by Adam Hartung | Aug 11, 2010 | Defend & Extend, Food and Drink, In the Whirlpool, Leadership, Lock-in, Television, Web/Tech
“Playboy’s Circulation drops 34%” is the Chicago Tribune headline. Is anyone surprised? If ever there was a brand, and business, that was out of step with current markets it has to be Playboy. That the business still exists is a wonder. But let’s spend a few minutes to see why Playboy has fallen on hard times, and what the alternative might have been – and could still be.
The Playboy Success Formula is really clear. Since founded by Hugh Hefner, the company has focused on titillating the male libido with a magazine that focused on pictures of naked women, videos of same (physical videos, on-line videos and television), radio talk shows about sex, and alternative lifestyle issues such as recreational drug use. At one time this was unique, and in a male dominated 1960s it was even tolerated. Although never mainstream, the business was very profitable early in its lifecycle. Thus the founder kept doing more of the same, building a small empire and eventually taking the company public.
But the market shifted. Larry Flint and others ushered in a new era of pornography altering the market for prurient, sexually oriented material. Women in the workforce – and I’d like to think a heavy dose of decency – made public toleration of such material unacceptable. You couldn’t read a Playboy at work, or on the airplane, and you wouldn’t have a business lunch at their clubs. Other magazines sprung up to deal with men’s interests in automobiles, clothing, music, sports, etc. in a more acceptable – and for most people more significant and intelligent – manner. Other lifestyle publications were developed that discussed illicit drug use and non-traditional ways of life more directly, explicitly and with greater advocacy. The advent of cable TV and then the internet increasingly made access to the key features of Playboy’s product readily available, very inexpensive (often free) and targeted at niche audiences.
Yet, despite these many market changes, Playboy’s founder and his daughter, the company CEOs for 40+ years, steadfastly stuck to their old Success Formula. They kept thinking that people wanted those “bunny eared” products. They talked a lot about the heritage of Playboy, how it broke ground in so many markets, and opened the door for lots of new competitors. But they kept doing what the company always did – including foisting upon us the ever aging founder as a “role model” for male menopause and the anti-family aged entrepreneur. Playboy today is what it always was – and there simply aren’t a whole lot of people with much interest in those products any more. Nobody mismanaged the brand, the market just walked away from it. Sort of like the demand for Geritol.
Playboy focused on its core. And now its on the edge of bankruptcy. The company keeps outsourcing more and more of the work, as the staff has dropped to nearly nothing, cutting costs everywhere possible. Sales continue to decline, and the brand looks like it will soon join Polaroid and Woolworths on the heap of once famous but floundered companies. Playboy’s fatal mistake wasn’t that it was started as a prurient men’s magazine – but rather that for 40 years its leadership kept Defending & Extending that original Success Formula despite rather dramatic market shifts. Now, today, Playboy is a sour lemon that not many a marketer would want to be stuck promoting.
But – it didn’t have to be that way. Just imagine if you’d been given control of Playboy 30 years ago. What could you have done?
As soon as Hustler hit the newsstands, and the first women’s right protests developed – including the early push for the Equal Rights Amendment – it was clear that the future of the magazine was in jeopardy. Instead of doing “more of the same” could you have considered something else?
The growth of women in the workforce meant a lot of new opportunities. Why not jump onto that bandwagon? If you’re really at the forefront of “lifestyle” issues, as the leadership claimed, then you would have identified that women in the workforce meant something new was brewing – a group of consumers that would have more cash, and more influence. And not only would that be an appealing market, but so would the men who would be adjusting to new lifestyle issues as homes became dominated by 2-worker leadership.
Playboy was well positioned to be Victoria’s Secret. At a time before anybody else was really thinking about a significant market for attractive and comfortable lingerie Playboy certainly had the leading edge. Or, even more likely, the water carrying publication for Dr. Ruth-style discussions about sexuality. There was an emerging market for information targeted at increasingly affluent women about automobiles, stereos, apartments, resume writing, job hunting and even at-work etiquette — all topics that had been the dominant discussion areas for Playboy’s historically male readership. Had the leadership at Playboy opened its eyes, and scanned the horizon for growth markets being developed as a result of the trends which were negatively impacting it, these leaders would have been able to create a bevy of scenarios that were filled with opportunities for growth.
It’s hard to imagine today Playboy being anything else. But all that stopped stopped Playboy’s evolution was a commitment to its “core” – to its old Success Formula. That the CEO for over 20 years was a well educated woman is testament to the power of “core” philosophy versus a willingness to look at market opportunities. By keeping Playboy’s Success Formula tightly aligned with her father’s founding ideas she quite literally led the company into smaller and smaller sales with less and less profit. The big loser was, of course, investors. Playboy is worth very little today as Mr. Hefner hints at making a bid to take the company private once again.
