A Tale of 2 charts – AOL and Apple

Do you remember when AOL dominated the internet?  In the early 1990s most people who used the internet actually were AOL clients.  They bought their internet access, via dial-up modems, from AOL.  Their interface (browser) was from AOL.  And most of the sites – and navigation – was driven by AOL.  AOL was the "monster" of the web.  And it created enormous value for investors from this leadership position.  It's value stormed to over $160billion!

AOL chart
Chart from Silicon Alley Insider

But as we can see, once acquired by Time Warner AOL tried to Defend & Extend its position. These actions pushed AOL into the Swamp, an undefendable position in the rapidly growing internet world. Defending its position proved impossible, as people found better and lower cost solutions for accessing and using the web.  Now AOL is in the Whirlpool, fast disappearing – an historical anecdote about early internet days.

Apple has only about 2% market share in mobile phones.  On the one hand, this could appear nearly immaterial.  But if we look at usage, we see a very different story

Iphone apps
Chart courtesy Silicon Alley Insider

iPhone application growth, which is clearly becoming logarithmic, demonstrates a change in the marketplace.  People are clearly using these devices for more than making calls.  Unlike AOL, which tried to hold people into their environment – or even Motorola's RAZR which tried to dominate sales of phones with pricing – Apple isn't trying to Defend & Extend a market positionApple is creating a market disruption by changing how mobile devices are used.  Promulgating applications increases demand for the iPhone (and iTouch) as not just phones but as replacements for laptops and other internet devices.  Possibly ereaders like Kindle.  This pulls people toward Apple's devices, which will generate strong future growth.  By constantly bringing out new uses, Apple disrupts the market for phones, computers and internet access devices.  Positioning its own products to be big winners as demand continues growing, and keeping Apple in the Rapids.

PostScript –

I was pleased to see a recent Wall Street Journal article "What Kills Great Companies:  Inertia."  The message of Lock-in as a source of business problems keeps spreading.  This time Gary Hamel talks about some of the sources of Lock-in he sees.  Reads like he bought a copy of "Create Marketplace Disruption"!

Recognizing Lock-in – Be worried about Dell

In "Why Apple Can't Sell Business Laptops" Forbes gives the case to be pro-Dell.  The author points out that Dell has 32% of the computer market within companies that have more than 500 employees.  He then explains this happens because Dell makes machines that are constantly the next generation beyond the previous laptop – a little better, a little faster, a little cheaper.  Comparing the new Lenovo Z to the Mac Air, the author concludes that anyone who sits in a corporate office, with a lot of corporate IT requirements, who wants the next small laptop would find it easiest to fit the Dell product into their work.

He's right.  Which is why investors, employees, suppliers and customers should worry.

Everything described is Lock-in.  Dell has focused on big IT departments, and sells products which cater to them.  Dell is listening to its dominant customers.  Each quarter Dell gets more dependent upon these customers – and walks further out on the PC gangplank when servicing their needs. 

But, large corporations are laying off more workers than any other part of the economy.  Both in absolute numbers and as a percentage of employment.  They are not the "growth engine" or the companies that will lead us out of this recession.  And while Dell caters to these customers, Dell is missing major shifts that are happening in how people use computers.  Shifts that are already demonstrating the market for traditional laptop technology is waning.

In PC technology, people are moving away from laptops and toward netbooks.  By far, netbooks have overtaken laptops as users shift how they access the web and get work done.  Additionally, people are moving away from traditional computing platforms for lots of things, like email and web browsing (to name 2 big ones), and using instead mobile devices like Blackberry and iPhoneApple appears to be very careful to not chase the netbook curve, instead appearing to advance the mobile device curve with future iPhones and a possible Tablet product. 

As Dell keeps getting closer and closer to its "core" customers, its customer and technology (traditional PC) Lock-ins are making it increasingly vulnerable.  When users simply stop carrying laptops, what will Dell sell them?  When corporations move applications to cloud computing, and users no longer need their "heavy" laptop, where will that leave Dell?  

The Forbes writer made the big mistake of measuring Dell by looking at its past – and glorifying its focus.  But this points out that Dell is really very vulnerable.  Technology is shifting, as are a lot of users.  The author, and Dell, should spend more time looking at the competition — including solutions that aren't laptops.  And they should spend more time building scenarios for 2015 to 2020 — which would surely show that having a better "corporate laptop" today is not a good predictor of future competitiveness for changing user needs.

