Outside the Lunch Box

This week before Christmas, 2005 I had a great lunch.  I was in L.A. and I called an old acquaintance to join me for lunch.  He’s a great guy, somewhat trapped in an "old-line" American manufacturing company that’s been Locked-in for several years.  They’ve not done their shareholders, nor their employees, much good for a decade.  Executive turnover hasn’t helped as new leaders just follow worn-out strategies that have eroded their pricing and competitiveness.

"How about some Sushi?" I asked.  Now, this buddy was a "meat and potatoes" guy, so my question was intended as a ribbing.  I was surprised when he said, "Sure.  Whatever you like."  "You must be kidding" I said, "since when do you eat so adventurously?"  "Over lunch" he said, leading me to wait for a juicy answer.

During the last year, he had taken on a new role helping develop a company strategy.  In that role, he had made a half dozen trips to China.  "You know" he said to me "I never really understood just how dramatic the globalization changes were going to be to our business until I went to China.  They do work entirely differently than us.  It’s beyond culture and how smart we versus they are.  The Chinese are using resources we ignore, and approaching the opportunities differently.  If our company doesn’t change – fundamentally change – we won’t survive another 10 years.  The decision, the opportunity, is up to us.  If I can get our top management to see what I’ve seen, and we step up to the Challenges, we can get out of our Lock-in and create a future that exceeds everyone’s expectations.  But, if we sit doing what we’ve done – well, we’re a gonner."

My friend got outside the box.  When he changed roles and entered strategy he Disrupted his thinking about the business.  He visited foreign companies, and he saw opportunities for sales, marketing, product development, and manufacturing that he believes obsolete the existing Success Formula and create opportunities for a new one.  And, while doing this, he changed himself.  His personal Lock-ins to "the way this business is done" for the last 20 years disappeared and he sees a new industry competition developing.

Now he eats Sushi.  And he eats all kinds of Chinese food I’ve never had the opportunity.  He also eats Indian, or whatever food is served.  He got outside the box, he started thinking, and the old barriers fell away as he moved toward a new definition of success

I hope everyone enjoys their Christmas, Hanukah or Kwanzaa meals in joy and peace this year.  Whether it’s roast beef, turkey, goose, lamb — or Sushi.

CEO of the Year

Marketwatch has named Ed Zander of Motorola as it’s CEO of the Year.  What a well deserved compliment.  Motorola’s revenues are up an eye-popping 59% since before Zander joined, and the stock price has doubled.  The culture has changed from moribund and stifling to open and aggressive as they chase new opportunities in not only cell phones, but set top boxes and MP3 players.

We blogged Motorola’s success story in early September.  The story has been a classic Phoenix Principle implementation as Zander first Disrupted the organization and then implemented several White Space projects.  As early as mid-2004 we predicted the success of Motorola (and recommended buying the stock) due to the classic Phoenix Principle steps being taken (see case study here.) 

Extremely few turnarounds ever actually regain any sustainable growth – and less than 7% achieve the success of Motorola.  It is great that the company should be noted for what’s been accomplished.

You want to be optimistic

Every time we hear about a company hitting a stall we want to be optimistic.  We want to believe they will turn around their situation and recover their growth. Unfortunately, once a business hits a growth stall (regardless of the cause), it has a less than 7% chance of ever sustaining growth greater than 2%/year

Merck hit a growth stall about a year ago when one of its products was pulled from the market.  Several other products were challenged.  The immediate result was a dramatic decline in market capitalization.  The company lost about 1/3 of its value in a day – and over about 6 months the company lost half its value.  We would love to believe the company will recover its historic growth, so value shoppers begin buying up the stock.  But the fact is that Merck has a greater than 70% chance of NEVER recovering that lost market capitalization.

We would love to blame the regulators, personal injury lawyers and even product customers for creating this stumble for Merck.  But, regardless of cause, what we do know is that for Merck to recover will require a significant change in its Success FormulaThe marketplace has shifted, competition has changed (affecting the profits of all pharmaceutical companies) and Merck must change if it is going to try and regain its lost growth.

But the company is not trying to reinvent its Success Formula.  Instead, it is trying to Defend and Extend its old Success Formula with marginal changes and cost cutting. Although the company appointed a new CEO last May, it has not really Disrupted its Lock-in (in response to these market Challenges).  It has not created White Space to develop a new Success Formula.  It keeps trying to capture the lost growth by doing more, better, faster, cheaper.

Those who have heard me speak over the last year know that I have been a constant pessimist regarding Merck.  While it’s stock occasionally gains a point or two, there is no upward trajectory.  Why do I remain pessimistic?  Because, like 70% of companies that stall, Merck keep trying to "fix" its problems with tweaks.  Until the leadership Disrupts and uses White Space to reinvent, it will not address its market-based problems effectively

I’d love to be optimistic – but there just aren’t any signs that would be prudent. 

Don’t blame your customers

We all know how Apple rejuvenated itself with the iPod.  From a declining, niche player in personal computers the company took off after launching the iPod.  Taking advantage of commercially available MP3 technology, Apple stepped in after Napster was sued into oblivian to help customers accomplish their goals of building individual music libraries.