Singer was once a sewing machine company. But when Japanese products surpassed Singer’s product capabilities and achieved a cost advantage in the 1970s, Singer leadership converted Singer into a defense contractor. And Singer went on to multiply its value before being acquired by General Dynamics.
IBM was an office machine company famous for mechanical typewriters and adding machines. The founder said he would never enter computers. Fortunately for employees and shareholders the founder’s son took the company into computers and the company flourished as competitive typewriter companies such as Smith Corona – stuck on the core business – disappeared.
There’s a time for lemons – in your tea or on a salad. But when markets shift, lemons just turn sour. If you want to succeed long-term you have to shift with markets. And that might well mean making significant change. Adding water and sugar to the lemons is a good start – as lemonade is less about lemons than what you’ve added to it. After you open that lemonade stand, see where the market leads you.
No matter where you start, every day offers the opportunity to head toward new, emerging markets. No matter what your historical “core” you can literally become any business you want to become. Coke was founded by a pharmacist who wanted to boost counter sales in his store – and it was worth a lot more than the pills he was constructing. Those who develop scenarios about the future prepare for market shifts, understand the competitive changes and use them to identify the opportunities for a new future. Then they use White Space teams to move the business into a new Success Formula. Anybody can do it. You could even have remade Playboy. So what’s the plan for the future of your business? More of the same …. or …..
by Adam Hartung | Apr 20, 2010 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, In the Rapids, Innovation, Leadership, Openness, Television, Web/Tech
News Corp. executives (and shareholders) need to be worried. Really worried. While they are busy trying to Defend their newspaper approach, including the planned move to charge everyone a subscription fee to access the Wall Street Journal on-line, there is a competitor ready to eliminate them. Of course, if you've read the WSJ for years you may think this sounds ridiculous. This competitor is vying to do the same to the Financial Times, a newspaper much more popular in Europe than the USA, which already charges for on-line access. But this competitor is serious, and just might pull it off.
According to BusinessInsider.com, "Bloomberg Redesigns Web Site as it Tries to Kill Journal." Hiring an executive from Yahoo, Bloomberg News is "pulling the gloves off" and preparing to take on old-line competitors as it steers a course to being #1. And the odds are looking good for its success.
The market for business news has been shifting for years. Once this market was dominated by two delivery mechanisms. One was very expensive, costing thousands or hundreds of dollars per month, driving information to terminals sitting at desks of traders and brokers. The other was a daily reporting of business news through the traditional business newspapers mentioned above. Both businesses were very profitable.
But today, almost everyone can get almost everything the expensive terminals had simply by scanning the web. And if you can get news real-time, why wait until tomorrow? News Corp. bought Dow Jones and has been trying to Defend the terminal business, in the face of intense Bloomberg competition for traders desks and much lower cost competition for everyone else. In an effort to shore up the P&L at Wall Street Journal the company has announced it will reverse all industry trends and start charging for WSJ content on-line. They still haven't figured out how to effectively take advantage of Marketwatch.com as a viable delivery mechanism for WSJ content. An admission they don't know how to develop a robust advertising model on the web and mobile devices that will support the publication.
Don't forget, News Corp. was early to the on-line world with its acquisition of MySpace.com. But instead of letting the people who run MySpace.com do what they needed to do to become Facebook – or possibly to become the next Marketwatch.com – News Corp. leaders interceded. They helped "manage" MySpace and applied News Corp. Success Formula parameters to it. MySpace was not allowed to operate as a White Space project. Now MySpace is a narrow site mostly for musicians and artists – missing the big opportunities in social media, business/financial news or even traditional news dissemination. Had it been given permission to do whatever it needed to succeed, permission to create a new Success Formula, who knows what MySpace might have become?
Today's marketplace will not produce acceptable returns for the old Success Formula. But the value of good business news is growing, as all investors want to know what traders know as fast as they know it. And that is where Bloomberg.com is headed. It is squarely directed at building a new business that is advertiser supported which will deliver the right news to the right place fast enough to capture those who want business news.
Bloomberg is now running 2 separate businesses. They continue to allow the terminal business to work hard as possible at defending its turf. Simultaneously they have established a White Space project that is designed to eventually obsolete the old business. In the process they will cannibalize the terminal business. But they also will very likely drive less agile competitors Dow Jones and Financial Times out of business. In the process they could capture significant ad dollars while learning how to dominate the mobile device market as well as the traditional web.
When markets shift, nobody can win by trying to Defend the old. Customers move on, and they abandon old solutions. Returns decline. The winner has to use Disruptions to overcome old Lock-ins to do whatever is necessary to profitably grow! (like having a web site that looked like an old terminal screen with amber text on a black background) and establish White Space with permission to do what is necessary to succeed! Even recognizing this may create cannibalization – but in the process learning how to earn high rates of return while crushing competitors.