Apple keeps looking better and smarter.  Instead of going "head-to-head" with the PC makers, Apple is helping users migrate to mobile computing via different sorts of devices with better connectivity (the mobile network) and lighter interfaces.  They are providing applications that support a wider variety of user needs, like GPS as a simple example, which make their devices addictive.  They are pulling people toward the future, rather than trying to hold on to historical computing structures.  As the shift continues, eventually we'll see corporate IT departments make this shift – just as they shifted to PCs from mainframes and minicomputers throwing IBM and DEC into the lurch.  As this shift progresses, the winners will be those with the solutions for where customers are headed.  And Dell doesn't have anything out there today.

Be Wary of Quick Fixes – HP, Dell, EDS and Perot Systems

Last week was big news for technology.  Hewlett Packard announced it was killing the EDS brand name, pushing to make HP more of an integrated solutions company (like IBM).  And Dell bought Perot Systems to launch itsfirst push into services.  According to Washington Technology "HP, Dell Know They Have to Change or Die."  The article talks about the dramatically shifting marketplace (love that language!), and how these two hardware oriented companies are trying to avoid the Sun Microsystems finality by getting into services.  The author says the companies must "adapt or die," and "there's no sitting still."  He goes on to say "it may take years," but he thinks they will transition and eventually be successful.  His success forecast hinges on his belief that they must change to survive – and that will be sufficient motivation.

I love the awareness of shifting markets, and the recognition that shifts are demanding changes in these former leaders.  But I don't agree with the conclusion that future success is highly likely.  Because even with big acquisitions and name changes – HP and Dell haven't laid the groundwork to change.  They have taken some rifle shots, but they haven't followed The Phoenix Principle and that means the odds are less than 10% they will successfully transition.

Lots of companies have tried to transition via acquisition.  Heck, GM once bought EDS (and Hughes Electronics) – and look what it did for them.  Just because a company buys something doesn't mean they'll change.  McDonald's bought Chipotle, and then sold it despite double digit growth to fund acquisition of additional McDonald's.  Just because a company needs to change its Success Formula to succeed – or even survive – is a long way from proving they will do it.

Neither HP or Dell show they are building a company for the future.  Unfortunately, they look to be chasing a model built by IBM in the 1990s.  Taking action in 2009 to recreate "best practices" of 15 – 20 years ago is far from creating a company positioned for success.  There is no discussion of future scenario planning from either company – about technology use or changing business practices.  No description of their scenarios for 2015 and 2020 – scenarios that would demonstrate very high growth and payoff from their action.  To the contrary, all the discussion seems to be defensive.  They are getting into services – finally – because they realize their growth has slowed and profits are declining.  It's not really about the future, it's action taken by studying the rear view mirror.

Additionally, there is no discussion of any Disruptions at either company.  To change organizations must attack old Lock-ins.  Embedded processes – from hiring and reviews to product development and resource allocation – all exist to Defend & Extend past behavior.  If these aren't attacked head-on then organizations quickly conform any potential change into something like the past.  In the case of these companies, lacking a clear view of what future markets should look like, they have opted to forgo Disruptions.   Mr. Gerstner attacked the sacred cows around IBM viciously in his effort to transition the company into more services.  But the CEOs at HP and Dell are far less courageous.

And there's no White Space here for developing a new Success Formula aligned with market needs as they are emerging.  Instead of creating an environment in which new leaders can compete in new ways, these businesses are being instructed on how to behave – according to some plan designed by someone who clearly thinks they are smarter than the marketplace.  Without White Space, "the plan" is going to struggle to meet with markets that will continue to shift every bit as fast the next 2 years as they did the last year.

I have very limited expectations that these actions will increase the performance of either company.  I predict organic growth will slow, as "integration" issues mount and "synergy" activities take more time than growth initiatives.  They will not see a big improvement in profits, because competition is extremely severe and there is no sign these companies are introducing any kind of innovation that will leapfrog existing competitors – remember, mere size is not enough to succeed in today's marketplace.  They will largely be somewhat bigger, but no more successful.