Why didn’t Sony take this tack?  Sony not only had all the hardware (after all, they were leaders in radios, personal CD players and the marketplace for personal entertainment), but they actually owned a recording company — they had the content.  Sony could have been first to build on the market Napster pioneered to reap the results.

But Sony chose to Lock-in on CDs.  It missed the MP3 wave.  And it still is.  After leading the industry wave to wipe out Napster, Sony is now leading the industry to block piracy with copy protection software.  Instead of folowing its customers and developing the marketplace, Sony keeps trying to blame its customes for its woes.  Sony keeps fighting the last war, and in the process it is alienating its customers and its most important suppliers – the recording artists.

When markets shift, those who succeed move quickly to the new competitive ground.  You can moan and groan and try to use lawyers in an effort to protect and old business, but that never works.  Customers will find the suppliers who figure out how to give them what they want.  Sony needs to wake up and align with its customers, instead of trying to find ways to protect its out-of-date (and failing) Success Formula.

Deja Vu all over again

Vornado has acquired a 1.2% stake in McDonald’s (check out full Bloomberg News article.)  Does anyone remember this scenario?  It was just November, 2004 when Vornado bought 4.8% of Sears leading to Sears acquisition by Kmart.  Simply put, the Sears real estate was worth more than the stores (KMart’s rebirth as Sears Holdings hasn’t changed that situation, either).  Vornado has learned how to spot these opportunities – including acting as a principal in buying Toys R Us in March to capture the value of that struggling retailer’s real estate.

While everyone knows that McDonald’s franchises most restaurant operations, did you know the company owns about 37% of the land under those stores, and 59% of the buildings?  Once again, to sharp real estate people the land and buildings look more attractive than the hamburger operations which use them.

McDonald’s reaction?  In an email McDonald’s spokesperson Anna Rozenich said that McDonald’s plans to stick to its current business strategy.  Over the last 5 years McDonald’s has struggled with flattening demand for its products, selling off most non-hamburger operations, closing stores and restructuring.  Now an external party has emerged to question the validity of the business model.  But despite all these Challenges McD has refused to Disrupt its old Success Formula and develop new value for its shareholders, employees, vendors and customers. 

This is the operating definition of Lock-in.

What’s in a Name?

…. Apparently a lot.  Have you seen what’s been happening to the share prices of companies like New York Times, Gannett, Knight Ridder and Dow Jones?  Down, down, down, down – from 25% to 35% in the last year.  Why should such great companies be struggling?

I always thought of these companies as news companies.  But they think of themselves as newspaper companies.  Seem subtle.  Until you realize that newspaper readership is down across the board, as is advertising for newspapers.  As we all know (and this blog demonstrates) most of us get most of our news from the web now.  Instantaneous, customized, searchable news.  We don’t wait for a paper to arrive and take time to browse it.

It would seem obvious that the best newspapers, who have the best news bureaus, would be leaders in taking news to the web.  And leaders in attracting readers to those sites.  But, alas, they spent most of their energy in early web days Defending & Extending their hard-copy business.  They feared the web and the uncertain revenue model.  They waited, and waited.  Now, people don’t go to those sites first, or second, or often at all when they want news (for more detail see Chicago Tribune story.)  And, most importantly, younger readers completely ignore these venerable names for finding their news, prefering web sites more customized to their interests.

These companies got themselves into trouble because they didn’t see themselves as News companies.  They ignored the challenges the web brought in the 1990’s.  They Defended & Extended their old Success Formulas.  They reassured themselves their business would return.  They failed to Disrupt their Lock-in to newsprint (what a simple, and obvious Lock-in), and they never created White Space teams with the PERMISSION to actually develop leadership in on-line news delivery (as well as a profit model for the emerging new market).  Now they have a HUGE Re-invention Gap as they struggle to find a way to catch up with their customers, who are leaving them in the proverbial dust.  And once again we see their employees (layoffs), vendors (cost cutting), customers (forced to find new ways to advertise effectively) and investors (losing billions of dollars in equity value) suffer. 

Be careful how you refer to your business.  Deadly Lock-in might start with something as simple as calling your business News versus Newspaper.

Spicy Growth

Imagine you bought stock in a small restaurant concept in 1993 (12 years ago) with a handful of restaurants.  Today, that chain has expanded to 450 locations, profits have grown five-fold since turning profitable in 2004 and sales are up 33 percent in the first six months of this year after doubling between 2002 and 2004.  Would you want to sell that stock?

I wouldn’t either.  But that’s what McDonald’s is doing, by selling off ownership in Chipotles.  Chipotles is growing faster, and more profitably than McDonald’s.  But McD is saying they can’t afford to invest in Chipotle, they need to sell their ownership to have others pay for continuing to grow this skyrocketing opportunity.  Why?  Because McD wants to focus on their 37,000 stagnant hamburger restaurants.

The urge to Defend & Extend the hamburger business is greater than the urge to grow at McDonald’s.  McDonald’s shareholders and franchisees would all benefit from McD getting behind expanding Chipotles.  The growth and profit opportunities in the new business are multiples of the hamburger business.  Yet, even though the data is clear, the Lock-in to perpetuating its outdated Success Formula keeps McDonald’s from taking advantage of its own opportunity.  Instead of migrating McDonald’s Success Formula toward this overwhelmingly successful White Space project, they are sending it out the door.