Kudos to the management at Bloomberg. They are going for the jugular in the business news marketplace, and doing so by moving where the market is headed – while other competitors are trying to Defend & Extend old ways of doing business. It may not take Bloomberg long to create serious damage to the old institutions in business and financial news.
by Adam Hartung | Feb 5, 2010 | Current Affairs, General, Openness, Television, Web/Tech
I had two more Facebook ignorers this week. First was an old friend who didn't use Facebook, and could not imagine how it would be beneficial to his business. I responded with "that's kind of like the folks who didn't use a telephone saying that they didn't see any value in it for business." When you don't use a tool, it's easy to pretend it isn't valuable. Makes life easy on your competitors who do give it a try.
The second was a business that recruits people under 30. The top marketers at this company are still doing all their efforts with newspapers, radio and typical broadcast forms of media. They said they couldn't use social media to reach their base "because you can't control the message on Facebook." OK, so they don't use social media, and their focus is on message control so they don't intend to use social media. But their target is a population that every month uses less traditional media, and more social media. And these folks are wondering why media costs are up, and their success is way, way down. Uh huh.
At MediaPost.com "Avoiding Social Media Malpractice" Chad Cappellman tells the story of a hospital division that gets more people coming for insight through Facebook than come through the highlighted links on the hospital's own web site! People use Facebook today – a lot. We all would prefer a personal referral when we have a question. Often, a referral is better than 10 Google search hits at pointing you to the service provider or product which really fits your needs. And Facebook is a fast way to generate referrals. As is Twitter. So when you want potential customers referred your way, why wouldn't you try to maximize the use of social media? As the story above discusses, people would rather get info about a hospital (an example) from friends than from about any other source.
As for implementation, social media is part of the more sweeping market shift affecting all businesses. Historically, business people thought in terms of "control." The business had communication walls, internally and externally. More time was spent making sure information wasn't passed around than making sure communication was fluid and accurate. But in another MediaPost.com article "Twitter and Facebook Could Get You Fired" we see that approach simply won't work any more. We live in a "connected" and "networked" world today. There are precious few secrets when everyone has a mobile phone, and most of those have cameras, and texting is ubiquitous, and the vast majority of people under 35 have multiple social network locations.
Today, you can't win by limiting communications. That is a failed approach. Nor is it possible to "control" what is said about your business or its products and services. What you can, and increasingly must, do is monitor the chatter and be part of it. Of course some things will be inaccurate, so its now your role to help move the message in the right direction. Don't think about control, think about helping the message move toward accuracy. And leverage all the chatter to help you sell more stuff!
We live in a fast shifting world. That is not going to change. Slow moving traditional media is gradually dying. No competitor can succeed by avoiding the shifts. Those competitors that win will use scenario planning to help anticipate the shifts, and focus on fringe competitors to learn how to do new things which can create advantage. Success isn't going to come from trying to Defend & Extend the "core" – but rather by rapidly adapting to new market needs even if it means changing your "core." And the best way to stay connected to shifting markets today is through social media. It not only gives great, and timely, feedback but offers everyone the chance to enter into a dialogue with potential new customers at remarkably low cost. And in remarkably powerful ways.
by Adam Hartung | Dec 11, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, Food and Drink, In the Rapids, In the Swamp, Leadership, Television
If you can't sell products, I guess you sell the business to generate revenue. That seems to be the approach employed by Sara Lee's CEO – who has been destroying shareholder value, jobs, vendor profits and customer expectations for several years. Crain's Chicago Business reports "Sara Lee to sell air care business for $469M" to Proctor & Gamble. This is after accepting a binding offer from Unilever to purchase Sara Lee's European body care and detergent businesses. These sales continue Ms. Barnes long string of asset sales, making Sara Lee smaller and smaller. Stuck in the Swamp, Ms. Barnes is trying to avoid the Whirlpool by selling assets – but what will she do when the assets are gone? For how long will investors, and the Board, accept her claim that "these sales make Sara Lee more focused on its core business" when the business keeps shrinking? The corporate share price has declined from $30/share to about $12 (chart here) And shareholders have received none of the money from these sales. Eventually there will be no more Sara Lee.
Look at Motorola, a darling in the early part of this decade – the company CEO, Ed Zander, was named CEO of the year by Marketwatch as he launched RAZR and slashed prices to drive unit volume:
Chart supplied by Silicon Alley Insider
Motorola lost it's growth in mobile handsets, and now is practically irrelevant. Motorola has less than 5% share, about like Apple, but the company is going south – not north. When growth escapes your business it doesn't take long before the value is gone. Since losing it's growth Motorola share values have dropped from over $30 to around $8 (chart here).
