by Adam Hartung | Jan 6, 2010 | Current Affairs, General, In the Rapids, Innovation, Leadership, Openness, Web/Tech
Leadership
Listen To Competitors–Not Customers
01.06.10, 03:10 PM EST
The accepted wisdom that the customer is king is all wrong.
That's the start to my latest Forbes column (Read here.) Think about it. What would Apple be if it had listened to its customers? An out of business niche PC company by now. What about Google? A narrow search engine company – anyone remember Alta Vista or Ask Jeeves or the other early search engine companies? No customer was telling Apple or Google to get into all the businesses they are in now – and making impressive rates of return while others languish.
But today Google launched Nexus One (read about it on Mobile Marketing Daily here) – a product the company developed by watching its competitors – Apple and Microsoft – rather than asking its customers. In the last year "smartphones" went to 17% of the market – from only 7% in 2007 according to Forrester Research. There's nothing any more "natural" about Google – ostensibly a search engine company – making smartphones (or even operating systems for phones like Android) than for GE to get into this business. But Google did because it's paying attention to competitors, not what customers tell it to do.
No customers told Google to develop a new browser – or operating system – which is what Chrome is about. In fact, IT departments wanted Microsoft to develop a better operating system and largely never thought of Google in the space. And no IT department asked Google to develop Google Wave – a new enterprise application which will connect users to their applications and data across the "cloud" allowing for more capability at a fraction of the cost. But Google is watching competitors, and letting them tell Google where the market is heading. Long before customers ask for these products, Google is entering the market with new solutions – the output of White Space that is disrupting existing markets.
Far too many companies spend too much time asking customers what to do. In an earlier era, IBM almost went bankrupt by listening to customers tell them to abandon PCs and stay in the mainframe business —– but that's taking the thunder away from the Forbes article. Give it a read, there's lots of good stuff about how people who listen to customers jam themselves up – and how smarter ones listen to competitors instead. (Ford, Tribune Corporation, eBay, Cisco, Dell, Salesforce.com, CSC, EDS, PWC, Dell, Sun Microsystems, Silicon Graphics and HP.)
by Adam Hartung | Jan 5, 2010 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, eBooks, In the Rapids, In the Swamp, Innovation, Leadership, Web/Tech
Happy New Year!
As we start 2010 the plan, according to The Financial Times, "WalMart aims to cut supply chain costs." Imagine that. Cost cutting has been the biggest Success Formula component for WalMart for its entire career. And now, the company that is already the low cost retailer – and famous for beating its suppliers down on price to almost no profitability – is planning to focus on purchasing for the next 5 years in order to hopefully take another 5% out of purchased product cost. How'd you like to hear that if Wal-Mart is one of your big customers? What do you suppose the discussion will be like when you go to Target or KMart (match WalMart pricing?)
Will this make WalMart more admired, or more successful? This is the epitome of "more of the same." Even though WalMart is huge, it has done nothing for shareholders for years. And employees have been filing lawsuits due to unpaid overtime. And some markets have no WalMart stores because the company refuses to allow any employees to be unionized. This announcement will not make WalMart a more valuable company, because it simply is an attempt to Defend the Success Formula.
On the other hand according to Newsweek, in "The Customer is Always Right," Amazon intends to keep moving harder into new products and markets in 2010. Amazon has added enormous value to its shareholders, including gains in 2009, as it has moved from bookselling to general merchandise retailing to link retailing to consumer electronics with the Kindle and revolutionizing publishing with the Kindle store. Amazon isn't trying to do more of the same, it's using innovation to drive growth.
And the CEO, Jeff Bezos freely admits that his success today is due to scenario development and plans laid 4 years ago – as Amazon keeps its planning focused on the future. With the advent of many new products coming out in 2010 – including the Apple Tablet – Amazon will have to keep up its focus on new products and markets to maintain growth. Good thing the company is headed that direction.
So which company would you rather work for? Invest in? Supply?
Which will you emulate?
PS – "Create Marketplace Disruption: How To Stay Ahead of the Competition" was selected last week to be on the list of "Top 25 Books to read in 2010" by PCWorld and InfoWorld. Don't miss getting your copy soon if you haven't yet read the book.
by Adam Hartung | Dec 31, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, General, Leadership, Openness, Web/Tech
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
We end the first decade in 2000 with another first. In ReutersBreakingViews.com "Don't Diss the Dividend" we learn 2000-2009 is the first time in modern stock markets when U.S. investors made no money for a decade. Right. Worse performance than the 1930s Great Depression. Over the last decade, the S&P 500 had a net loss of about 1%/year. After dividends a gain of 1% – less than half the average inflation rate of 2.5%.