It's easy to get excited when a company makes an acquisition off the beaten path.  But you must look closely at their actions and plans before setting expectations.  These companies could make big changes.  But that would require a lot more scenario planning, a lot more focus on emerging competitors (not the existing, well known behemoths), much more Disruption to knock back the Lock-in and White Space for building a new Success Formula.  Without those actions this is going to be another acquisition followed by missed expectations, cost cutting and discussions about size that cover up declining organic growth.

“I don’t get it” is no excuse – Facebook, Linked-in, Twitter, MySpace, Plaxo

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.

Please leave Google alone – bad advice from Harvard and Mr. Anthony

Is Google a company who's growth and innovation worry you?  Not me.  Which is why I was disturbed by a recent blog at Harvard Business School Publishing's web site "Google Grows Up."  In this article Scott Anthony, a consultant and writer for HBS, says that he thinks Google has been immature about its innovation management, and he thinks the company needs to change it's approach to innovation.  Unfortunately, his comments replay the core of outdated management approaches which lead companies into lower returns.

No doubt Google's revenues are highly skewed toward on-line ad placement.  But with the market growing at more than 2x/year, and Google maintaining (or growing) share it's not surprising that such high revenues would dwarf other projects.  Google created, and has remained, in the Rapids of growth by leading the market.  From its Disruptive innovation, offering advertising through products like Google AdWords to people who previously couldn't afford it or manage it, allowed Google to lead a market shift for advertising.  And ever since Google has implemented sustaining innovations to maintain its leadership position.  That's great management.  No reason to worry about a lot of revenue in ad placement today, with the market growing.  Not as long as Google keeps breeding lots of new, big ideas to help grow in the future.

But Mr. Anthony flogs Google for its "unrestrained" approach to innovation.  He recommends the company push hard to implement a process for innovation management – and he uses Proctor & Gamble as his role model – in order to curtail so many innovations and funnel resources to "the right" innovations.  Even though he's obviously flogging his consulting, and pushing that all "good management" requires some significant stage gate management of innovation – he couldn't be more wrong.

Firstly, P&G is far from a role model for innovation.  As recently discussed in this blog, the company recently said one of its major innovations was cutting prices on Tide while introducing less a less-good formulation.  As commenters said loudly, this is not innovation.  It's merely price cutting – taking another step on the demand/supply curve of price vs. performance.  It doesn't change the shape of the curve – it doesn't help people get a far superior return – nor does it bring in new customers who's needs were not previously met. 

In a Wall Street Journal article "P&G Plots Course To Turn Lackluster Tide," the CEO freely admits the company has had insufficient organic growth.  Additionally, his big future opportunities are to "reposition Tide," to cut the price of Cheer by another 13% and to use Defend & Extend practices to try pushing the P&G Success Formula into other countries.  Like people in China, India and elsewhere are in need of 1.5 gallon containers of laundry detergent sold through enormous stores which have big parking lots for all those cars to lug stuff home.  None of these ideas have helped P&G grow, nor helped the company achieve above-average returns, nor demonstrate the company is going to be a leader for the next 10 years in new products, new distribution systems or new business models for the developed or developing world. 

This urge to "grow up" is a huge downfall of business thinking.  It smacks of arrogance and superiority by those who say it – like they somehow are "in the know" while everyone else is incapable of making smart resource allocation decisions.   In "Create Marketplace Disruption" I provide a long discussion about how introducing "professional management' causes companies to enter growth stalls.  The very act of saying "gee, we could be more efficient about how we manage innovation" immediately applies braking power well beyond what was imagined.  If Mr. Anthony were worried about Google managers leaving to start new companies in the past (like Twitter) he should be apoplectic at the rate they'll now leave – when it's harder to get management attention and funding for new potentially disruptive innovations.

Google is doing a great job of innovating.  Largely because it doesn't try to manage innovation.  It maintains robust pipelines of both disruptive, and sustaining, innovations. Google allows everybody in the company to work at innovation – providing wide permission to try new things and ample resources to test ideas.  Then Google lets the market determine what goes forward.  It lets the innovators use supply chain partners, customers, emerging customers, lost customers and anybody who can provide market input guide where the innovation processes go.  As a result, the company has developed several new products — such as new network applications that replace over-sized desktop apps, and a new, slimmer mobile operating system that expands the capabilities of mobile devices —- and we can well imagine that it may be coming close to additional revenue breakthroughs.