And so now we need to worry about GE, while being excited about Comcast. GE got into trouble under new Chairman & CEO Jeffrey Immelt because he kept investing in the finance unit as it went further out the risk curve extending its business. Now that business has crashed, and to raise cash he is divesting assets (not unlike Brenda Barnes at Sara Lee). Mr. Immelt is selling a high growth business, with rising margins, in order to save a terrible business – his finance unit. This is bad for GE's growth prospects and future value (a company I've longed supported – but turning decidedly more negative given this recent action):
Chart supplied by Silicon Alley Insider
Meanwhile, as the acquirer Comcast is making one heck of a deal. It is buying NBC/Universal which is growing at 16.5% compounded rate with rising margins. That is something which suppliers of programming, employees, customers and investors should really enjoy.
Revenue growth is a really big deal. You can't have profit growth without revenue growth. When a CEO starts selling businesses to raise cash, be very concerned. Instead they should use scenario planning, competitive analysis, disruptions and White Space to grow the business. And those same activities prepare an organization to make an acquisition when a good opportunity comes along.
(Note: The President of Comcast, Steven Burke, endorsed Create Marketplace Disruption and that endorsement appears on the jacket cover.)
by Adam Hartung | Nov 12, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, In the Rapids, In the Swamp, Innovation, Leadership, Openness, Television, Web/Tech
The Myth of Market Share by Richard Minitar is one of those little books, published in 2002 by Crown Business, that you probably never read – or even heard of (available on Amazon though). And that's too bad, because without spending too many words the author does a great job of describing the non-correlation between market share and returns. There are as many, or possibly more, companies with high profitability that don't lead in market share as ones that do. Even though the famous BCG Growth/Share matrix led many leaders to believe share was the key to business success. Another something that worked once (maybe) – but now doesn't.
"Moto Looks to Sell Set-Top Box Unit" is the Crain's Chicago Business headline. Motorola's television connection box business is #1 in market share. But even though Motorola paid $11B for it in 1999, they are hoping to get $4.5B today. That's a $6.5B loss (or 60%) in a decade. For a business that is the market share leader. Only, it's profitability + growth doesn't justify a higher price. Regardless of market share.
Kind of like Motorola's effort to be #1 in mobile handset market share by cutting RAZR prices. That didn't work out too well either. It almost bankrupted the company, and is causing Motorola to sell the set top box business to raise cash in its effort to spin out the unprofitable handset business.
On the other hand, there's Apple. Apple isn't #1 in PCs – by a long shot. It has about a 14% share I think. Nor is it #1 in mobile handhelds, where it has about a 2.5% market share. But Apple is more profitable than the market leaders in both markets. Today, Apple's value is almost as high as Microsoft – historically considered the undisputed king of technology companies.
Chart source Silicon Alley Insider 11/12/09
While Microsoft has been trying to Defend & Extend it's Windows franchise, its value has declined this decade. Quite the contrary for Apple.
Additionally, Apple has piled up a remarkable cash hoard with it's meager market shares in 2 of 3 businesses (Apple is #1 in digital music downloads – although not #1 in portable MP3 players).
Chart Source Silicon Alley Insider 11/11/09
"While Rivals Jockey for Market Share Apple Bathes in Profits" is the SeekingAlpha.com headline. Nokia has 35% share of the mobil handheld market. It earned $1.1B in the third quarter. With its 2.5% share Apple made $1.6B profit on the iPhone. While everyone in the PC business is busy cutting costs, Apple has innovated the Mac and its other products – proving that if you make products that customers want they will buy them and allow you to make money. While competitors behave like they can cost cut themselves to success, Apple proves the opposite is true. Innovation linked to meeting customer needs is worth a lot more money.
Bob Sutton, Stanford management professor, blogs on Work Matters "Leading Innovation: 21 Things that Great Bosses Say and Do." All are about looking to the future, listening to the market, using disruptions to keep your organization open, and giving people permission and resources to open and manage White Space projects.
If your solution to this recession is to cut costs and wait for the market to return – good luck. If you are trying to figure out how you can Defend & Extend your core – good luck. If you think size and/or market share is going to protect you – check out how well that worked for GM, Chrysler, Lehman Brothers and Circuit City. If you want to improve your business follow Apple's lead by developing thorough scenario plans you can use to understand competitors inside out, then Disrupt your old notions and use White Space to launch new products and services that meet emerging needs.
by Adam Hartung | Oct 29, 2009 | Current Affairs, Innovation, Leadership, Television
I was intrigued to read about Apple proposing to rebuild a mass transit stop in Chicago in exchange for naming rights to the stop, as well as permission to advertise in the stop (Crain's Chicago Business – "Doors will open on the right at Apple stop.") Most people would ask "why?" And it's because Apple is moving toward a very different advertising future.
Most people think of advertising as the ads in newspapers and magazines, as well as on the radio, or television, or possibly billboards. Only we know that newspapers and magazines are failing because fewer people read them every month. Advertising in print media has limited value if there aren't any readers.
Likewise, people under 30 are watching a LOT less TV than the older generation. Whereas I grew up with my eyes on the "boob tube," increasingly I watch a lot less TV as I spend more time on the web. But my web use is nothing compared to people 17 to 34, who have almost abandoned television. They go to the web for entertainment. And they increasingly only watch TV shows and movies when they can download them – or possibly watch via DVD.