Things have shifted. We ended the last millenium with a shift from an industrial economy to an information economy. And the tools for success in earlier times no longer work. Scale economies and entry barriers are elusive, and unable to produce "sustainable competitive advantage." Over the last decade shifts in business have bankrupted GM, Circuit City and Tribune Corporation – while gutting other major companies like Sears. Simultaneously these changes brought huge growth and success to Google, Apple, Hewlett Packard, Virgin and small companies like Louis Glunz Beer, Foulds Pasta and Tasty Catering.
Even the erudite McKinsey Quarterly is now trumpeting the new requirements for business success in "Competing through Organizational Agility." Using academic research from the London Business School, author Donald Sull points out that market turbulence increased 2 to 4 times between the 1970s and 1990s – and is continuing to increase. More market change is happening, and market changes are happening faster. Thus, creating strategies and organizations that are able to adjust to shifting market requirements creates higher revenue and improved operational efficiency. Globally agility is creating better returns than any other business approach.
A McKinsey Quarterly on-line video "Navigating the New Normal: A Conversation with 4 Chief Strategy Officers," discusses changes in business requirements for 2010 and beyond. All 4 of these big company strategists agree that success now requires far shorter planning cycles, abandoning efforts to predict markets that change too quickly, and recognizing that historically indisputable assumptions are rapidly becoming obsolete. What used to work at creating competitive advantage no longer works. Monolothic strategies developed every few years, with organizations focused on "execution," are simply uncompetitive in a rapidly shifting world.
And "the old boys club" of white men in top business leadership roles is quickly going to change dramatically. In the Economist article "We Did It" we learn that in 2010 the American workforce will shift to more than 50% women. If current leaders continue following old approaches – and generating anemic returns – they will rapidly be replaced by leaders willing to do what has to be done to succeed in today's marketplace. Like Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo, women will take on more top positions as investors and employees demand changes to improve performance. Leaders will have to be flexible and adaptive or they, and their organizations, will not survive.
Additionally, the information technology products which unleashed this new era will change, and become unavoidable. In Forbes "Using the Cloud for Business" one of the creators of modern ERP (enterprise resource planning) systems (like SAP and Oracle) Jan Baan discusses how cloud computing changes business. ERP systems were all about data, and the applications were stovepiped – like the industrial enterprises they were designed for. Unfortunately, they were expensive to buy and very expensive to install and even more expensive to maintain. Simultaneously they had all the flexibility of cement. ERP systems, which proliferate in large companies today, were control products intended to keep the organization from doing anything beyond its historical Success Formula.
But cloud computing is infinitely flexible. Compare Facebook to Lotus Notes and you start understanding the difference between cloud computing and large systems. Anyone can connect, share links, share files and even applications on Facebook at almost no cost. Lotus Notes is an expensive enterprise application that costs a lot to buy, to operate, to maintain and has significantly less flexibility. Notes is about control. Facebook is about productivity.
Cloud computing is 1/10th the cost of monolithic owned/internal IT systems. Cloud computing offers small and mid-sized companies all the computing opportunity of big companies – and big advantages to new competitors if CIOs at big companies hold onto their "investments" in IT systems too long. Businesses that use cloud architectures can rearrange their supply chain immediately – and daily. Flexibility, and adaptability, grows exponentially. And EVERYONE can use it. Where mainframes were the tool for software engineers (and untouchable by everyone else), the PC made it possible for individuals to have their own applications. Cloud computing democratizes computing so everyone with a smartphone has access and use. With practically no training.
As we leave the worst business environment in modern times, we enter a new normal. Those who try to defend & extend old business practices will continue to suffer declining returns, poor performance and failure – like the last decade. But those who embrace "the new normal" can grow and prosper. It takes a willingness to let scenarios about the future drive your behavior, a keen focus on competitors to understand market needs, a willingness to disrupt old Lock-ins and implement White Space so you can constantly test opportunities for defining new, flexible and higher returning Success Formulas.