Unfortunately, Mr. Anthony would like readers, and his clients, to believe they are better at managing innovation than the marketplace.  However, all research points in the opposite direction.  When managers start guessing at the future their Lock-ins to historical processes, products and market views consistently causes them to guess wrong.  They over-invest in things that don't work out well, and investing for really good ideas dries up.  All resource allocation approaches use things like technology risk, market risk, cost risk and revenue risk to downplay breakthrough ideas.  Management cannot help but "extend the past" and in doing so over-invest in what's known, rather than let ideas get to market so real customers can say what is valuable.

Google is doing great.  In a recession that has put several companies out of business (Silicon Graphics and Sun Microsystems are two neighbors) and challenged the returns of several stalwarts (Microsoft and Dell just 2 examples) Google has grown and seen its value rise dramatically.  To think that hierarchy and managers can apply better decision-making about innovation is – well – absurd.  It's always best to get the idea surfaced, push for permission to do things that might appear crazy at first, and get them to market as fast as possible so the real decision-makers can react, and give input, to innovation.

September 11, 2009 – United, American, Delta, Northwest, Airlines et.al.

Stealing language from FDR, September 11, 2001 is a day that will go down in infamy.  Dramatic shifts happened in the world resulting from the horrific attacks on American civilians in New York, Pennsylvania and D.C. .  But can we say that most organizations have reacted effectively to those shifts?

Few industries were more affected by the attacks than the airline industry.  Shut down for a week, revenues plummeted immediately and were hard to win back from a frightened public.  But if ever there was an industry of needing to push the "reset button" on how things worked it was airlines.  All the major players (except Southwest) had struggled with profitability, many declaring bankruptcy.  Some never emerged (like PanAm, Eastern, Braniff).  Mergers had been rampant as companies tried to expand into greater profits – unsuccessfullyCustomer satisfaction had been on a straight southeasterly direction, lower and lower, ever since deregulation.  Here was a collection of businesses for which nothing was going right, and in dire need of changing their business model.

The shut down and economic downturn provided a tremendous opportunity for the airlines to change their Success Formula.  The government allowed unprecedented communication between companies, and unions were ready to make changes, to get the air traffic system working again.  A sense of cooperation emerged for finding better solutions, including security.  Market shifts which had been happening for a decade were primed for new solutions – perhaps implementing operational methods proven successful at Southwest.

Unfortunately, everybody chose instead to extend Lock-ins to old practices and bring their airline company back on-line with minimal change.  Instead of using this opportunity to Disrupt their practices, taking advantage of a dramatic challenge to their business, and use White Space to try new approaches – to a competitor every single airline re-instituted business as usual.  To disastrous results.  Quickly profits went down further, customer satisfaction dropped further and in short order all the major players (except Southwest) were filing bankruptcies and hoping some sort of merger would somehow change the declining results.

The airlines' problems were not created by the events of 9/11/01.  But on that day long-developing market shifts become wildly apparent.  The airlines, and other industries like banking, had the opportunity to recognize these market shifts, admit their impact on future results (not good), and begin Disrupting old practices in order to experiment with new solutions that better fit changing market needs.  None did.  It wasn't long before America was mired in another long and expensive military conflict, and an extended deep recession.  For most businesses, things went from bad to worse.

Leaders need to recognize when external events pose the opportunity to Disrupt things as they've been – Disrupt the status quo – and start doing things differently.  These prime opportunities don't happen often.  Reacting with reassurances, and efforts to get back to the status quo as quickly as possible prove disastrous.  This is an emotional reaction, seeking a past sense of stability, but it creates additional complacency worsening the impact of market shifts already jeopardizing the future.  Instead, one of the most critical actions leaders can take is to leverage these market challenges into a call for Disruptions and use White Space to implement new solutions which meet market needs. 

If only the airlines had done that perhaps they could operate on-time, let customers check luggage without a charge, provide quality meals on long flights and internet access on all flights, and provide a reliable service that customers enjoy.  If they had sought to find a better solution, rather than Defending & Extending what they had always done, airline customers would be in a far better shape.  And that's a lesson all leaders need to learn from the events of 9/11 – use challenges to move forward, not try reclaiming some antiquated past.