And Apple is at the forefront of killing the radio business. With iPods and digital music now cheap and plentiful, why listen to somebody else's programming? When you can program your own music, radio becomes less interesting. And if you want news there's the iPhone, Blackberry or similar mobile device to access the web – so why listen to talk radio?
Advertising as it was is gone. Coke, Pepsi, Procter & Gamble, Kraft, etc. built huge companies via media advertising. But media usage is declining sharply. So how do you get the message out to people who increasingly get their entertainment without using most of the traditional media?
And that's where Apple's move makes sense. By rebuilding a train station, they help promote their brand. It reminds me of when Hooters offered to fill the potholes in Chicago (a big problem) if they could put their company logo over them. This week I noticed that in the Newark, NJ airport the jetways had big billboards on the outside. And the TSA bins (for shoes, coats, laptops, etc.) had ads printed on the bottom. It's getting harder and harder to reach customers when they don't need traditional media.
So if you have historically been a big user of traditional media advertising, you'd better be rethinking that strategy. What worked in the past isn't going to work in 2015. Staying Locked-in to old ad budgets, and approaches, is going to keep producing declining returns. Traditional advertising won't even maintain current positions – much less work for new product launches. As ad costs go up, they are less effective. To reach customers requires shifting with the market.
If your new business plas is to use advertising as a way to grow your business, think again. While advertising isn't gone – it is a lot less effective than it was when traditional media was widely the source of information and entertainment. If you want to get people to recognize your brand, you have to start being a lot more clever. You have to find new ways to get in front of customers. You have to use your scenarios of the future to help you find the best way to promote your product. Because the old channels, and the ad firms that used to supply them, increasingly are an ineffective answer.
by Adam Hartung | Sep 28, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, General, Leadership, Lock-in, Television, Web/Tech, Weblogs
Lock-in causes us to keep moving in the same direction, to continue behaving the same way, even when competition and market shifts makes it a surety that the direction we're heading will produce poorer returns. Blacksmiths who ignore the shift to automobiles. Printers who ignore the shift to photocopiers. As I often point out, unless something attacks the Lock-in, we are amazingly able to keep right on going the same direction – blithely ignoring the inevitable problems.
"I read Playboy for the articles" is a Harvard Business School Working Knowledge article which outlines just how far we all will go to avoid dealing with internal conflicts caused by undertaking behavior we know is unjustifiable. (Download full pdf text of White Paper here.) According to the article:
- Because people do not want to be perceived as (or feel) unethical or
immoral, they make excuses for their behavior—even to
themselves.
- People cope with their own questionable actions in a number of ways by rationalizing, justifying, and
forgetting—a remarkable range of strategies allowing them to maintain a
clear conscience even under dubious circumstances.
Which leads me to the #1 excuse I hear. "I don't get it." I bring up to people – especially those who are over 35 – the power of modern technology tools. For example, ask a 40 year old why two 20 year old girls sitting across a table will text each other and the answer is "I don't get it." Tell them you know teenagers who spend more time at the computer monitor on-line than watching TV and the answer is "I don't get it." Hear someone say "my cell phone is more important than my car" and you hear "I don't get it.' And the biggest one of all, tell this person they need to open up accounts and go everyday to Facebook, Linked-in, Twitter, MySpace and Plaxo and you hear "you're kidding – right? Why anyone spends time on those – I don't get it."
Every time I hear "I don't get it" I wince. Because that person just admitted "I'm willing to get out of step with the market, and risk having my skills become obsolete. I'm happy doing what I do, and I don't see why I need to doing something new and different. I'm sure the world is not evolving away from me, and I've chosen to remain Locked-in to where I've been rather than learn what's going on with these new solutions." See what I mean? When you read my interpretation makes you wince, doesn't it?
Our parents used to tell us when we talked on the telephone "Why don't you just go to their house, I don't get it." When we listened to rock-and-roll "Your music makes no sense, I don't get it." When we thought everybody needed a car they'd say "We always walked, why do you need a car? I don't get it."
"I don't get it" is the proverbial excuse justifying Lock-in. It allows us to walk away from a shift that's right in front of us, and remain stuck. It allows us to feel like we're OK to remain – well — ignorant.
So, the next time you hear yourself saying "I don't get it" it's time to stop, Disrupt yourself, and find some time to get it. It's time to review your willingness to remain Locked-in, and invest some resources in trying new stuff instead of Defending & Extending. Because if you do create some White Space you can learn – and the first who "get it" will be the ones who do best in the market, getting the best results.
PART 2 – a personal extension for those with time to read.
When my son died last week, at age 21, he left a brother age 20 and a brother age 18. He also left hundreds of friends his own age. These people shared what all of us shared at that age – a deep desire to talk to each other, to communicate, to cry in groups, to grieve, to find things in the past that made them happy. To capture time in a bottle by reflecting on Alex's life. And they also shared the simple fact that they have almost no money, precious little time, and a host of responsibilities to school, family and work.