Here's to 2010 and the new normal! Happy New Year!
by Adam Hartung | Dec 30, 2009 | Defend & Extend, General, Leadership, Openness, Web/Tech, Weblogs
As we enter 2010, is your business expecting a very different future – and have you started planning to implement new approaches based upon a different future? For example, how do you plan to acquire new customers, employees and vendors in 2010 and beyond? Do you still rely on traditional advertising? Do you use a web site? Is most of your on-line IT budget still dedicated to web site development? How much of your plans for 2010 are extensions of what you've been doing on 2009 – or maybe an ongoing trend from much earlier in the decade?
According to the Wall Street Journal in "Linked In Wants Users to Connect More," the number of Linked in users almost doubled in 2009, from 31.5M to 53.6M. And to drive additional user traffic the site is working hard to add applications which can help companies with recruiting, marketing and other business functions. With users jumping, and time on site increasing, is your company blocking access? Or is it figuring out how to leverage this leading web site to find new customers, recruit aggressive new employees and build a stronger business?
But Linked-in is considerably less successful than Facebook. Do you still think of Facebook as a site for college kids to plan drinking parties? If so, you've missed a tsunami in the making. Facebook's user base, at 350 million, is over 6 times Linked-in. According to ReadWriteWeb.com "It was a Facebook Christmas; Site Hits #1 in U.S. for First Time." On 2 days Facebook actually had more site hits than search giant Google! And Facebook was the #1 Google search in 2009. Facebook use is exploding. The average Facebook user spends over 3.5 hours in a session. Many Facebook users log in daily to keep up with their network and what's happening in markets of interest to them.
Increasingly, people don't do web searches to find out about restaurants, movies, products, services – or even jobs. They go to social media sites like Linked-In, Facebook and Twitter. If you depend on people to use your web site to learn about your business – that may be too late. When referred by a friend, what is the first impression a potential customer (or recruit) gets when reaching out to your LInked-in, MySpace or Facebook page? What applications or groups do you support to demonstrate your business and your ability to grow? How are you reaching out through these environments to meet the people who should be a customer, employee or vendor?
Increasingly, people don't even make their first touch with your business via your web site. iPhone users, and the soon-to-explode Android phone users, as well as all the other "smartphone" (or mobile device) users learn about your business from a very small screen that brings in small bits of information that is largely text. They often go to a PC and search a traditional web site only every few days. So how is your information presented? Is it largely graphical, with embedded objects that don't show up well (or at all) on a mobile device? Is it lengthy HTML pages that requires scrolling on a phone?
Increasingly, people looking for you will blow off traditional web pages in favor of easier to access and read information. You may hate the 140 character Twitter limit – but it's becoming a standard (the new "elevator pitch.") So is your on-line impression being driven by web developers, or by mobile device developers? Is your on-line environment all about driving people to your web site – which may never happen – or are you effectively connecting with them via Facebook, et.al. and informing them without asking them to go to your environment? Are you letting users control their access to your information, making it easy for them, or are you trying to control their behavior — and putting off many?
There are many reasons to think that in 2010 how people acquire business information will shift from traditional web sites to social media sites. First impressions, and a lot of the decision making process, will come from Facebook, Linked-in and Twitter. Is your business positioned for this shift?
Pepsi recently made a decision that appears forward-focused rather than following tradition. Pepsi is abandoning Super Bowl ads in favor of spending more on-line. MarketingDaily.com reports in "Compete: Pepsi's On-line Push a Smart Play" that Pepsi is reaching more people at a lower cost by investing in on-line marketing. Despite the historical role Super Bowl ads have played for big consumer products companies, Pepsi's decision is positioning the company to better connect with more users and drive more sales. Coke's decision to remain with traditional advertising looks increasingly expensive – and out of step with how people really make purchase decisions today.
Smart companies are already making changes to reach the tidal wave of people relying on social media. They are building a strong impression, and business applications, that help them grow using environments like Linked-in, MySpace and Facebook. And they employ people to keep their Twitter communications clear and strong.
So is your business taking actions – making implementations – that will support where the market is headed in 2010? Are you putting yourself where the customers and recruiting targets are? Or are you trying to do more of the same better, faster and cheaper?
by Adam Hartung | Dec 28, 2009 | Current Affairs, In the Rapids, Innovation, Leadership
I was intrigued when I read on the Harvard Business Review web site “Do we celebrate the wrong CEOs?” The article quickly pointed out that many of the best known CEOs – and often named as most respected – didn’t come close to making the list of the top 100 best performing CEOs. Some of those on Barron’s list of top 30 most respected that did not make the cut as best performing include Immelt of GE, Dimon of JPMorganChase, Palmesano of IBM and Tillerson of ExxonMobil. It did seem striking that often business people admire those who are at the top of organizations, regardless of their performance.
