Don’t Fear Cannibalization – Embrace Future Solutions – NetFlix, Apple iPad, Newspapers


Summary:

  • Businesses usually try defending an old solution in the face of an emerging new solution
  • Status Quo Police use “cannibalization” concerns to stop the organization from moving to new solutions and new markets
  • If you don’t move early, you end up with a dying business – like newspapers – as new competitors take over the customer relationship – like Apple is doing with news subscriptions
  • You can adapt to shifting markets, profitably growing
  • You must disrupt your lock-ins to the old success formula, including stopping the Status Quo Police from using the cannibalization threat
  • You should set up White Space teams early to embrace the new solutions and figure out how to profitably grow in the new market space

When Sony saw MP3 technology emerging it worked hard to defend sales of CDs and CD Players.  It didn’t want to see a decline in the pricing, or revenue, for its existing business.  As a result, it was really late to MP3 technology, and Apple took the lead.  This is the classic “Innovator’s Dilemma” as described by Professor Clayton Christenson of Harvard.  Existing market leaders get so hung up on defending and extending the current business, they fear new solutions, until they become obsolete.  

In the 1980s Pizza Hut could see the emergence of Domino’s Pizza.  But Pizza Hut felt that delivered pizza would cannibalize the eat-in pizza market management sought to dominate.  As a result Pizza Hut barely participated in what became a multi-biliion dollar market for Domino’s and other delivery chains.

The Status Quo Police drag out their favorite word to fight any move into new markets.  Cannibalization.  They say over and over that if the company moves to the new market solution it will cannibalize existing sales – usually at a lower margin.  Sure, there may someday be a future time to compete, but today (and this goes on forever) management should keep close to the existing business model, and protect it.

That’s what the newspapers did.  All of them could see the internet emerging as a route to disseminate news.  They could see Monster.com, Vehix.com, eBay, CraigsList.com and other sites stealing away their classified ad customers.  They could see Google not only moving their content to other sites, but placing ads with that content.  Yet, all energy was expended trying to maintain very expensive print advertising, for fear that lower priced internet advertising would cannibalize existing revenues.

Now, bankrupt or nearly so, the newspapers are petrified.  The San Jose Mercury News headlines “Apple to Announce Subscription Plan for Newspapers.”  As months have passed the newspapers have watched subscriptions fall, and not built a viable internet distribution system.  So Apple is taking over the subscription role – and will take a cool third of the subscription revenue to link readers to the iPad on-line newspaper.  Absolute fear of cannibalization, and strong internal Status Quo Police, kept the newspapers from embracing the emerging solution.  Now they will find themselves beholden to the device providers – Apple’s iPad, Amazon’s Kindle, or a Google Android device. 

But it doesn’t have to be that way.  Netflix built a profitable growth business delivering DVDs to subscribers. Streaming video clearly would cannibalize revenues, because the price is lower than DVDs.  But Netflix chose to embrace streaming – to its great betterment!  The Wrap headlines “Why Hollywood should be Afraid of Netfilx – Very Afraid.”  As reported, Netflix is now growing even FASTER with its streaming video – and at a good margin.  The price per item may be lower – but the volume is sooooo much higher!

Had Netflix defended its old model it was at risk of obsolescence by Hulu.com, Google, YouTube or any of several other video providers.  It could have tried to slow switching to streaming by working to defend its DVD “core.”  But by embracing the market shift Netflix is now in a leading position as a distributor of streaming content.  This makes Netfilx a very powerful company when negotiating distribution rights with producers of movie or television content (thus the Hollywood fear.)  By embracing the market shift, and the future solution, Netflix is expanding its business opportunity AND growing revenue profitably.

Don’t let fear of cannibalization, pushed by the Status Quo Police, stop your business from moving with market shifts.  Such fear will make you like the proverbial deer, stuck on the road, staring at the headlights of an oncoming auto — and eventually dead.  Embrace the market shift, Disrupt your Locked-in thoughts (like “we distribute DVDs”) and set up White Space teams to figure out how you can profitably grow in the new market!