30 years ago my generation would have made a few phone calls. Maybe a few of us gotten together for an hour. But our talks would have been mostly a small group, and for a short time.
The last week I've been living on Facebook, Linked-in, Twitter, et.al. I have used all these tools for at least several months, and in some cases years. But I used these through the filters of my history. I saw them as extensions (D&E) of old ways I communicated. Finally, now, I get it. These communities are an entirely different way of communicating. I different way of building a community. And in many ways, it is MORE vibrant and more honest than anything ever before. LIkewise, it is real time. And it is open to everyone. It is extraordinarily effective. And it is unbelievably healthy.
For those who question their child's life on-line, you are looking from your historical reference. What happens in this environment is incredibly open – thus very informative. It is remarkably honest – in ways everyone finds very hard to be face-to-face. And it is very fast. There are no boundaries – no race, no origin questions, no location questions, no income questions. It is the most egalitarian, comprehensive method of creating a self-forming community to accomplish a goal I've ever seen. Way beyond anything I've ever seen my generation accomplish by developing plans and subsequently focusing on execution.
Within hours, my son's friends found out he had died 500 miles away – and his Facebook page exploded. It became a central hub to exchange information of all kinds about his accident, his life, his funeral. Within hours almost his entire world new what happened – far faster than any "family call chains" we ever created. As they searched to learn more, within a day someone found a video of the accident scene and the helicopter whisking him away —- something that would have taken my generation weeks to find (if at all) and share. And the videographer was put in contact with me, able to give me first-hand info about the accident scene.
His brother created a new Facebook site dedicated to honoring Alex the next day. Within hours 200 people were hooked up. Before week end the number went to 400. This became universe central for this topic. There was no CEO. No Director of communications. Just a self-organizing activity that brought together hundreds of people who wanted to talk about Alex. Very effective discussion.
Since Alex's 22nd birthday is 9/30 – some spontenous person said a birthday party should be thrown. Within hours an event had been created, and hundreds were talking about whether they could attend or not (by the way, it's going to be on 10/2 in Chicago.) All kinds of talk about who had to work, who could come, what to bring. Again, self-organizing and spontaneous and remarkably effective.
By the time the newspaper published an article on the accident, and my son's obituary, it was so old news I don't think anybody cared. And certainly the only people who learned this way were those who were – over 40.
If you aren't using these tools – if you don't "get it" – this is one place I would recommend some personal White Space investment. If you do, the payoff is extremely high. If you don't, you're likely to find yourself as out of date as cobblers and blacksmiths faster than you think.
by Adam Hartung | Aug 7, 2009 | Defend & Extend, Disruptions, Food and Drink, General, Leadership, Lock-in, Music, Openness, Television
"Pepsi Launches Own Music Label in China" is the BusinessWeek headline. Clearly, the Pepsi staff has some new ideas. Recently Pepsi's Chairperson, Ms. Nooyi, made a trip to China for 10 days. Apparently frustrated, she commented to the Wall Street Journal in July that she didn't see enough Disruptive thinking on the part of her folks in China. She indicated the market was robust, but it was different and would take a different approach. It now sounds like her China leadership got the message.
In addition to launching a music label, Pepsi is producing a "Battle of the Bands" show in China. It's almost like a reformatted page from the aggressive growth years of Starbucks. Instead of just expanding into a new geography (China) with the same old playbook (like the floundering WalMart), Pepsi is figuring out how to be a big success. And that may mean producing television, producing music and making people into stars. China's culture is unlike anything in the U.S. or Europe. So doing new and different things will be critical to success. When you see a business developing its own scenarios about the future, taking actions its competitors (Coke) are too hide-bound to try, acting Disruptively to compete and using White Space projects to test new ideas you simply have to be excited!
On the other hand, "Tide Turns 'Basic" for P&G in Slump" is the Wall Street Journal headline about the latest "new" product at P&G. Please remember, the departing P&G CEO was lauded for creating an innovative culture at P&G. But it appears the legacy is a culture of sustaining innovations intended to do nothing more than Defend & Extend the old P&G brands. Now slumping, P&G needs to identify market shifts more than ever, and create new solutions that help it move with market trends. Instead, the company is rushing into reverse! Management not only seem to be driving the bus looking in the rear-view mirror, but actually driving it that way as well!
Tide has been around a long time. Ostensibly a very good product. For reasons explained in the article, managers at P&G felt the best way to sell more product was to make it less good. Really. They removed some of the chemicals that help you get clothes clean, renamed it "Basic" and launched the product at a lower price. It's not "new and improved." It's not even "better." It's literally less good – but cheaper. Sort of like store brands, or private label – only maybe not as good? Doesn't that sort of obviate the whole notion of branding?