I was delighted when HBR put out the full article “The Best Performing CEOs in the World.” And it is indeed an academic exercise of great value. The authors looked at CEOs who came into their jobs either just before 2000, or during the decade, and the results they obtained for shareholders. There were 1,999 leaders who fit the timeframe. As has held true for a long time in the marketplace, the top 100 accounted for the vast majority of wealth creation – meaning if you were invested with them you captured most of the decade’s return – while the bulk of CEOs added little value and a great chunk created negative returns. (It does beg the question – why do Boards of Directors keep on CEOs who destroy shareholder value – like Barnes of Sara Lee, for example? It would seem something is demonstrably wrong when CEOs remain in their jobs, usually with multi-million dollar compensation packages, when year after year performance is so bad.)
The list of “Top 50 CEOs” is available on the HBR website. This group created 32% average gains every year! They created over $48.2B of value for investors. Comparatively, the bottom 50 had negative 20% annual returns, and lost over $18.3B. As an investor, or employee, it is much, much better to be with the top 5% than to be anywhere else on the list. However, only 5 of the top best performers were on the list of top 50 highest paid — demonstrating again that CEO pay is not really tied to performance (and perhaps at least part of the explanation for why business leaders are less admired now than the previous decade.)
Consistent among the top 50 was the ability to adapt. Especially the top 10. Steve Jobs of Apple was #1, a leader and company I’ve blogged about several times. As readers know, Apple went from a niche producer of PCs to a leader in several markets completely unrelated to PCs under Mr. Jobs leadership. His ability to keep moving his company back into the growth Rapids by rejecting “focus on the core” and instead using White Space to develop new products for growth markets has been a model well worth following. And in which to be invested.
Similarly, the leaders of Cisco, Amazon, eBay and Google have been listed here largely due to their willingness to keep moving into new markets. Cisco was profiled in my book Create Marketplace Disruption for its model of Disruption that keeps the company constantly opening White Space. Amazon went from an obscure promoter of non-inventoried books to the leader in changing how books are sold, to the premier on-line retailer of all kinds of products, to the leader in digitizing books and periodicals with its Kindle launch. eBay has to be given credit for doing much more than creating a garage sale – they are now the leader in independent retailing with eBay stores. And their growth of PayPal is on the vanguard of changing how we spend money – eliminating checks and making digital transactions commonplace. Of course Google has moved from a search engine to a leader in advertising (displacing Yahoo!) as well as offering enterprise software (such as Google Wave), cloud applications to displace the desktop applications, and emerging into the mobile data/telephony marketplace with Android. All of these company leaders were willing to Disrupt their company’s “core” in order to use White Space that kept the company constantly moving into new markets and GROWTH.
We can see the same behavior among other leaders in the top 10 not previously profiled here. Samsung has moved from a second rate radio/TV manufacturer to a leader in multiple electronics marketplaces and the premier company in rapid product development and innovation implementation. Gilead Sciences is a biopharmaceutical company that has returned almost 2,000% to investors – while the leaders of Merck and Pfizer have taken their companies the opposite direction. By taking on market challenges with new approaches Gilead has used flexibility and adaptation to dramatically outperform companies with much greater resources — but an unwillingness to overcome their Lock-ins.
Three names not on the list are worth noting. Jack Welch was a great Disruptor and advocate of White Space (again, profiled in my book). But his work was in the 1990s. His replacement (Mr. Immelt) has fared considerably more poorly – as have investors – as the rate of Disruption and White Space has fallen off a proverbial cliff. Even though much of what made GE great is still in place, the willingness to Defend & Extend, as happened in financial services, has increased under Mr. Immelt to the detriment of investors.
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are now good friends, and also not on the list. Firstly, they created their investor fortunes in previous decades as well. But in their cases, they remained as leaders who moved into the D&E world. Microsoft has become totally Locked-in to its Gates-era Success Formula, and under Steve Ballmer the company has done nothing for investors, employees — or even customers. And Berkshire Hathaway has spent the last decade providing very little return to shareholders, despite all the great press for Mr. Buffett and his success in previous eras. Each year Mr. Buffett tells investors that what worked for him in previous years doesn’t work any more, and they should not expect previous high rates of return. And he keeps proving himself right. Until both Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway undertake significant Disruptions and implement considerably more White Space we should not expect much for investors.