Adopt Market Shifts – Television, Telephone, Apple’s new products


Summary:

  • Market shifts create losers, and winners
  • Demand doesn’t decline, it just changes form – and usually grows!
  • We want more entertainment and communcation – but not the old fashioned way
  • Losers keep trying to sell what they have, and know
  • Winners supply solutions aligned with market needs regardless of old competencies

How would you react if your customers said your product really wasn’t something they needed?  Would you work hard to convince them they are wrong?  Maybe try to add some features hoping it would regain their attention?  Or would you start looking for what they really do need/want?

Pew Research Center, at PewSocialTrends.org headlines “The Fading Glory of the Television and Telephone” describing how quickly people are walking away from what were very recently considered absolute necessities. As a “boomer” and member of the “TV generation” I was surprised to read that only 42% of Americans now think a television is a necessity!  This has been a rapid, dramatic decline from 52% last year and 64% in 2006!  1 in 5 Americans have changed their point of view about television as a necessity in just 4 years!  And TV as a necessity is in an accelerating decline!  I can remember when my generation went from 1 TV in the house to 1 in every room!  This trend does not bode well for broadcast television networks, affiliates, advertisers, traditional production companies, television newscasters, manufacturers of TV sets and TV equipment – or many other businesses linked to TV as we know it.

Simultaneously, demand for a land line telephone  has declined.  Again, my generation remembers the days with one phone in the house – in some areas on a shared “party” line where multiple families shared a single phone line.  The phone was in a central area so it could be shared.  In the 1970s we saw things change as telephones were added to every room!  Now, according to Pew, folks who consider a land-line phone a necessity has declined to only 62%, a 10% decline from just last year (68 to 62) and barely 3 in 5 Americans!  Wow! 

Of course, for every decline there’s a winner.  47% see the cell phone as a necessity – that’s 5 percentage points greater than the TV score, indicating mobile phones are seen as more of a necessity than television by the general population.  And 34% see high speed internet as a necessity – only 9 percentage points fewer than the TV number – and more than half who see the need for a land-line phone. 

Demand for entertainment and communication have not declined!  If you are in television or land lines you might think so.  Rather, that demand is accelerating.  But it is just shifting to a different solution.  Instead of the old technology, and supplier industry, people are changing to something new.  First with video cassetttes, then digital video recorders (DVRs), then the plethora of available cable channels and on-demand TV, and now with on-line entertainment from YouTube to Hulu people have been changing the way they consume entertainment.  Demand has gone up, but not from traditional consumption of TV, especially as viewing has switched from the TV to the computer monitor – or the hand held device.

Clearly, access to the internet (facebook, twitter, et.al.), texting and anytime/anywhere calling has increased both our access and use of one-way (such as reading web pages) and two way communication.  Communication is continuing to grow, but it will be in a different way.  No longer do we need a “dial tone” to communicate – and in most instances people are finding a preference to asynchronous rather than real-time communication.

These are the kind of industry transitions that threaten so many businesses.  What Clayton Christensen calls “The Innovator’s Dilemma” as new solutions increase demand while making old solutions obsolete.  The tendency is for the supplier of traditional solutions to say “my market is in decline.”  But really, the market is growing!  Just like Kodak said the demand for film was declining, when demand for photography – now in digital format – was (and is) escalating!  When market shifts happen, incumbents have to resist the temptation to try “keeping” the “old customers” by undertaking Defend & Extend efforts – like adding features and functionality, while cutting price.  This inevitably leads to disaster!  Instead, they have to understand the shift is only going to accelerate, and develop an approach to entering the new market.

As this research comes out, Apple launched a series of new products to augment its set-top box and iPod/iTouch product lines. (San Francisco Chronicle, SFGate.comSteve JobsUnveils Upgraded Apple TV, New iPods“)  by doing so Apple recognizes that people still want entertainment – but they are a whole lot less likely to accept sitting in front of a communal television, serially deploying programming at them.  They want their entertainment to be on-demand, and personalized.  Why should we all watch the same thing?  And why watch what some programmer at CBS, HBO or TMC wants to deliver? 