To read how GM ended up bankrupt by refusing to recognize opportunities for changing to meet shifting market needs download the free ebook "The Fall of GM."

Buying the Business – Kraft, Cadbury and Del Monte vs. Google & Apple

When they can't figure out how to grow a business, leaders often turn to acquisitions.  This despite the fact that every analysis ever done of public companies buying other public companies has shown that such acquisitions are bad for the buyer.  Yet, after no new products at Kraft for a decade, and no growth, "Kraft shares fall on Cadbury bid, Higher offer awaited" is the Marketwatch.com headline.

Some analysts praise this kind of acquisition.  And that's when we can realize why they are analysts, in love with investment banking and deals, and not running companies.  "Kraft is demonstrating its operational and financial strength" is one such claim.  Hogwash.  After years of cost cutting and no innovation, the Kraft executives are worried they'll get no bonuses if they don't grow the top line.  So they want to take a cash hoard from all those layoffs and spend it, overpaying for someone else's business which has been stripped of cost by another CEO.  After the acquisition the pressure will be on to cut costs even further, in order to pay for the acquisition, leading to more layoffs.  It's no surprise that 2 years after an acquisition they all have less revenue than projected.  Instead of 2 + 1 = 3 (the expected revenue) we get 2 + 1 = 2.5 as revenues are lost in the transition.  But the buyer will claim revenues are up 25% (.5 = 25% of the original 2 – rather than a 12.5% decrease from what the combined revenues should be.) 

With rare exceptions, acquisitions generate no growth.  Except in the pocketbooks of investment bankers and their lawyers through deal fees, the golden parachutes given to select top executives of the acquired company, and in bonuses of the acquirer who took advantage of poorly crafted incentive compensation plans.  These are actions taken to Defend & Extend an existing Success Formula.  The executives want to do "more of the same" hoping additional cost cutting (synergies – remember that word?) will give them profits from these overpriced revenues.  There is no innovation, just a hope that somehow they will work harder, faster or better and find some way to lower costs not already found. Kraft investors are smart to vote "no" on this acquisition attempt.  It won't do anybody any good. 

Simultaneously we read in MediaPost.com, "Del Monte To Hike Marketing Spend 40%."  If this were to launch new products and expand the Del Monte business into new opportunities this would be a great investment.  Instead we read the money is being spent "to drive sales of Del Monte's core brands and higher-margin businesses."  In other words, while advertising is off market-wide Del Monte leadership is attempting to buy additional business – not dissimilarly to the goals at Kraft.  By dramatically upping the spend on coupons, shelf displays and advertising Del Monte will increase sales of long-sold products that have shown slower growth the last few years.  Del Monte may well drive up short-term revenues, but these will not be sustainable when they cut the marketing spend in a year or two.  Nor when new products attract customers away from the over-marketed old products.  Lacking new products and new solutions such increased spending does not improve Del Monte's competitiveness.

You'd think after the last 10 years business leaders would have learned that investors are less and less enamored with financial shell games.  Buying revenues does not improve the business's long term health.  A cash hoard, created by cutting costs to the bone, is not well spent purchasing ads to promote existing products – or in buying another business that is already large and mature.  Instead, companies that generate above-average rates of return do so by developing and launching new products and services.

You don't see Google or Apple or RIM making a huge acquisition do you?  Or dramatically increasing the marketing budget on old products?  Compare those companies to Kraft and you see in stark contrast what generates long-term growth, higher investor returns, jobs and a strong supplier base.  Disruptions and White Space lead these companies to new innovations that are generating growth.  And that's why even the recession hasn't shut them down.

Know when to say “no” – Chicago Sun-Times Media Group and Newspapers

I never cease to be startled by the optimism of businesspeople.  Why would anybody buy a newspaper company these days?  Yet, Crain's reports "Sun Times Sale Appears Near."  It's believed the buyers are a group of independent investors, no media experience, led by Mesirow Financial Group.

