Fire the Status Quo Police! – Forbes, AT&T, Microsoft, DEC, P&G, Sears, Motorola


Leadership

Fire The Status Quo Police

Adam Hartung, 09.08.10, 06:00 PM EDT

Their power to prevent innovation can devastate your business.

“That’s not how we do things around here.” How often have you heard that? And what does it really mean? It is said to stop someone from doing something new. It is no way to promote innovation, is it?”

That’s the lead paragraph to my latest column on Forbes.com, published yesterday evening.  Forbes launched a new editorial page covering Change Management, and gave my column’s link the premier placement!  

All companies want to grow.  But early in the lifecycle they Lock-in on what works, and then implement Status Quo Police that intentionally do not allow anything to change.  Their belief is that if nothing changes, the business will always grow.  So conformance to historical norms is more important than results to them.  To Status Quo Police results will return when conformance to old norms is returned!

Of course, this completely ignores the marketplace.  Market shifts, created by competitors launching new technologies, new pricing models, new delivery models or other new solutions cause the value of old solutions to decline.  No matter how well you do what you always did, you can’t achieve historical results.  The market has shifted! 

To keep any company growing you must know who the Status Quo Police are in your organization.  They can be in HR, controlling hiring, promotions and pay.  In Finance controlling what projects receive resources.  In Marketing, tightly controlling branding, product development or distribution.  The Status Quo Police are committed to keeping things tightly controlled, and saving the organization from change that could send the company in the wrong direction!  No matter what the marketplace may require.

But it’s not enough to know who the Status Quo Police are, its up to leaders to eliminate them!  If you want to have a vibrant, profitably growing organization you have to constantly adjust to market shifts.  You have to sense what the market wants, and move to deliver it.  You have to be very wary of the Status Quo, and instead be open to making changes in order to grow.  To do that, you have to hold those who would be the Status Quo Police in check.  Otherwise, you’ll find the obstacles to innovation and growth overwhelming!

Please read the article at Forbes, review it and comment!  Let me know what you think!

Innovate to Grow – Amazon, Apple, Google, Shell

I was struck to learn that most people with a growth plan simply think they will sell more to customers in existing markets.  About 2/3 of respondents to a Harvard study.

Growth plans 7.09

Chart from Harvard Business School Publishing

But we know that not only you, but your competitors are all hoping to sell more to the existing market!  This is the fodder for price wars, and declining returns.  When we think we can somehow eke more out of existing customers – even if we think we'll take them a new product – we are ignoring competitors.  As a result, we rarely get the growth.  The results are pre-ordained, when everyone is trying to do the same thing all you get is a war to Defend your existing business!

The encouraging sign is that about 40% of respondents are considering new markets.  And that's a good thing.  A GREAT Wall Street Journal article "The New, Faster Face of Innovation" tells us that everyone has the opportunity to apply more innovation today At length this article explains how today's computer deep, networked world allows for testing of almost everything, almost anywhere, pretty nearly continuously, for very small cost.  The biggest obstacle to testing more options, trying more innovation, is the self-imposed limits management puts on the tests!

Now, more than ever, businesses need to be oriented on growth.  But that doesn't mean entering gladiator style battles to see who can win, usually coming out the bloodiest, battling in existing markets.    Quite to the contrary, now is the perfect time for trying new things to connect with shifted marketsPeople are looking for new solutions to their problems, and willing to evaluate more options than ever.  But management Lock-in to traditional notions about the market – set at an earlier time, under different conditions – will often keep a company from trying new things, entering new markets, testing new solutions.  Too often management wants to remain "focused" on its "core offerings" and "core strengths" creating the gladiator-style environment!

Use innovation to test!  Leaders need to let lower level managers test new optionsThe most important thing leaders can do today is give PERMISSION to the organization to create new options, and the RESOURCES (now smaller commitments than ever) for testing those options.  These become White Space projects where we can forget the conditions which initially created the old Success Formula and find out what works NOW.  Those companies that are willing to Disrupt Locked-in notions about how markets should behave will use these market tests to create the most desirable solutions in the future.  And these companies will come out the winners.

Just think like these folks:

  • Amazon retailer creating the Kindle e-reader
  • Apple computer creating iTunes and the iPod
  • Google search engine creating AdWords for on-line advertising placement
  • Singer Sewing Machines becoming a defense contractor
  • Royal Dutch Shell Petroleum building wind farms

[And, like I wrote in my latest Forbes article, this will work for health care as well

http://tinyurl.com/pkupxv]

Hoisted on my own pitard – Radio

Today I was hit by a market shift that left me baffled as to what I should do next. 

