS and Android handhelds have been taking share. The executives aren't unaware, nor stupid.  But, they have not been able to change the internal momentum at RIM to the right issues.

The success formula at RIM has long been to "own" the enterprise marketplace with the Blackberry server products, offering easy to connect and secure network access for email, texting and enterprise applications.  Handsets came along with the server and network sales.  All the momentum at RIM has been to focus on the needs of IT departments; largely security and internal connectivity to legacy systems and email.  And, honestly, even today there is probably nobody better at that than RIM.

But the market shifted.  Individual user needs and productivity began to trump the legacy issues.  People wanted to leave their laptops at home, and do everything with their smartphones.  Apps took on a far more dominant role, as did ease of use.  Because these were not part of the internal momentum at RIM the company ignored those issues, maintaining its focus on what it believed was the core strength, especially amongst its core customers.

Now RIM is toast.  It's share will keep falling, until its handhelds become as popular as Palm devices.  Perhaps there will be a market for its server products, but only via an acquisition at a very low price.  Momentum to protect the core business killed RIM because its leaders failed to recognize a critical market shift.

Turn next to Yahoo's announcement that it is laying off 1 out of 7 employees, and that this is not likely to be the last round of cuts.  Yahoo has become so irrelevant that analysts now depicct its "core" markets as "worthless."

Yahoo valluation 4-2012
Source: SiliconAlleyInsider.com

Yahoo was an internet pioneer.  At one time in the 1990s it was estimated that over 90% of browser home pages were set to Yahoo! But the need for content aggregation largely disappeared as users learned to use search and social media to find what they wanted.  Ad placement revenue for keywords transferred to the leading search provider (Google) and for display ads to the leading social media provider (Facebook.) 

But Yahoo steadfastly worked to defend and extend its traditional business.  It enhanced its homepage with a multitude of specialty pages, such as YahooFinance.  But each of these has been outdone by specialist web sites, such as Marketwatch.com, that deliver everyhing Yahoo does only better, attracting more advertisers.  Yahoo's momentum caused it to miss shifting with the internet market. Under CEO Bartz the company focused on operational improvements and efforts at enhancing its sales, while market shifts made its offerings less and less relevant. 

Now, Yahoo is worth only the value of its outside stockholdings, and it appears the new CEO lacks any strategy for saving the enterprise.  The company appears ready to split up, and become another internet artifact for Wikipedia.  Largely because it kept doing more of what it knew how to do and was unable to overcome momentum to do anything new.

Last, but surely not least, was the Dell announced acquisition of Wyse

Dell is synonymous with PC.  But the growth has left PCs, and Dell missed the markets for mobile entertainment devices (like iPods or Zunes,) smartphones (like iPhone or Evo) and tablets (like iPads and Galaxy Tab.)  Dell slavisly kept to its success formula of doing no product development, leaving that to vendors Microsoft and Intel, as it focused on hardware manufacturing and supply chain excellence.  As the market shifted from the technologies it knew Dell kept trying to cut costs and product prices, hoping that somehow people would be dissuaded from changing technologies.  Only it hasn't worked, and Dell's growth in sales and profits has evaporated.

Don't be confused.  Buying Wyse has not changed Dell's "core."  In Wyse Dell found another hardware manufacturer, only one that makes old-fashioned "dumb" terminals for large companies (interpret that as "enterprise,") mostly in health care.  This is another acquisition, like Perot Systems, in an effort to copy the 1980s IBM brand extension into other products and services that are in like markets – a classic effort at extending the original Dell success formula with minimal changes. 

Wyse is not a "cloud" company.  Rackspace, Apple and Amazon provide cloud services, and Wyse is nothing like those two market leaders.  Buying Wyse is Dell's effort to keep chasing HP for market share, and trying to pick up other pieces of revenue as it extends is hardware sales into more low-margin markets.  The historical momentum has not changed, just been slightly redirected.   By letting momentum guide its investments, Dell is buying another old technology company it hopes it can can extend its "supply chain" strenths into – and maybe find new revenues and higher margins.  Not likely.

