"CraigsList is for hookers."  That's what the General Manager at the Los Angeles Times told me in 2005.  In a meeting to discuss the newspaper's future profitability I pointed out that 1/3 of his newspaper's revenues came from Classified ads, and I had asked him if he was concerned about CraigsList.com.  As you can tell, he was not. 

At the same time, I asked him if he was concerned about on-line ads and the Google placement engine undermining his display ad business.  He assured me that the internet was all for bloggers and no reputable news reader would pay much attention to on-line news.  So no, he wasn't worried about internet competition to the newspaper sucking away this advertiser base.  He just needed to keep old customers focused on the value of newspaper ads.  In less than 6 months GM removed 70% of its newspaper ads – shifting all the money to on-line advertising – leading the auto pack on-line.  And movie companies moved nearly 75% of their newspaper ad budget to on-line, while more than half of real-estate ads went on-line.  Those happen to be the top 3 sources of display ad revenue for newspapers.

Today Tribune Corporation is in bankruptcy, and classified ads have dropped to a trickle for all major newspapers.  Meanwhile, things are going pretty well at CraigsList and Google:

CraigsList.Google rev per employee 2009
Source: Business Insider

As can be seen, revenues per employee are phenomenal at CraigsList, and extremely good at Google.  Much better than at the Tribune Company newspapers such as the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune – despite them shedding a high percentage of employees over the last 7 years!  

According to Gavin O'Malley, at OnlineMediaDaily of MediaPost.com in "CraigsList Revenues Soar: But Problems Loom" revenues at CraigsList may exceed $4M/employee/year!  Margins he asserts are in the range of 75-80%!  And revenues, while still small at about $125M, are growing at 25%/year (for what everyone thinks of as "free.")  Albeit, this is a small business.  But what if Tribune Company had paid attention back 5 years ago and invested hard in creating the world's best CraigsList – rather than ignoring it?  What would the possible revenues be today?  And margins?  And impact on Tribune Company growth in revenues and profits?

Most companies do only a surface analysis of competition.  They are so busy listening to, and reacting to, big customers it's all they can do to keep operations going and make the marginal changes to keep big customers happy.  As a result, maybe they look at 2 or 3 of their most similar competitors (like other newspapers in the local market for our example.)  And that will be cursory, examining total revenues, perhaps margins (if public and data is available) and a quick glimpse at impact on existing customers and any new products recently launched.  But overall, very little attention is paid to competition.

And practically none is paid to "fringe" competitors.  Those with different business models.  Polaroid ignored digital camera manufacturers (despite licensing them technology) until Polaroid went bankrupt.  Digital Equipment (DEC) ignored AutoCad – calling their CAD/CAM products "toys." Wang and Lanier said no big company would use a PC, rather than an integrated centralized system, for corporate word processing so they discounted Apple and Microsoft.  Motorola largely ignored Apple in mobile phones, even after doing a joint venture with them to create and launch the RoKR.  Failure lists are strewn with companies that simply ignored "fringe" competitors – saying they didn't understand the industry, the customers and how "the business works." 

Large or small size is not important when studying competition, it's the ability to change how customers buy that is important.  As we've seen in the case of companies like Google, Apple, eBay and Amazon we can see that fringe competitors can grow extremely fast.  They can alter the competitive landscape quicker than almost any traditional corporate planning group will give them credit.  Just ask the folks at Sears or Home Depot about he impact of Amazon and other on-line retailers (do you think either of those traditional retailers have anywhere near $1M revenue/employee like Amazon?)  Or ask Merrill Lynch about the impact of Schwab, eTrade and ScotTrade. 

The second step in The Phoenix Principle is to obsess about competition.  When you're "the big gun" in the industry it can be incredibly easy to ignore fringe competitors.  But do so at your risk.  When profits are something like $2M to $3M per employee (as in the case of CraigsList) there is a lot of resource to invest in growth.  And strong indications that the business is able to very profitably grow!  Ignoring "fringe" competition – especially because you are focused on existing large customers who are Locked-In to your Success Formula – leaves you remarkably vulnerable to rapid market shifts and a really fast demise.

Video:  Listen to Competitors