Ever heard the term "smart money?"  This is definitely not "smart money."  Just like Cerberus was none to clever to spend billions buying Chrysler a couple of years ago.  Shortly before it went bankrupt.  Too often, those with lots of money to invest become full of hubris.  They believe their experience allows them to "fix" any business.  This almost always involves cost cutting – such as letting go any sort of R&D, product development, advertising, marketing and often sales.  Assets are sold to raise cash and incur one-time write-offs (with tax deductions) and get rid of depreciation charges.  These financiers believe they can "fix" any business if they are "tough" enough to cut enough costs, and get the remaining employees "focused" on specific segments with specific products.

Only we're finding out that just doesn't work.  This sort of "company flipping" was prevalent in the early 2000s.  But it added no value, and it wasn't long before market investors quit playing.  The value of these cost-stripped businesses, with no growth potential, dropped like a stone.  Without growth, the business just keeps on shrinking.

Tribune Corporation, parent of newspaper Chicago Tribune, has already filed bankruptcy.  But it is expected to wipe out bondholders (lots of it the employee pension plan), and come out of bankruptcy.  To a market which in which fewer and fewer people read newspapers, and fewer and fewer advertisers are buying ads.  There is too much competition today for too few subscribers, and too few advertisers, in newspapers.  Sun Times Media has no major on-line presence, nor television stations.  So how will these investors make a return on their acquisition investment?

They won't.

It's hard to give up in business.  It's hard to believe that there just isn't demand for buggy whips any more.  It's hard to believe that the last remaining buggy whip manufacturers are so competitive, unwilling to give up, that they don't make much profit.  We are romanced into believing that "if you really want to be a blacksmith, there's a way to make money at it."  We want to believe that somehow if we work hard enough, if we're smart enough, we can "fix" any business.  But when the market has shifted, and demand drops, the smart leaders know to say "no."  They take their investing to where customers and demand are growing so they can make a much better rate of return.

Invest in the Rapids.  Not the Swamp.  Companies in the Swamp almost always end up in the Whirlpool.  It's hard to think Sun Times Media isn't already there – what with their negative cash flow and very small cash hoard.  Unless you know exactly how you're going to add growth to a troubled business, it's best to simply walk away.

Don’t wait too long – Huffington Post, GM, Chrysler, Ford, Hyundai, Honda, Toyota

"Huffington Says Her Site Is Close To Making Money" is the video headline at Marketwatch.com.  For years this blog has chastised traditional news publishers for trying to Defend & Extend their traditional business, when the market has shifted on-line —- both for readers and advertisers.  Of course, the newspaper companies counter this argument by saying that they can't make any money on-line.  They have to defend their traditional business – even from web competitors.

When shifts happen it's best to get started experimenting and migrating early.  You may hate the political bent of HuffingtonPost.com, but that it's near making money shows that the model can work.  Just differently than a newspaper or magazine.  Unfortunately, most traditional media have been too busy trying to fend off the web to learn anything.  For example, Tribune Corporation has long owned equity stakes in CareerBuilder.com and Cars.com as well as FoodChannel.com.  But the company refused to learn from these ventures and migrate toward a different Success Formula.

Now it's too late for these traditional companies.  You may think that if HuffingtonPost.com is still not quite profitable there's still time to compete.  But reality is that Ms. Huffington's organization has been experimenting and learning and creating this Success Formula for 4 years.  That kind of learning you can't pick up overnight.  You have to participate in the marketplace, then make what you learn (good and bad) available for everyone to see.  Then you have to discuss what you've learned openly so the organization can become knowledgable about what works and migrate toward a new Success Formula in which they have confidence.  And that's why most companies react to market switches way too late.  They think they can jump in at the last minute.  But by then the HuffingtonPost.coms and Marketwatch.coms and MediaPost.coms have already learned how to succeed at this business, developed a subscriber base and created a viable ad sales program.

Take for example "Clunkers Program Boosts Ford, But Not GM, Chrysler" as headlined on Marketwatch.com.  Now that the results are in from the government stimulated "clunkers" program, we know that the market has shifted away from GM and Chrysler.  Year-over-year, Hyundai sales were up 47%, Honda up 9%, Toyota up 6.4%Ford scored big with sales up 17%.  But GM sales were down over 20%, and Chrysler sales fell 15%.  We can see from this data that people were ready to buy cars, given a boost.   While the overall market was up, we can see that it has shifted to a new batch of competitorsGM and Chrysler simply weren't prepared to compete – and it's doubtful they ever will be.  They've missed the market shift, and now they don't have the R&D, products, distribution, marketing, etc. to remain competitive with companies that are seeing volumes and revenues rise.

