Two very unlikely companies demonstrated this week that anyone can Disrupt and create White Space to develop a new Success Formula.  IBM and General Motors both showed signs of what any company can do. 

Last spring the leaders of IBM Disrupted their product development process when they opened it up to all employees, suppliers and their family members (read article here).  As a result, they involved 53,000 people and generated 37,000 ideas.  How, by simply asking for their input.  CEO Palmisano attacked hierarchy and sacred notions of product development in high-tech, and as a result he achieved a breakthrough in the potential to redefine IBM’s Success Formula.  Now IBM is creating White Space to develop those ideas, committing (in advance!) $100million for operation InnovationJam to see what can work.  When Louis Gerstner wrote "Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance" about IBM’s turnaround he demonstrated that size does not preclude innovation and growth.  And now that legacy is living on in a tremendous example of just what any company can do.

Even more surprising is what is happening at GM – a company I have unabashadly beat up on the last year.  Yet, within the confines of a horribly Locked-in organization we now can see the use of White Space in product design (see complete article here.)  As recently as 2001 the hierarchy gave vehicle line executives the say on a car’s appearance – the kind of analytical, cost saving process that produced such great autos as the Pontiac Aztek (don’t remember it? – that’s the point!).  "Design had been relegated to putting a wrapper on something that everyone else had decided what the dimensions, the proportions and the interior package were going to be", according to design head Bob Lutz.

What’s different now?  "Tom Peters, a GM designer for 22 years called Lutz a ‘breath of fresh air’ because he lets designers start with a fresh sheet of paper." Lutz was brought in, at almost age 70 mind you, by CEO Waggoner as a Disruption to the old hierarchy.  As head of design, he reports outside the old hierarchy and directly to the CEO.  And his dedicated budget was carved out of the old product groupls.  Thus permission and resources were both granted up front, and Lutz has made the most of it.

Many people accept the notion that older companies are unable to change.  Like somehow organizations are destined to Lock-in and eventually fail.  Unfortunately there is no data to support that notion.  The ability to Lock-in and fail is just as apparent in start-ups as in behemoths.  And, behemoths can Disrupt and use White Space just as well as a start-up.  IBM has shown it’s ability to do so, and we can hope they will keep up their efforts to again be reborn – continuously, like a Phoenix.  GM has a much longer and tougher road, but it can be done.  If they can just get the rest of the company to behave like Bob Lutz and his design group!