Over and again we see companies falter due to momentum.  Why? Markets shift.  Faster and more often than most business leaders want to admit.  For years leaders have been told to understand core strengths, and protect them.  But this approach fails when your core strength loses its value due to changes in technologies, user preferences, competition and markets.  Then the only thing that can keep a company successful is to shift. Often very far from the core – and very fast.

Success actually requires overcoming internal momentum, built on the historical success formula, by putting resources into new solutions that fulfill emerging needs.  Being agile, flexible and actually able to pivot into new markets creates success.  Forget the past, and the momentum it generates.  That can kill you.

Early Trend Spotting Very Valuable – Apple and Dell


Summary:

  • There is a lot of value to recognizing early trends, and acting upon them
  • That Apple is as popular as Dell for computers among college students is a trend indicator that Dell’s future looks problematic, while Apple’s looks better
  • It is hard to maintain long-term value from innovations that defend & extend an historical market – they are easily copied by competitors
  • Long term value comes from the ability to innovate new product markets which are hard for competitors to copy
  • Dell is a lousy investment, and Apple is a good one, because Dell is near end of life for its innovation (supply chain management) while Apple has a powerful new product/market innovation capability that can continue for several years

I can think of 3 very powerful reasons everyone should look closely at the following chart from Silicon Alley Insider.  It is very, very important that Apple is tied with Dell for market share in PCs among college students, and almost 2.5 times the share of HP:

Apple-v-dell-college-share-8.10

Firstly, it is important to understand that capturing young buyers is very valuable.  If you catch a customer at 16, you have 50 to 60 years of lifelong customer value you can try to maintain.  Thus, these people are inherently worth more than someone who is 55, and only 10 to 20 years of lifetime value.  While we may realize that older people have more discretionary income, many loyalties are developed at a young age.  Over the years, the younger buyers will be worth considerably more.

When I was 15 popular cars were from Pontiac (the GT and Firebird) Oldsmobile (Cutlas) Dodge (Charger and Challenger) and Chevy (Camaro.)  Thus, my generation tended to stay with those brands a long time.  But by the 1990s this had changed dramatically, and younger buyers were driving Toyotas, Hondas and Mazdas.  Now, the American car companies are in trouble because a generational shift has happened.  Market shares have changed considerably, and Toyota is now #1.  Keeping the old buyers was not enough to keep GM and Chrysler healthy.

That for a quarter as many college students want a Mac as want a PC from Dell says a lot about future technology purchases.  It portends good things for Apple, and not good things for leading PC suppliers.  Young people’s purchase habits indicate a trend that is unlikely to reverse (look at how even the Toyota quality issues have not helped GM catch them this year.)  We can expect that Apple is capturing “the hearts and minds” of college students, and that drives not just current, but future sales

Secondly, it is important to note that Dell built its distinction on price – offering a “generic” product with fast delivery and reasonable pricing.  Dell had no R&D, it outsourced all product development and focused on assembly and fast supply chain performance.  Unfortunately, supply chain and delivery innovation are far easier to copy than new product – and new market – innovation.  Competitors have been able to match Dell’s early advantages, while Apple’s are a lot harder to meet – or exceed.  Thus, it has not taken long for Dell to lose it’s commanding industry “domination” to a smaller competitor who has something very new to offer that competitors cannot easily match.

Not all innovation is alike.  Those that help Defend & Extend an existing business – making PCs fast and cheap – offer a lot less long term value.  Every year it gets harder, and costs more, to try to create any sense of improvement – or advantage.  D&E innovations are valued by insiders, but not much by the marketplace.  Customers see these Dell kind of innovations as more, better, faster and cheaper – and they are easily matched.  They don’t create customer loyalty. 

However, real product/market innovations – like the improvements in digital music and mobile devices – have a much longer lasting impact on customers and the markets created.  Apple is still #1 in digital music downloads after nearly a decade.  And they remain #1 in mobile app downloads despite a small share in the total market for cell phones.  If you want to generate higher returns for longer periods, you want to innovate new markets – not just make improvements in defending & extending existing market positions.

Thirdly, this should impact your investment decisions.  SeekingAlpha.com, reproducing the chart above, headlines “Are 2010 Apple Shares the new 1995 Dell Shares?” The author makes the case that Apple is now deeply mired in the Swamp, with little innovation on the horizon as it is late to every major new growth market.  It’s defend & extend behavior is doing nothing for shareholder value.  Meanwhile, Apple’s ability to pioneer new markets gives a strong case for future growth in both revenue and profits.  As a result, the author says Dell is fully valued (meaning he sees little chance it will rise in value) while he thinks Apple could go up another 70% in the next year! 