This has been a tough decade for far too many investors and employees. As we end the year, the list of television programs bemoaning how badly the decade has gone is long. Show after show laments the poor performance of the stock market, as well as employers. We end the year with official unemployment north of 10%, and unofficial unemployment some say near 20%. But what this HBR report us is that it is possible to have a good decade. We need leaders who are willing to look to the future for their planning (not the past), obsess about competitors to discover market shifts, be willing to Disrupt old Success Formulas by attacking Lock-in, and using White Space to keep the company in the growth Rapids. When businesses overcome old notions of “best practice” that keeps them trying to Defend & Extend then business performs marvelously well. It’s just too bad so few leaders and companies are willing to follow The Phoenix Principle.
by Adam Hartung | Dec 26, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, In the Swamp, Leadership, Web/Tech
The business media get really excited about acquisitions. And it is clear that many executives still think acquisitions are a good way to grow – especially when wanting to enter new markets. Even though all the academic research says that acquirers inevitably overpay, and that almost all acquisitions don't really have "synergy." In fact, most acquisitions significantly reduce shareholder value. While this doesn't keep execs from going forward, if we understand why acquisitions go badly better performance can be obtained.
As reported at Financial Times in "The Rise and Fall of MySpace" the problem with acquisitions is very tied to the "owner and acquired" thinking that emerges. NewsCorp wanted to get into social media, so it moved early. And the investment looked brilliant when a quick deal with Google appeared to make payback a year from new ad revenues. MySpace was an early social media winner, and it looked to be potentially transformative for NewsCorp.
Until NewsCorp decided that things were too undisciplined at MySpace. NewsCorp thought, like almost all acquirers, that it was more "disciplined" and "structured" and could apply its "better management" to the growth at MySpace. Of course, all of this is code for pushing the NewsCorp Success Formula onto MySpace. What was acquired as White Space was quickly turned into another NewsCorp division – with the decision-making processes and overhead costs that NewsCorp had. Quickly Behavioral and Structural Lock-ins that were prevalent in NewsCorp were applied to MySpace in management's effort to "improve" the acquisition.
But applying the acquirer's Success Formula to an acquisition soon removes it from White Space. Even though NewsCorp felt sure that it's higher caliber IT staff, big budgets and strong management team would "help" MySpace, it was robbing MySpace of its tight link to a rapidly shifting/evolving marketplace and replacing that with "NewsCorp think." Quickly, competitors started to take advantage of market shifts. Facebook took advantage of the now weighted-down MySpace to rapidly bring on more users, while the additional ads on MySpace simply frustrated formerly happy customers more than willing to trade platforms.
Scott Anthony on the Harvard Business Review blog "MySpace's Disruption, Disrupted" points out how in just 4years MySpace went from market leader to almost irrelevant. MySpace lost its position as market disruptor as it increasingly conformed to demands of NewsCorp. As the NewsCorp Success Formula overwhelmed MySpace it stopped being a market sensing project that could lead NewsCorp forward, and instead became a now money-losing division of a newspaper and TV company. NewsCorp started trying to make MySpace into a traditional media company – rather than MySpace turning NewsCorp into the next Amazon, Apple or Google.
If a company wants to acquire a company for new market entry, that acquisition has to be kept in White Space. It has to be given permission to remain outside the acquirer's Lock-ins and separate from the Success Formula. It has to be allowed to use its resources to develop a new Success Formula toward which the acquirer with migrate – not "brought into the fold."
Unfortunately, acquirers tend to think like previous century conquerers. In Gengis Khan fashion they almost always end up moving to change the acquired. Often in the name of "discipline" or "good management practices." And that's too bad, because the result is a loss of shareholder value as the investment premium is dissipated when the acquisition fails to reach objectives. Acquisitions can be good, but they have to be kept in White Space — like we see Google doing with Facebook!
by Adam Hartung | Dec 22, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, General, In the Swamp, Innovation, Leadership, Web/Tech
In "The Year in Innovation" BusinessWeek has offered its review of innovation in 2009. And the report is grim. Most companies cut innovation spending – including R&D. Even the pharmaceutical industry, historically tied to long-term investment cycles, cut 69,000 jobs in 2009, up 60% from 2008. Meanwhile, P&G's dust cloth Swiffer was pronounced a major innovation – indicating both how few innovations made it to market in 2009 – and the degree to which BusinessWeek must depend upon P&G for advertising dollars given this selection (I mean really – BusinessWeek ignores Google Wave and Android entirely in the article but feature a Swiffer dust cloth!)