People don't ever like to go backward. We like to grow. To learn and get more out of life. When we find a product that works, why would we want a product that works less well? And the folks at P&G missed this. Only by being insanely internally focused, terribly Locked-in, can you think this is a good idea. Looking inside a person could say "well, we want to jam the shelves with more of our branded product. We want to have the word 'Tide' smeared everywhere we can. We think people so identify with 'Tide' that they'll take a worse product just to get the name brand. We're willing to create a less good product thinking that we will get sales simply because it's cheaper than the stuff people really want to buy." Seem a little mixed up to you?
When you want to grow you figure out new ways to Disrupt the marketplace. You develop new solutions, new entry points, new connections with shifting market trends. You figure out how to be the best at the right price. You don't try to give people less, and tell them they are cheap. And Pepsi clearly gets it. They are willing to expand into music recording and TV production. Stuff P&G did when it was really creative and innovative – after all, that's why we call daytime TV "soaps", because P&G produced them just to sell soap. Now we see Pepsi applying that kind of scenario planning and competitive obsession, along with White Space, to develop new market approaches. Unfortunately we can't say the same for P&G — clearly stuck on trying to cram more stuff with the word "Tide" on it through distribution.
by Adam Hartung | Aug 4, 2009 | Innovation, Investing, Leadership, Software
A typical headline from last week read "Microsoft, Yahoo to Begin Joint Assault on Google". After a year of negotiating, the behemoth Microsoft finally came up with an accord to get some Yahoo technology in order to be more effective with its search engine product. "Microsoft to Tap 400 Yahoo Workers in Partnership" is the Marketwatch headline today trumpeting the plan to bring Yahoo engineers to Microsoft.
Will it make a difference? If we look at the trend, it looks doubtful (slide courtesy Silicon Alley Insider):
Of course, lots of folks think this isn't a very good idea. (Cartoon Courtesy DenverPost.com):
As John Dvorak pointed out in his column: "Microsoft and Yahoo Bring Google Good News." After all, the Google's competitors just went from 2 to 1 – a 50% reduction. What's more, the remaining player is not known for expertise in internet technology – merely its money hoard. Moreover, when it used its money hoard in the past it has rarely (never?) resulted in a success. No wonder BusinessWeek headlined "Microsoft and Yahoo: Too Little, Too Late, Too Hyped."
What's more intriguing to me is what this deal says about Microsoft. The company has already missed the market shift in search and ad placement. Search is "yesterday's news". Microsoft is still trying to fight the last war, not the next one. As it has done far too often, Microsoft remained Locked-in to its old Success Formula — all about the desktop and personal computing. It has not been part of the market shift to new applications and new ways of personal automation. That has been going to RIM, Apple, Oracle and other players. Microsoft has sat on its market share in the old market, piled up cash, but not taken the actions to be a winner in the next market – the next battle for growth. Now it's joint venture with Yahoo will strip out engineers, attempt to convert them to Microsoft ways of thinking, and put them into battle with not only the largest player in search and on-line ad placement – but the only one making money. And the one introducing new technologies and products on a regular basis.
Someone asked me last week "Who's the next GM?" I think they meant "who's the next big bankruptcy." But the better question here is "Who's the giant company that everyone thinks is competitively insurmountable, but at great risk of falling from market leadership into the Whirlpool – and eventual bankruptcy?" To that I say keep your eyes on Microsoft.
The comparisons between Microsoft and GM are striking:
- Early market leaders
- Developed near monopolies
- Challenged by the trust busters
- Created very high growth rates and huge cash hoards
- Considered a great place to work, with great longevity
- Bought up competitors
- Bought up technologies, and often never took them to market
- Became arrogant to customers
- Implemented a strong Success Formula that everyone was expected to follow
- Strong leaders that kept the companies "focused"
- Dominated their local geography as employers
- Tended to talk a lot about their past, and how what they've previously accomplished
- Tended to ignore competitors
- Avoided Disruptions – late to market with every product. Tried using marketing and money to succeed rather than being first with great products and solutions
- Never allowed White Space to develop anything new
This joint venture is not White Space. Microsoft may want to be in Search and ad sales, but the company is still relying on its old business to "carry it through." They have ignored Google and other competitors, and are trying to use the old Success Formula to compete with a much nimbler and more market-attuned competitor. They have ignored Disruptive innovations, and not developed any new solutions themselves. They have refused to allow White Space to develop new solutions for shifting market needs – instead trying to push the market to buy their solutions based on old ways of doing business. Don't forget that MSN and it's search engine have been in the market since the beginning – it's not like they just woke up to discover the market existed. Rather, they just started hinting that maybe, after 15 years of failing, they aren't doing the right things.
