Great companies don’t only get into new businesses, they know when to get out.  Look at GE – a company that sells almost as many businesses as it buys every year.  Another company following this practice is Philips (see chart here).  In the U.S. few people know much about Philips – although it is a global company with many successful products in multiple businesses. 

Philips sells consumer products, like radios, telephones, monitors, DVD players, cameras, webcams, Sonicare toothbrushes, Norelco razors, MP3 players and televisions.  It also sells medical systems – like CT scanners, ultrasound machines and heart defibrilators. It sells lighting systems which includes everything from home light bulbs to interior designs to products for lighting the exterior of office skyscrapers or religious temples. Philips was a pioneer in developing compact disc technology and optical storage devices and is a leader in high tech plastics and printed circuit board technology. (Read about Philips at its company web site here.)

Philips generated 2007 revenues of $39billion.  Founded and run out of the Netherlands, this is pretty remarkable.  The Netherlands has only 16.5million people!  The whole country’s population is about 2x the five buroughs of New York City – or the same as the New York metropolitan area.  Yet this company is bigger than DuPont, Intel, 3M and Merck – all members of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  Founded in 1891, Philips has met the test of time, entering new markets, and growing both revenues and profits, for several decades.  Well resourced, Philips has created and implemented White Space to grow for longer than almost any company in the U.S.A.

Yet, today Philips announced it was going to quit making televisions for North America (read article here).  A pioneer, and leader, in flat panel televisions – a high growth product line in the consumer-centric U.S. market – Philips is abandoning manufacturing this $1.7Billion product line, shutting its Althanta headquarters.  Manufacturing for the Philips and Magnavox brands will transfer to Tokyo based Funai (which makes Emerson brand as well.)

Phoenix Principle companies not only are quick to Disrupt and implement White Space, they are quick to get out as well.  And here we see a large company, with big resources, walk away from manufacturing a product line that is huge WHILE GROWTH IS GOOD.  Long before the business slips into the Swamp Philips is looking ahead and changing course.  Rather than get trapped in a low-profit business as growth slows, they are getting out on the way up to maximize the value – while focusing precious resources on other opportunities.

All companies of all sizes can be fleet of foot.  Even large and aged ones.  It requires the discipline to be forward-focused on markets and opportunities rather than history focused.  It requires not getting blinded to think big businesses need Defend & Extend behavior – but rather the flexibility to move fast as markets move.  It requires a willingness to not rely on your own internal focus – and your own resource pool – when making decisions about future investments.  It requires the skill to realize that not all White Space is worth additional investment, and there are times to get out

Long term success requires overcoming Lock-in.  Not only by consistently setting up new White Space, but knowing when to get out of White Space rather than Lock-in on its efforts.  Constantly getting into new opportunities means, by definition, that not all are worth pursuing.  Some get out early, and others later.  It takes discipline to overcome Lock-in – and Philips has shown the knack for 10 decades.