Apple is bringing out products that align with the direction the market is now heading. Ping is designed to help people share program information and identify the entertainment you would like to receive.  iTunes is upgrading to bring you in bite-size chunks exactly the entertainment you want, as you want it, aurally or visually.  These are products which will grow because they are aligned with what the market says it wants — even more entertainment.  Those who are hidebound to the old supply mechanism will simply find themselves fighting for declining revenue as demand shifts – and grows – in the new solutions

The End of Management – Wall Street Journal


Summary:

  • The Wall Street Journal is calling for a dramatic shift in how business is managed
  • Most corporations are designed for the industrial age, and thus not well suited for today’s competition
  • Change is happening more quickly, and organizations must become more agile
  • CEOs today are concerned about dealing with rapid, chronic change – and obsolescence
  • Resource deployment, from financial to people, must be tied more closely to market needs and not defending historical strengths

A FANTASTIC article in the Wall Street Journal entitled “The End of Management” by Alan Murray, If you have time, I encourage you to click the link and read the entire thing.  Below are some insightful quotes from the article I hope you enjoy as much as I did:

  • Corporations, whose leaders portray themselves as champions of the free
    market, were in fact created to circumvent that market. They were an
    answer to the challenge of organizing thousands of people in different
    places and with different skills to perform large and complex tasks,
    like building automobiles or providing nationwide telephone service.
  • the managed corporation—an answer to the central problem of the industrial age.
  • Corporations are bureaucracies and managers are bureaucrats. Their
    fundamental tendency is toward self-perpetuation… They were designed and tasked, not with
    reinforcing market forces, but with supplanting and even resisting the
    market.
  • it took radio 38 years and television 13 years to reach audiences of 50
    million people, while it took the Internet only four years, the iPod
    three years and Facebook two years to do the same.
  • It’s no surprise that
    fewer than 100 of the companies in the S&P 500 stock index were
    around when that index started in 1957.
  • When I asked members of The Wall Street Journal’s CEO Council… to name the most influential business book they had read,
    many cited Clayton Christensen’s “The Innovator’s Dilemma.” That book
    documents how market-leading companies have missed game-changing
    transformations in industry after industry
  • They allocated capital to the innovations that promised the largest
    returns. And in the process, they missed disruptive innovations that
    opened up new customers and markets for lower-margin, blockbuster
    products.
  • the ability of human beings on different continents and with vastly
    different skills and interests to work together and coordinate complex
    tasks has taken quantum leaps. Complicated enterprises, like maintaining
    Wikipedia or building a Linux operating system, now can be accomplished
    with little or no corporate management structure at all.
  • the trends here are big and undeniable. Change is rapidly accelerating.
    Transaction costs are rapidly diminishing. And as a result, everything
    we learned in the last century about managing large corporations is in
    need of a serious rethink. We have both a need [for]… a new science of
    management, that can deal with the breakneck realities of 21st century
    change.
  • The new model will have to be more like the marketplace, and less like
    corporations of the past. It will need to be flexible, agile, able to
    quickly adjust to market developments, and ruthless in reallocating
    resources to new opportunities.
  • big companies… failed, not…
    because they didn’t see the coming innovations, but because they failed
    to adequately invest in those innovations
    . To avoid this problem, the
    people who control large pools of capital need to act more like venture
    capitalists, and less like corporate finance departments… make lots of bets, not just a few big ones, and… be willing
    to cut their losses.
  • have to push power and decision-making down the organization as much as
    possible, rather than leave it concentrated at the top. Traditional
    bureaucratic structures will have to be replaced with something more
    like ad-hoc teams of peers, who come together to tackle individual
    projects, and then disband
  • New mechanisms will have to be created for harnessing the “wisdom of
    crowds.” Feedback loops will need to be built that allow products and
    services to constantly evolve in response to new information. Change,
    innovation, adaptability, all have to become orders of the day.

Well said.  Traditional management best practices were designed for the industrial age.  For bringing people together to efficiently build planes, trains and automobiles.  This is now the information age.  Organizations must be more agile, more flexible, and tightly aligned with market needs – while eschewing focus on “core” capabilities. 

Companies must understand Lock-in, and how to manage it.  Instead of planning for yesterday to continue, we must develop future scenarios and prepare for different likely outcomes.  We have to understand competitors, and how quickly they can move to rob us of sales and profits.  We have to be willing to disrupt our patterns of behavior, and our markets, in order to drive for higher value creation.  And we must understand that constantly creating and implementing White Space teams that are focused on new opportunities is a key to long-term success.