If you still own Microsoft stock, I predict a really bumpy ride. They won't go bankrupt soon. But GM spent 30 years going sideways for investors before finally going bankrupt. That looks like the future at Microsoft. If you're a vendor, expect poor returns to create a procurement environment intending to suck all profits out of your business. If you're a customer, expect "me too" products that are late, expensive and at best "lowest common denominator" in appearance and performance. If you're an employee, expect increased turnover, lot of infighting, increased internal politics, promotions based on reinforcing the status quo rather than results, and few opportunities for personal growth.
Employees, vendors and investors of Microsoft should read the free ebook "The Fall of GM: What Went Wrong and How To Avoid Its Mistakes." Everyone who has to deal with shifting markets needs to.
by Adam Hartung | May 24, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, General, Lifecycle, Television
One of the hardest things for leaders to do is recognize market shifts. The tendency to remain focused on Defending & Extending what was always does is so great that market shifts which demand change are overlooked in the urge to improve what was always done – even as results fade.
An obvious example is Playboy enterprises. "Playboy denies report of $300M price tag" was a Chicago Crain's headline, as rumors that the company (now publicly valued at only $90M) was being shopped for a new owner. Playboy was founded as a "lifestyle" media company intended to meet the emerging needs of "sophisticated" adult males in the 1960s. To the surprise of many publishers and government leaders, Playboy became a huge success. Its magazines outsold expectations. The company grew by opening clubs in major cities where businessmen entertained. Even resorts were founded as vacation destinations. As the company expanded it moved its headquarters from Chicago, where government officials disliked the hometown anomaly, to LA. And the company acquired a 727 as the corporate jet. As revenues and profits expanded, the company went public. As recently as 2000 the company was worth nearly $1.2billion (chart here).
But, the market changed. Women entered the workforce as one primary contributor to the clubs becoming passe, leading to their close. Likewise, the resorts closed as competitors – clubs catering to young men and couples, such as Club Med – did a better job of meeting their needs. The magazine became less and less viable as market shifts led to a split between pornography magazines for those who wanted photos and serious mens journals ranging from Stereophile and Autoweek to GQ. Market shifts ranging from America's attitudes about how to treat women, to what was needed in a serious current events or hobbyist journal, left the company's products less and less interesting. As the founder aged, the company lost track of its primary target and failed to identify a new target market. And the new CEO, the founder's daughter, was unable to develop future scenarios identifying a viable direction – or products – to keep the company growing.
At this point, Playboy has no clear market, has suffered from decades of declining revenue and profits, and investors have no reason to expect an improved return on investment. Why anyone should want to buy the company, especially as we observe that all print journalism is shrinking dramatically, is unclear. Playboy is at the vanguard again – but this time of demonstrating the end of print media and the losses capable from ignoring market shifts. Had Playboy long ago dropped the salatious pictures and moved itself toward a growing readership – providing insights to men's lifestyle issues in sports, fashion, electronics, autos or any number of topics – it had a chance of maintaining its success. But now the brand represents a complete out-of-synch with market needs and is more likely a negative than a positive; of no value. Playboy leadership should take the money and run, distributing what it can to investors, from whatever fool is willing to throw away its money on an acquisition.
Meanwhile, a recent Wall Street Journal Blog was titled "Skype Gets the Oprah Treatment". The WSJ blooger seemed perplexed that Oprah Winfrey's show would choose to run an entire episode by interviewing people on Skype. His implication was strongly that the episode was some sort of technology endorsement in disguise.
But, to the contrary, we can see where Ms. Winfrey and her producers are much smarter than her media CEO counterpart at Playboy. This episode gave viewers a firsthand experience with new technology which is available and usable by her target audience. People were able to recognize how the technology works, and why you would use it to communicate with others – possibly in remote locations.
Although Ms. Winfrey is "50ish" her company is keeping her product very current. Her audience is learning how to use new technology that will help them be better connected to family or business associates. And save money doing so, compared to traditional telephonic tools. Ms. Winfrey and her leadership team could continue to do what they always did, but this kind of new show helps them keep Harpo Enterprises and one of its products – The Oprah Show – in the forefront of competitivesness. That's why Harpo can lay claim to reaching even more people in Asia and Europe than in the USA! Thus Harpo keeps viewer numbers high, and advertisers willing to foot the bill.
Harpo Productions and Ms. Winfrey are demonstrating their willingness to shift with the marketplace. They are trying new things, and are willing to branch out with changes to stay connected to markets as they shift. Doing so is a requirement in lifestyle products, like media. She benefits her customers by willingly shifting with the market, and those lucky enough to work for Harpo or supply the company, will benefit by its willingness to remain connected to changing markets – by staying on the forefront.
Many CEOs and their leadership teams would do well to understand the failure of remaining Locked-in, like Playboy did. And to recognize the value of remaining abreast of market shifts and keeping products current with changing market requirements, like Harpo Productions and is famous CEO. Sometimes being criticized for being too avant garde is a good thing, because it shows you aren't afraid to change in the pursuit of keeping current with market shifts.