Too often people invest based upon size of company – thinking big = stability.  But now that giants are falling (Circuit City, GM, Lehman Brothers) we know this isn’t true.  Others invest based upon dividend yield.  But with markets shifting quickly, too often dividends rapidly become unsustainable and are slashed (BP).  Some think you should invest where a company has high market share, but this often is meaningless because the market stagnates leading to a revenue stall and quick decline as the entire market drops out from under the share leader (Microsoft in PCs). 

Investing has to be based upon a company’s ability to maintain profitable growth into the future.  And that now requires an ability to understand market trends and innovate new solutions quickly – and take them to market equally quickly.  Only those companies that are agile enough to understand trends and competitors, implementing White Space teams able to lead market disruptions.  Throw away those old books about “inherent value” and “undervalued physical assets” as they will do you no good in an era where value is driven by understanding information and the ability to rapidly move with shifting markets.

Oh, and if you feel at all that I obscured the message in this blog, here’s a recap:

  1. Dell is trying to Defend its old customers, and it’s not capturing new ones.  So it’s future is really dicey
  2. Dell’s supply chain innovations have been copied by competitors, and Dell has little – if any – competitive advantage today.  Dell is in a price war.
  3. Apple is pioneering new markets with new products, and it is capturing new customers.  Especially younger ones with a high potential lifetime value
  4. Apple’s innovations are hard to duplicate, giving it much longer time to profitably grow revenues.
  5. You should sell any Dell stock you have – it has no chance of going up in value long term.  Apple has a lot of opportunity to keep profitably growing and therefore looks like a pretty good investment.

Who to follow in 2010? – Amazon, WalMart

Happy New Year!

As we start 2010 the plan, according to The Financial Times, "WalMart aims to cut supply chain costs."  Imagine that.  Cost cutting has been the biggest Success Formula component for WalMart for its entire career.  And now, the company that is already the low cost retailer – and famous for beating its suppliers down on price to almost no profitability – is planning to focus on purchasing for the next 5 years in order to hopefully take another 5% out of purchased product cost.  How'd you like to hear that if Wal-Mart is one of your big customers?  What do you suppose the discussion will be like when you go to Target or KMart (match WalMart pricing?)

Will this make WalMart more admired, or more successful?  This is the epitome of "more of the same."  Even though WalMart is huge, it has done nothing for shareholders for years.  And employees have been filing lawsuits due to unpaid overtime. And some markets have no WalMart stores because the company refuses to allow any employees to be unionized.  This announcement will not make WalMart a more valuable company, because it simply is an attempt to Defend the Success Formula.

On the other hand according to Newsweek, in "The Customer is Always Right," Amazon intends to keep moving harder into new products and markets in 2010.  Amazon has added enormous value to its shareholders, including gains in 2009, as it has moved from bookselling to general merchandise retailing to link retailing to consumer electronics with the Kindle and revolutionizing publishing with the Kindle store.  Amazon isn't trying to do more of the same, it's using innovation to drive growth

And the CEO, Jeff Bezos freely admits that his success today is due to scenario development and plans laid 4 years ago – as Amazon keeps its planning focused on the future.  With the advent of many new products coming out in 2010 – including the Apple Tablet – Amazon will have to keep up its focus on new products and markets to maintain growth.  Good thing the company is headed that direction.

So which company would you rather work for?  Invest in?  Supply? 

Which will you emulate?

PS – "Create Marketplace Disruption:  How To Stay Ahead of the Competition" was selected last week to be on the list of "Top 25 Books to read in 2010" by PCWorld and InfoWorld.  Don't miss getting your copy soon if you haven't yet read the book.

New Decade – New Normal

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

We end the first decade in 2000 with another first.  In ReutersBreakingViews.com "Don't Diss the Dividend" we learn 2000-2009 is the first time in modern stock markets when U.S. investors made no money for a decade.  Right.  Worse performance than the 1930s Great Depression.  Over the last decade, the S&P 500 had a net loss of about 1%/year.  After dividends a gain of 1% – less than half the average inflation rate of 2.5%. 

