How can we recognize a Phoenix company?  One that will sustain its success for a prolonged period?  We can start by looking at the one and only company which has been on the Dow Jones Industrial Average ever since it was created.  The one company that has overcome Schumpeter’s dire predictions of individual company failure, and demonstrated it is possible to earn above average rates of return for  extended time and simultaneously grow.  That company is General Electric.

A recent article on GE’s Medical Devices business (see article here) highlights key characteristics of how to overcome Lock-in to an existing Success Formula by internally Disrupting and using White Space.  Mark Morita is the Manager for Disruptive Technologies within this GE business.  Mark is not an engineer, nor is he in product development.  GE recognizes that it must maintain a powerful group always focused on making incremental improvements in their products and markets.  But, they simultaneously must have a Disruptive focus that can produce breakthrough results

And that is where Mark comes in.  Mark Disrupts the engineers by introducing technologies from entirely other fields.  While they attend medical equipment conferences, Mark attends gaming and consumer electronics conferences.  While they try to make sonogram machines that are 10% lighter or 10% cheaper, Mark looks for ways to make them the size of a GameBoy at less than half current cost.  His role is not only tolerated in GE – it is mandatedAll across the many GE businesses they maintain roles which are dedicated to attacking Lock-In and Disrupting the existing Success Formula.  Mark and his counterparts constantly keep the GE businesses operating White Space to create new Success Formulas leading to growth.

Jack Welch, the famed former CEO of GE, had the nickname "Neutron Jack."  This referred to his willingness to Disrupt GE in order to seek above average results and growth.  No business was sacred in GE, and no market was beyond their reach.  Welch constantly Disrupted GE from within, and kept Lock-in from leading to deteriorating performance.  It wasn’t mere goal-setting that kept GE dynamic, it was an institutionalized practice of internal Disruption and extensive use of White Space.  New CEO Jeffrey Immelt is now continuing that practice, with dramaticly large recent acquisitions of about 2/3 of Abbott Labs (medical diagnostic equipment) and Smiths Group (aerospace) while indicating he plans to sell the $10B plastics business (see article here).

Even a huge company, such as GE, can operate according to The Phoenix Principle and sustain success.  The Phoenix Principle does not apply only to small companies, nor those in high-tech markets.  Any company can achieve and sustain success if they are willing to identify their Success Formula and Lock-ins, attack those Lock-ins with programs designed to generate internal Disruptions, then fund White Space in which permission is given to develop new Success Formulas.  These steps may seem mundane, but those who follow them can become the next GE – and that would not be a bad thing.