Of course, every company has the opportunity to shift with markets – or be crushed by changes.  The latest economic reports show that too many American businesses, like GM and Chrysler, are waiting to be crushed.  "US productivity rises at fastest pace in nearly 6 years, while labor costs plunge in spring" is the ChicagoTribune.com headline.  This is bad news for those thinking an economic upturn will save them.

When an economy grows productivity improvements are good.  Imagine you sell 100 items.  You have 100 employees.  Productivity is 1.  A growing economy allows you to sell 105, your employment remains the same, and productivity jumped 5%.  Lots of winners – between the employees (more pay or bonus), the customers (possibly lower prices down the road based on rising volume), for investors (more profits)  and for suppliers (more volume and less pressure on prices.)  Let's say the economy slackens – like 2009.  Volume drops to 90.  But through cost saving measures employment drops to 86.  Productivity just went up almost 5%!  But nobody won.  And that's what's happening today.  Labor rates keep dropping because there's more labor supply than product demand – and if businesses keep cutting costs we'll improve our productivity right up while the economy keeps going down.

Business leaders need to be more like Huffington Post, and less like GM.  To improve profits they need to recognize that markets have shifted, and move quickly to develop new Success Formulas which get them growing.  Trying to Defend & Extend the old business, like newspaper publishers, simply drives you toward bankruptcy.  Instead, it's time to Disrupt the status quo and create some White Space projects to learn what the market wants.  It's time to experiment and get the whole company involved in applying the collective brainpower to develop new a new Success Formula which gets you growing, making more money, and improving productivity for real!

Can you spot a bad idea – Pizza Hut of Yum Brands and stuffed pan pizza

Innovation comes in many forms, and some are a lot more valuable than others.  The most valuable bring in users formerly un-served or under-served thus expanding the market and offering new growth – like mobile phones did.  The least valuable are variations of something that exists, which do little more than give variety to existing customers. 

"Pizza Hut Intros Stuffed Crust Pan Pizza" from Mediapost.com is without a doubt the latter.  The company takes a product introduced in 1980, then adds an enhancement developed in 1995, and in 2009 launches a product that is merely the combination of the two.  At first blush you say "why not?"  But this launch costs money – quite a bit of money.  There's the cost in product formulation, the cost in training tens of thousands of store workers to make it, cost in new menus, cost for in-store marketing materials, and cost for media advertising of the new product.  The same costs (only much  higher now)  as incurred to launch the totally new innovation pan pizza 30 years ago. 

Only this won't generate new revenue.  These kind of variation innovations largely provide an alternative for existing customers.  Restaurants are famous for selling 70% of their product to repeat customers that return week after week.  These people often look for new, sometimes strange, variations.  Remember Hawaiian pizza with pineapple, or Bar-B-Que pizza with roasted pork and BBQ sauce?  These are the kinds of things that don't bring in new customers, they aren't finding an under-served market and bringing those people to the restaurant.  They merely offer variations, which might catch the interest of returning customers, but few others.  They are very expensive defensive product launches meant to keep the loyal customer from considering the competition.  But because these incur cost, with little new revenue, they are negative to the bottom line.

Part of the fallacy comes from the old logic of  "ask customers what they want."  Unfortunately, customers can only think of cheaper, faster and usually fractionally better.  Their ideas about innovation are almost exclusively variations on existing themes.  They already are your customer, thus not thinking hard about alternatives.  To find new products that can really grow your market, use lost customers to lead you to the new ideas.  And scan other industries and markets to see what's happening on the fringe of competition – things that can serve newly developing market needs. 

Companies that make high rates of return do not merely try to maintain revenues and cater to existing customers.  They use breakthroughs to tap into new markets and new customer segments.  Think about the "personal pan pizza" a product innovation Pizza Hut pioneered 35 years ago.  That made it possible for customers to buy a pizza for lunch – it was small enough, cheap enough, and could be served fast enough that it expanded the market for lunch pizza buyers in non-urban locations where "a slice" wasn't available.  There are new needs emerging in the restaurant business today – but putting cheese in the crust of your old pan pizza isn't the kind of thing that's going to bring new customers into the restaurant any time soon.