Please leave Google alone – bad advice from Harvard and Mr. Anthony

Is Google a company who's growth and innovation worry you?  Not me.  Which is why I was disturbed by a recent blog at Harvard Business School Publishing's web site "Google Grows Up."  In this article Scott Anthony, a consultant and writer for HBS, says that he thinks Google has been immature about its innovation management, and he thinks the company needs to change it's approach to innovation.  Unfortunately, his comments replay the core of outdated management approaches which lead companies into lower returns.

No doubt Google's revenues are highly skewed toward on-line ad placement.  But with the market growing at more than 2x/year, and Google maintaining (or growing) share it's not surprising that such high revenues would dwarf other projects.  Google created, and has remained, in the Rapids of growth by leading the market.  From its Disruptive innovation, offering advertising through products like Google AdWords to people who previously couldn't afford it or manage it, allowed Google to lead a market shift for advertising.  And ever since Google has implemented sustaining innovations to maintain its leadership position.  That's great management.  No reason to worry about a lot of revenue in ad placement today, with the market growing.  Not as long as Google keeps breeding lots of new, big ideas to help grow in the future.

But Mr. Anthony flogs Google for its "unrestrained" approach to innovation.  He recommends the company push hard to implement a process for innovation management – and he uses Proctor & Gamble as his role model – in order to curtail so many innovations and funnel resources to "the right" innovations.  Even though he's obviously flogging his consulting, and pushing that all "good management" requires some significant stage gate management of innovation – he couldn't be more wrong.

Firstly, P&G is far from a role model for innovation.  As recently discussed in this blog, the company recently said one of its major innovations was cutting prices on Tide while introducing less a less-good formulation.  As commenters said loudly, this is not innovation.  It's merely price cutting – taking another step on the demand/supply curve of price vs. performance.  It doesn't change the shape of the curve – it doesn't help people get a far superior return – nor does it bring in new customers who's needs were not previously met. 

In a Wall Street Journal article "P&G Plots Course To Turn Lackluster Tide," the CEO freely admits the company has had insufficient organic growth.  Additionally, his big future opportunities are to "reposition Tide," to cut the price of Cheer by another 13% and to use Defend & Extend practices to try pushing the P&G Success Formula into other countries.  Like people in China, India and elsewhere are in need of 1.5 gallon containers of laundry detergent sold through enormous stores which have big parking lots for all those cars to lug stuff home.  None of these ideas have helped P&G grow, nor helped the company achieve above-average returns, nor demonstrate the company is going to be a leader for the next 10 years in new products, new distribution systems or new business models for the developed or developing world. 

This urge to "grow up" is a huge downfall of business thinking.  It smacks of arrogance and superiority by those who say it – like they somehow are "in the know" while everyone else is incapable of making smart resource allocation decisions.   In "Create Marketplace Disruption" I provide a long discussion about how introducing "professional management' causes companies to enter growth stalls.  The very act of saying "gee, we could be more efficient about how we manage innovation" immediately applies braking power well beyond what was imagined.  If Mr. Anthony were worried about Google managers leaving to start new companies in the past (like Twitter) he should be apoplectic at the rate they'll now leave – when it's harder to get management attention and funding for new potentially disruptive innovations.

Google is doing a great job of innovating.  Largely because it doesn't try to manage innovation.  It maintains robust pipelines of both disruptive, and sustaining, innovations. Google allows everybody in the company to work at innovation – providing wide permission to try new things and ample resources to test ideas.  Then Google lets the market determine what goes forward.  It lets the innovators use supply chain partners, customers, emerging customers, lost customers and anybody who can provide market input guide where the innovation processes go.  As a result, the company has developed several new products — such as new network applications that replace over-sized desktop apps, and a new, slimmer mobile operating system that expands the capabilities of mobile devices —- and we can well imagine that it may be coming close to additional revenue breakthroughs.

Unfortunately, Mr. Anthony would like readers, and his clients, to believe they are better at managing innovation than the marketplace.  However, all research points in the opposite direction.  When managers start guessing at the future their Lock-ins to historical processes, products and market views consistently causes them to guess wrong.  They over-invest in things that don't work out well, and investing for really good ideas dries up.  All resource allocation approaches use things like technology risk, market risk, cost risk and revenue risk to downplay breakthrough ideas.  Management cannot help but "extend the past" and in doing so over-invest in what's known, rather than let ideas get to market so real customers can say what is valuable.