According to BusinessWeek, the big advances in innovation in 2009 apparently were "open innovation" and "trickle up innovation." The first is asking vendors and others outside the company to contribute to innovation. Adoption of open innovation has spurred one thing – less spending on innovation as companies cut budgets, using "open innovation initiatives" as an explanation for how they intend to maintain themselves while spending less. Open innovation has not spurred improved innovation implementation, just justified spending less with no real plans to achieve growth. With open innovation, of course, failures no longer belong to the company because the "open environment" didn't produce anything – hence innovation simply wasn't possible!
Trickle up innovation is asking people in poor countries, like India, how they do things. Then seeing if you can steal an idea or two. There's nothing wrong with turning over every rock when trying to innovate, but using analysis of third world countries, where costs happen to be very low and new innovations few, to drive your innovation program smacks of looking for ways to put a fig leaf on a naked innovation program. Expectations are low, so explanations are more prevalent than results. C.K. Prahalad wrote an entire book on this approach – which is popular with big company leaders who have abandoned innovation and think it clever to steal ideas from the poor. But it's not how Apple became #2 in smart phonesor created iTunes or how Facebook has taken over social networking.
source: Silicon Alley Insider (with Google picking up 2 new carriers in late 2009, this chart will be very different by summer 2010)
None of the trends identified by BusinessWeek reflect behavior of the real innovation winners. Rather, they reflect the big companies who are mired in Defend & Extend management, and making excuses for their terrible performance since 2007. Not once does the article talk about Google, Apple, Cisco – or leading small company innovators like Tasty Catering in Chicago. There are companies winning at innovation, but they are certainly not following the trends (which have produced marginal results – at best) identified in this article.
Because planning processes look at last year when setting goals for next year, lots of companies now plan even lower innovation spending for 2010. And that's how an economy goes into a tailspin. Everyone from bankers to manufacturers to retailers are saying 2009 was weak, and they don't see much improvement for 2010. That can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. 24/7 Wall Street reported in "Immelt Speaks at West Point: Future Leadership Path" that the CEO of GE, Jeff Immelt, is doing less innovation spending and relying more on government/business partnership. And of course GE is realing from over-reliance on financial services and under-investment in new products during his leadership. While Immelt is patching up holes at GE, the company is sinking without new products manning the oars.
Companies don't just need to spend on R&D. Studies of R&D have shown that the bulk of spending is Defend & Extend. Trying to get more out of the technologies embedded in the Success Formula. P&G and GE can spend easily enough. But when it's on short-term "quick hits" they get declining marginal returns and weaker competitiveness.
Companies in 2010 must adopt new approaches. They have to quit planning from the past, and plan for the future. More scenario development and understanding how to change competitive position. And they have to quit being so conforming and promote Disruption. Disruptions are needed to open White Space so new Success Formulas can be developed. In the 2000/01 recession Apple looked to the future, Disrupted its total dedication to the Macintosh and unleashed White Space allowing the company to become a leader in digital music as well as the front runner in smart phones within a decade.
Your business can be a leader; and soon. If you start thinking differently about what you must do, quit putting all your energy into Defend & Extend behavior and invest in White Space, innovation will flourish – and with it your revenues and profits.
by Adam Hartung | Dec 21, 2009 | Current Affairs, Defend & Extend, General, In the Swamp, Leadership, Lock-in
Great blog today at MidasNation.com. Rob Slee is a book author and blogger focused on privately held companies. And today he took on "Old White Men" – or OWM – in his blog "Why 60 Year Old White Men are Killing America." Telling the story about how GM management drove the profits out of suppliers while bankrupting the company, he contrasted GM's behavior with the Japanese run firms in America who partnered with suppliers to make a better product customers more highly valued. We know who ended up with the profitable approach.
Similar to Defend & Extend management, Mr. Slee talks about "past as predicate" as he discusses older managers who keep doing what they always did, even though results keep worsening. And how "command and control" hierarchies sucked the value out of the traditional Big 3 automakers. His views about how OWM leaders expect a "return to the norm," creating a recipe for disaster in an ever changing world increasingly producing black swans. His stories are an action call for all leaders to change their behavior.