McDonald’s is horribly Locked-in.  Leadership doesn’t understand how to Disrupt that Lock-in in order to move the company from the Swamp back into the Rapids.  They only difference between McD and GM is that McD hasn’t moved far enough into the Swamp.  But time will tell. 

For employees and investors, now’s the time to run, not walk, toward Chipotle.  It’s always better to be in the Rapids of Growth than stuck in the Swamp of mediocre performance. 

Sporting Disruptions

What is ESPN?  Many people would say "a TV channel about sports." What an understatement.  ESPN has not one, but several channels (in multiple languages) and radio channels.  Beyond that ESPN is a magazine, an internet portal (over 17million hits/month), a provider of on-demand video, book publisher, apparel maker and retailer, restauranteur, video game producer, and soon to be provider of cell phone services.

Is all this just so much brand extension?  I don’t think so.  All of these are different businesses that ESPN has entered, learned, and now makes money on.  Cable TV content is a tough, low margin business with more failures than successes, yet ESPN has grown its viewership and revenues by more than double digits every year for a decade.  Radio listenership has been declining for almost a decade.  Periodical publishing has had negative growth in ad dollars and pages printed for over 5 years (just review the declining fortunes of New York Times and Gannett).  Apparel makers and retailers are struggling with changing market tastes and offshore competitors, while restaurants is the #1 most likely to fail start-up business and video games are dominated by a handful of very large, trendy shops.  And ESPN has entered all these extremely competitive businesses and turned a profit within only a few months.

ESPN has profitably grown by staying in the Rapids, rather than resting on it’s original Success Formula to provide sports news over cable TV.  The company has overcome its Lock-In to the past by hunting out opportunities which aren’t obvious, and certainly aren’t core competencies, and then openings White Space for these opportunities to succeed.  Instead of trying to optimize its old Success Formula, the company keeps trying to invent a new one.  Every time you’d think the growth would flatten, they run right past the market Challenges to put more projects into the Rapids for ongoing growth.

At the top of ESPN is a mild-mannered 47 year old named George Bodenheimer who for the last 7 years has led the charge into all these initiatives.  Like all leaders that keep their organizations growing, he constantly Disrupts his organization.  He creates White Space, and he works to make the new projects a success.  He’s atypical of many executives (especially media executives) in his emphasis on teamwork rather than ego, and success rather than promotion.  Things simply get done – maybe not because he tries to "own" all the success and instead by unleashing his organization to succeed.

Velveeta-land

Kraft‘s shares have dropped about 22% in the last year.  They are flat over 2 years.  They are down around 25% for three years, and down 35% from their peak in 2002.  Recent profit announcements affirmed that Kraft is currently making 13.5% less than it made in the same quarter a year ago.

Company CEO Deromedi explained away the poor performance with "We don’t want to repeat mistakes we made in early 2003 when we raised prices and had significant share declines."  So, 3 years into a restructuring the CEO says investors can hope for either sales at low profits, or less sales? (see full Chicago Tribune story)

When was the last time your boss said you could spend 3 years trying to get your job right with no performance improvement?  The CEO certainly has high expectations for investor patience, doesn’t he?

Kraft is completely stuck in the Swamp, as it moves toward the Whirlpool.  The company never disrupted its worn out Success Formula, and keeps trying to regain the glory years when "America Spelled Cheese K-R-A-F-T" (remember that ad slogan?)  Yes, it is launching a new South Beach Diet line, but because it’s still using its old, poorly performing Success Formula that line is not moving the company toward a bright (and more profitable future.)  The head of new products left in June. And in the last year they’ve sold businesses to both Wrigley and Kellogg in an effort to shore up the P&L.

Kraft’s leadership needs to create some White Space and find a new future – instead of trying to resurrect Velveeta-land.

Save your way to prosperity?

GM announced a plan to cut retiree and employee healthcare costs by $18B per year today.  It also plans to cut another 8% of its workforce (25,000 jobs) on top of the 30% cut in employment it’s taken over the last 5 years. Oh, and by the way, the company is investigating selling it’s most profitable (and practically only) profitable business – GMAC.

Analysts cheered the actions, and the stock climbed on the news (despite reporting big losses.)  What do they expect?  Is GM going to save its way to prosperity? 

GM is hopelessly mired in the Swamp.  With losses mounting, and a corporate raider on their doorstep (Kirk Kerkorian now owns 10% of GM) you’d think leadership would recognize that the Challenges warrant some serious Disruption of their Success Formula (and not these ineffective disturbances).  But no, not this leadership.  They appear willing to take any action to Defend & Extend their failing Success Formula.  Even if it means cutting off their supply of resources (GMAC) and cutting rations to their own troops. 

Maybe Kerkorian can bring in a management team capable of really changing GM (he did team with Lee Iacocca on his takeover of MGM Grand).  It’s certainly clear that the current leadership has no clue how to overcome existing Lock-In.