I talk a lot about the deadly impact of growth stalls.  Whenever companies suffer two consecutive flat or declining quarters, or a year-over-year decline, I call that a growth stall.  And the results are deadly, with fewer than 10% of these companies ever achieving sustained growth of 2% again.

I’m often asked if two quarters, or year to year comparisons, aren’t too short.  After all, I preach on the importance of White Space and using transformations for long-term good health.  Aren’t I supporting the short-term thinking that gets leaders into trouble?

My answer is no.  Leaders and managers must be impatient for results.  The world moves quickly, and it takes precious little time for a company to falter and fail.  Take for example Sun Microsystems.  This was a high-growth tech company for 20 years and a big winner in the internet boom of the 1990s.  But now the company has seen 4 consecutive years of declining revenue.  It’s value has been lackluster that entire time as well.  And now it has announced it is planning to cut another 4-5,000 jobs in an effort to find profitability.

Investors and managers can’t wait 4 years for improved results.  In fact, they shouldn’t wait at all.  If a company can’t grow, it will atrophy and eventually falter.  The purpose of Disruptions is to constantly challenge Lock-In to old Success Formulas, and the purpose of White Space is to identify new opportunities that can create long-lived growth.  The problem is that too many companies try to milk the Lock-in, and they wait too long before they Disrupt and seek White Space.  They confuse short-term optimization of an old Success Formula with the requirement to continuously identify and develop growth opportunities ad infinitum.

When it was doing incredibly well, Sun Microsystem decided the right strategic action was to "identify its core strengths" upon the recommendation of Gary Hamel.  Scott McNealy said the company’s future was "selling iron" (his macho-speak for selling computer server hardware.)  As a result, Sun never moved into networking gear, like Cisco, or network software like Google.  Also, Sun was pushing boxes so hard it missed the Challenge Linux placed on its own Unix software.  Sun was a hot player in the center of the action, but by "sticking to its core" it wasn’t prepared when the marketplace determined it had sufficient server capacity and good a good software alternative.  It’s market started collapsing.  And Sun wasn’t prepared to move to the next market opportunity.  The first two declining quarters led to nearly 20 declining quarters.

The best time to Disrupt and fund White Space is when your business is doing well.  It is then that you can clearly evaluate new Success Formulas without the crisis of declining revenue making you "bet the company" on limited options – and do so quickly.  By the time you see two consecutive bad quarters, or year-over-year revenue declines, the business is already stuck in the Swamp and well on its way into the Whirlpool.  It might not look that bad, but it already has almost no hope of ever growing again.