Everybody, every work team, every company has Lock-ins.  Lock-ins help you operate quickly and efficiently.  And they blind you to potential market shifts.  I have as many Lock-ins as anyone.  Some I recognize, and some I don't.  It's always the ones we don't recognize that leave us in trouble.

For 18 years I've listened to only one radio station in Chicago.  WNUA 95.5 smooth jazz.  I like jazz, and I've just about quit listening to anything else musically.  I grew accustomed to the people who played the "light jazz" music on WNUA, and so enjoyed it I even listened to the station on my computer when traveling out of town.  I was a stalwart, loyal fan.  My whole family knew that when I was driving the car, the channel would be 95.5.

Then, after a long weekend out of town, I got in the car this morning.  I pushed the button for 95.5, and for some reason there was Hispanic music.  I couldn't figure it out.  This didn't make any sense.  So I turned off the radio and went about my business.  When I returned home I logged onto WNUA.com to find a letter from a Clear Channel Chicago executive telling me that WNUA was no longer broadcasting as of 10:00am on Friday, May 22.  The web site was gone, only this one HTML page existed.  I was stunned

I quickly did a Google search and found an article published by the media critic at The Chicago Tribune dated May 22, "WNUA Swings to Spanish Format."  I immediately thought "this can't be right.  There has to be something I can do to get back my radio station.  Maybe if I email Clear Channel?"  See, I quickly wanted to defend my radio selection, and extend the life of the product I personally enjoyed.

But then I read the article.  Turns out there are a lot of smooth jazz lovers who were loyal to WNUA.  But, unfortunately, that number has not been growing for a while.  The channel management had tried many things to boost listeners, but none had worked.  The market just wouldn't grow, despite their efforts.  The jazz radio listener market had stalled – and was showing signs of (oh my gosh) decline!  I was getting older, and apparently us old Chicago smooth jazz hounds aren't creating new jazz followers.

But, the station had done a lot of analysis as to what was growing.  Hispanics now outnumber African-Americans as the largest minority group in the country.  Clear Channel Chicago did a full scenario about the future, thinking about what would be needed to fill the needs of Chicago's biggest listener groups in 5 years.  Looking forward, there was no doubt that smooth jazz wasn't going to grow – but the opportunity for an Hispanic station was "crystal clear".  Competitively, they would continue losing revenue playing smooth jazz, and although the cost of shifting would be great – the opportunity to be part of a growing market had much more to gain.  Chicago is the 5th largest Hispanic population in the USA and growing, with 28% of the current population Hispanic.  Clear Channel management did both scenario planning and competitor analysis before deciding to make this switch – just what a Phoenix Principle company is supposed to do!

KaBoom.  The market was shifting, and I saw it, but I didn't think about the impact on my own life.  I just assumed WNUA would always be there playing jazz for me.  But the people at Clear Channel looked at the market shifts, and how they could best use their 5 stations to service the most people.  That is good for Chicago, and good business for Clear Channel.  If they wanted to keep growing, WNUA had to be replaced.  I would bet the hate mail has been extreme.  The longing for our old station must be felt by several thousand people around Chicago.  It's hard to let go of a Lock-in.

Oh, I feel terrible about not having my radio station.  But the right move was made.  I should have thought about this more, and seen it coming.  I could have scouted out other radio stations, and started looking for other music styles that I'd like to listen to.  But I wore blinders – until the market shifted and left me in the cold. 

I'm curious, have any of you readers found yourself the unfortunate loser due to a market shift?  Did some favorite aspect of your life or work disappear because the market went a different direction – and you found yourself in a small segment unprofitable to serve?  I'd love to hear more stories from folks whose Lock-in left them unprepared for a change in lifestyle or work.

As for me, I guess there's always CDs.  Or NPR (I'm getting old enough to like the news). But those would be D&E behaviors intended to ignore the shifting market.  So, maybe I should start letting others in my family select the radio stations so I could climb out of my cave and learn what more modern musicians are doing these days.  It would do me good to update my music knowledge – get me closer to people who have music appreciation beyond jazz, and probably make me a lot more likable as a driver.  It's never too late to open up some White Space and learn what's new in the world you couldn't see because of your old Lock-in.