With an endorsement for change from nothing less than the stodgy Wall Street Journal, perhaps more leaders and managers will begin moving forward, implementing The Phoenix Principle, so they can recapture a growth agenda and rebuild profitability.

So many good die young – SGI, Sun Micro, DEC, Wang, Univac, etc.

How many of these company names do you remember — Sperry Rand? Burroughs? Univac? NCR? Control Data? Wang? Lanier?  DataPoint?  Data General? Digital Equipment/DEC? Gateway? Cray? Novell?  Banyan? Netscape?

I'm only 50, yet most of these companies were originated, became major successes, and failed within my lifetime.  Now, prepare to add a couple more.  In the 1980s Silicon Graphics set the standard for high-speed computing, using their breakthrough technology to open the door on graphics.  There never would have been a PS3 or Wii were it not for the pioneering work at SGI. The company invented high speed graphics calculating methods that allowed for "real-time" animation on a computer, as well as "color fill" and "texture mapping" – all capabilities we take for granted on our computer screen today but that were merely dreams to early GUI users.  But now SGI has disappeared according to the Cnet.com article "First GM, Now Silicon Graphics.  Lessons Learned?"  The company that expanded the high-speed computing market most on SGI's early lead was Sun Microsystems, building the boxes upon which the first all-computer animated movie was made – Toy Story.  But 2 weeks ago we learned Sun will most likely soon disappear into the bowels of IBM ("Final Chapter for Sun Micro Could be Written by IBM" at WSJ.com)

When Clayton Christensen wrote The Innovator's Dilemma he said academics like to talk about the tech industry because the product life cycles are so short.  Actually, he would have been equally accurate to say their company life cycles were so short.  For business academics, looking at tech companies is like cancer researchers looking at white lab mice.  Their lifespan is so short you can rapidly see the impact of business decisions – almost like having a business lab.

What we see at these companies was an inability to shift with changes in their markets.  They all Locked-in on some assumptions, and when the market shifted these companies stayed with their old assumptions – not shifting with market needsLike Jim Collins' proverbial "hedgehog" they claimed to be the world's best at something, only to learn that the world put less and less value in what they claimed as #1.  Either the technology shifted, or the application, or the user requirements.  In the end, we can look back and their lives are like a short roller coaster – up and then crashing down.  Lots of money put in, lots spent, not much left for investors, vendors or employees at the end.  They were #1, very good (in fact, exceptional), and met a market need.  Yet they were unable to thrive and even survive – because a market shift emerged which they did not follow, did not meet and eventually made them obsolete.

Today we can see the same problem emerging in some of the even larger tech companies we've grown to admireDell taught everyone how to operate the world's best supply chain.  Yet, they've been copied and are seeing their market weaken to new products supplied by different channels.  Microsoft monopolized the "desktop", but today less and less computing is done on desktops.  Computing today is moving from the extremes of your hand (in your telephone) to "clouds" accessed so serrendipituously that you aren't even sure where the computing cycles are, much less how they are supplied.  And software is provided in distributed ways between devices and servers such that an internet search engine provider (Google) is beginning to provide operating systems (Android) for new platforms where there is no "desktop."  As behemoth as these two companies became, as invincible as they looked, they are equally vulnerable to the fate of those mentioned at the beginning of this blog

Of course, their fate is not sealedApple and IBM both are tech companies that came perilously close to the Whirlpool before finding their way back into the RapidsWhen businesses decide their best future is to Defend & Extend past strengths they get themselves into trouble.  To break out of this rut they have to spend less time thinking about their strengths, and more about market needs.  Instead of looking at similar competitors and figuring out how to be better, they have to look at fringe competitors and figure out how to change with emerging market requirements.  And just like they disrupted the marketplace once with their excellence, they must be willing to disrupt their internal processes in order to find White Space where they can create new market disruptions

Today, with change affecting all companies, it is important that leaders look at the "lab results" from tech.  It's important to recognize past Lock-ins, and assumptions about continuation (or return to) past markets.  Markets are changing, and only those that take the lead with customers will quickly return to profitability and emerge market leaders.  It's those new leading companies that will get the economy growing again, so waiting is really not an option.