According to Marketwatch.com today, "GM Hires Microsoft Exec Liddell as CFO." Is this good, or just more OWM? According to BusinessWeek, Mr. Liddell is 50 – which makes him 10 years shy of the minimum 60 Mr. Slee denotes for OWM. More disconcerting was the final paragraph of his bio at Microsoft.com which claims Mr. Liddell "has completed a number of triathlons, including an Ironman and also enjoys rugby, yoga, golf and tennis." Pretty seriously testosterone laden language – and appealing primarily to OWM types. Like his new boss, the retired Southwestern Bell Chairman, now running GM.
Triathlon and rugby often have a way of making people Lock-in on the values of persistence, hard work and sacrifice. Jim Collins is a rather famous triathlete who loves Lock-in. Creativity and innovation are rarely the stuff of winners in those sports. Of course, competing in a global marketplace with fast changing competitors who defy all rules is a far cry from any sport. Sport analogies are usually more harmful than good in today's global marketplace, where adaptability is worth more than repetitive behavior seeking scale.
Mr. Liddell's last boss, Steve Ballmer, is one of the 10 most Locked-in CEOs in corporate America. Not a great mentoring for open-mindedness. And during Mr. Liddell's 4.5 year career at Microsoft the company's big launches were the me-too, and underwhelmingly exciting, Vista and System 7 products. Mr. Liddell didn't seem to push the innovation engine much in Seattle.
From appearances it would seem likely he'll focus on cost reductions pretty hard — something unlikely to make GM a success. GM doesn't need to launch it's own version of Vista. GM doesn't need a tough guy to whack the chicken coop hoping to get more eggs – instead just making the hens all upset. GM needs significant Disruption – attacks on its Success Formula – with a revitalization of new product development and technology application. GM needs an entirely new Success Formula, not just a better Defended and Extended one.
Keep your eyes on Mr. Liddell. Perhaps he'll surprise us. Look for Disruptions and White Space. It doesn't seem to be Mr. Liddell's nature. But watch. Until then, there's no sign yet that GM is taking the right actions to make itself a vital competitor against Hyundai, Kia, Tata Motors, Honda and Toyota.
by Adam Hartung | Dec 14, 2009 | Current Affairs, In the Rapids, Innovation, Leadership, Web/Tech
"The Google Phone, Unlocked" is a Seeking Alpha article detailing the early release of a Google phone planned for market introduction in 2010. Will this be successful or not? Legitimate question – given the success of Apple's iPhone. And the answer to that really has nothing to do with cell phone technology. It has everything to do with the downloadable applications. The market for phones has shifted to where applications are rapidly becoming more important than the phones themselves.
Which is why "Android to become eWallet" on MediaPost is an important article. Mpayy is offering an app that supersedes both credit cars and debit cards. It's Paypal on steroids. This app allows users who want to buy something to use their phone to instantaneously pay for something. Users can perform an eBay style transaction with immediate payment. And they can do this buying products in the Burger King, or Starbucks, or Target.
Two things are emerging that represent significant market shifts to which all businesses must react. Firstly, mobile devices are much more than phones. They are more than laptops. They allow people to do a lot more things than they previously could, and these activities can be immediate. From reading a CAT scan, to finding the closest pizzeria and downloading a coupon, to paying for a Pepsi at the convenience store. This represents substantially different use of technology. Those who remain Locked-in to old fashioned credit card/debit card technology – or internet transaction technology – will be left behind as users move quickly to mobile phone payment.
And, secondly, those who rapidly incorporate these opportunities will have advantages. If you're making your business more internet friendly you are likely fighting the last war. To be successful in 2012 it will be important you are able to offer real-time transactions buyers can access from their mobile device. People will want to find you, find your discounts, and pay you from the device in their hands. They will want to complete their business seamlessly using their mobile device – without a call, without a browser transaction. Those who make life easy for customers will increasingly win – and making life easy will mean access via the mobile device
It is increasingly ineffective to build future plans based upon completing projects started last year – or the previous year – or a few years ago. Customers don't care about your enterprise system implementation that is X years into implementation. Customers are running fast – really fast – toward using new, low cost and easily usable technology. This is a substantial market shift. And your scenario plans must incorporate these shifts, expect them, and use them to move beyond Locked-in competitors by implementing these shifts fast and effectively. That allows you to Create Marketplace Disruptions which create superior rates of return.
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.)