Things have shifted.  We ended the last millenium with a shift from an industrial economy to an information economy.  And the tools for success in earlier times no longer work.  Scale economies and entry barriers are elusive, and unable to produce "sustainable competitive advantage."  Over the last decade shifts in business have bankrupted GM, Circuit City and Tribune Corporation – while gutting other major companies like Sears.  Simultaneously these changes brought huge growth and success to Google, Apple, Hewlett Packard, Virgin and small companies like Louis Glunz Beer, Foulds Pasta and Tasty Catering.

Even the erudite McKinsey Quarterly is now trumpeting the new requirements for business success in "Competing through Organizational Agility."  Using academic research from the London Business School, author Donald Sull points out that market turbulence increased 2 to 4 times between the 1970s and 1990s – and is continuing to increase.  More market change is happening, and market changes are happening faster.  Thus, creating strategies and organizations that are able to adjust to shifting market requirements creates higher revenue and improved operational efficiency.  Globally agility is creating better returns than any other business approach. 

A McKinsey Quarterly on-line video "Navigating the New Normal:  A Conversation with 4 Chief Strategy Officers," discusses changes in business requirements for 2010 and beyond.  All 4 of these big company strategists agree that success now requires far shorter planning cycles, abandoning efforts to predict markets that change too quickly, and recognizing that historically indisputable assumptions are rapidly becoming obsolete.  What used to work at creating competitive advantage no longer works.  Monolothic strategies developed every few years, with organizations focused on "execution," are simply uncompetitive in a rapidly shifting world.

And "the old boys club" of white men in top business leadership roles is quickly going to change dramatically.  In the Economist article "We Did It" we learn that in 2010 the American workforce will shift to more than 50% women.  If current leaders continue following old approaches – and generating anemic returns – they will rapidly be replaced by leaders willing to do what has to be done to succeed in today's marketplace.  Like Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo, women will take on more top positions as investors and employees demand changes to improve performance.   Leaders will have to be flexible and adaptive or they, and their organizations, will not survive.

Additionally, the information technology products which unleashed this new era will change, and become unavoidable.  In Forbes "Using the Cloud for Business" one of the creators of modern ERP (enterprise resource planning) systems (like SAP and Oracle) Jan Baan discusses how cloud computing changes business.  ERP systems were all about data, and the applications were stovepiped – like the industrial enterprises they were designed for.  Unfortunately, they were expensive to buy and very expensive to install and even more expensive to maintain.  Simultaneously they had all the flexibility of cement.  ERP systems, which proliferate in large companies today, were control products intended to keep the organization from doing anything beyond its historical Success Formula.

But cloud computing is infinitely flexible.  Compare Facebook to Lotus Notes and you start understanding the difference between cloud computing and large systems.  Anyone can connect, share links, share files and even applications on Facebook at almost no cost.  Lotus Notes is an expensive enterprise application that costs a lot to buy, to operate, to maintain and has significantly less flexibility.  Notes is about control.  Facebook is about productivity.

Cloud computing is 1/10th the cost of monolithic owned/internal IT systems.  Cloud computing offers small and mid-sized companies all the computing opportunity of big companies – and big advantages to new competitors if CIOs at big companies hold onto their "investments" in IT systems too long.  Businesses that use cloud architectures can rearrange their supply chain immediately – and daily.  Flexibility, and adaptability, grows exponentially.  And EVERYONE can use it.  Where mainframes were the tool for software engineers (and untouchable by everyone else), the PC made it possible for individuals to have their own applications.  Cloud computing democratizes computing so everyone with a smartphone has access and use.  With practically no training.

As we leave the worst business environment in modern times, we enter a new normal.  Those who try to defend & extend old business practices will continue to suffer  declining returns, poor performance and failure – like the last decade.  But those who embrace "the new normal" can grow and prosper.  It takes a willingness to let scenarios about the future drive your behavior, a keen focus on competitors to understand market needs, a willingness to disrupt old Lock-ins and implement White Space so you can constantly test opportunities for defining new, flexible and higher returning Success Formulas.

Here's to 2010 and the new normal!  Happy New Year!