What is ESPN?  Many people would say "a TV channel about sports." What an understatement.  ESPN has not one, but several channels (in multiple languages) and radio channels.  Beyond that ESPN is a magazine, an internet portal (over 17million hits/month), a provider of on-demand video, book publisher, apparel maker and retailer, restauranteur, video game producer, and soon to be provider of cell phone services.

Is all this just so much brand extension?  I don’t think so.  All of these are different businesses that ESPN has entered, learned, and now makes money on.  Cable TV content is a tough, low margin business with more failures than successes, yet ESPN has grown its viewership and revenues by more than double digits every year for a decade.  Radio listenership has been declining for almost a decade.  Periodical publishing has had negative growth in ad dollars and pages printed for over 5 years (just review the declining fortunes of New York Times and Gannett).  Apparel makers and retailers are struggling with changing market tastes and offshore competitors, while restaurants is the #1 most likely to fail start-up business and video games are dominated by a handful of very large, trendy shops.  And ESPN has entered all these extremely competitive businesses and turned a profit within only a few months.

ESPN has profitably grown by staying in the Rapids, rather than resting on it’s original Success Formula to provide sports news over cable TV.  The company has overcome its Lock-In to the past by hunting out opportunities which aren’t obvious, and certainly aren’t core competencies, and then openings White Space for these opportunities to succeed.  Instead of trying to optimize its old Success Formula, the company keeps trying to invent a new one.  Every time you’d think the growth would flatten, they run right past the market Challenges to put more projects into the Rapids for ongoing growth.

At the top of ESPN is a mild-mannered 47 year old named George Bodenheimer who for the last 7 years has led the charge into all these initiatives.  Like all leaders that keep their organizations growing, he constantly Disrupts his organization.  He creates White Space, and he works to make the new projects a success.  He’s atypical of many executives (especially media executives) in his emphasis on teamwork rather than ego, and success rather than promotion.  Things simply get done – maybe not because he tries to "own" all the success and instead by unleashing his organization to succeed.