Google is doing great.  In a recession that has put several companies out of business (Silicon Graphics and Sun Microsystems are two neighbors) and challenged the returns of several stalwarts (Microsoft and Dell just 2 examples) Google has grown and seen its value rise dramatically.  To think that hierarchy and managers can apply better decision-making about innovation is – well – absurd.  It's always best to get the idea surfaced, push for permission to do things that might appear crazy at first, and get them to market as fast as possible so the real decision-makers can react, and give input, to innovation.

New Look and Feel – Recharge, Reignite, Regrow – Get America Growing

Those of you who follow my blog should have noticed a new look and feel today!  If you receive this missive in your email box via an RSS feed, I encourage you to stop by www.ThePhoenixPrinciple.com to see the new look.

As most of you know, I'm quite serious about helping organizations realize that they all can rejuvenate.  It's a mission I started in 2004, and devoted my life to in 2007 when I started writing Create Marketplace Disruption.  And now, in the midst of this terrible recession, it is clearer than ever that we need to realize that different phases of the lifecycle take different management approaches.  And for most companies today, old fashioned notions of "focus" and "hard work" simply won't pull them out of this recession and toward better returns

So I've rededicated myself to this mission.  And part of that rededication is hiring some professional help with this website!  Thanks to Public Words for the new design – and this is just a small part of what they will be doing to help me over the next year to increase the awareness of this mission and expand the base of people who want to help their organizations recharge, reignite and regrow!  I'm also spending more time public speaking to companies, leadership teams, industry events and multi-company conferences about what we need to do so we can get back to growing!  (If you know of groups, please let them know how The Phoenix Principle and Adam Hartung can help them get growing again.)

So, let me know what you think of the new look and feel!  Your comments can help the site be more productive for us all.  If you want things added, speak up!  I read all comments, whether here or emailed my way, and my new team will consider them all.  In addition to the look and feel, please offer your ideas for how I can drive more links, and attract more readers to our mission.  Some of you offered great ideas recently (special kudo to reader Bob Morris for his insightful recommendations) about how to better use tags, technoroti tags and trackbacks.  Please keep telling me places I need to link, and other things which can help grow readership.  Your help in spreading the word is greatly appreciated.

Also, if you haven't noticed I'm not twittering.  So you all are invited to reach out to me on Twitter – there's even a link to twitter me on the blog now!  I'll be getting my facebook page up soon as well.

I read a fascinating report published today you can dowload from Bank of America claiming that this recession actually began in 2000 – and we're somewhere between 60% and 70% of the way through.  Real estate could decline another 15%, and the big equity averages may drop another 20-40%!   Whether that's true, or maybe we're closer to "the bottom", for most of our organizations to be prosperous again will take a different approach to management.  One that overcomes Lock-in to outdated Success Formulas (often created in a previous industrial era) by obsessing about competitors to learn about market trends, never fearing disruption – internal or in the marketplace – and utilizing White Space to test new business ideas which can create better, higher return Success Formulas that fit newly evolved markets.

"Hiring Plans or Firing Plans" is the headline on Marketwatch.comPreviously, the lowest number achieved for "net hiring plans" was in 1982 when a net 1% of firms were planning to hire.  But in the entire 47 years of the Manpower hiring survey (since 1962) never was the index a negative – where more firms plan to lay off than hire!!!  That was until now, with the index at -1%.  Just one year ago the number was +17%! (Find the complete Manpower Employment Outlook Survey at this link to their site.)  More of the same "ain't going to cut it".  Instead of looking for reasons to lay off workers, we have to realize that there are a lot of reasons to hire more!  If we follow the right management principles – The Phoenix Principle – we can get going again!  If we encourage Disruption and keep White Space alive we can continue to grow!

A past client of mine recently discovered a way to introduce a new line of products with 80% less development cost.  But the new product is being delayed because the CEO feels he must lay off workers and slow down product launches – due to what he's reading about the economy.  The CEO is afraid that a new product launch, which would cement the company's #1 position ahead of competitors gnawing at their position the last 4 years, would be a tough sell to the Board of Directors.  The CEO is clearly focusing on the wrong thing – because his Board would be happier with growing sales and profits, and a reinforced #1 market position, than anything else!  Especially now!  But this company is almost afraid to grow, locked in fear of what to do next.  Instead of reallocating resources to growth projects, and jettisoning "sacred cow" products that are low-profit and declining in sales volume, management prefers to follow today's popular wisdom of cutting costs, cutting new product introductions, even cutting revenues by sticking with historical products nobody is buying - so that's what they will do!!!

So, please be a part of this journeyParticipate, don't just be a spectator.  Provide your feedback and comments.  And share the word!  Nothing is more valuable than debate.  Great ideas are developed in the marketplace, not in someone's head!  Pass along the message, and get others involved

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