Cry or Take Action – Huffington Post, Wall Street Journal, LA Times, NY Times, Washington Post

Do you lament "the way things used to be?"  I remember my parents using that phrase.  Now I often hear my peers.  And it really worries me.  Success requires constant growth, and when I hear business leaders talking about "the way things used to be" I fear they are unwilling to advance with market shifts.

For 5 years newspaper publishers have been lamenting the good old days, when advertisers had little choice but to pay high rates for display or classified ads.  Newspaper publishers complain that on-line ads are too inexpensive, and thus unable to cover the costs of "legitimate" journalism.  While they've watched revenues decline, almost none have done anything to effectively develop robust on-line businesses that can offer quality journalism for the future.  Instead, most are cutting costs, reducing output and using bankruptcy protection to stay alive (such as Tribune Corporation.)  Even as more and more readers shift toward the digital environment.

Huffington Post site visits 2007-2010
Source:  Business Insider 5/18/10

While most of the "major" newspapers (including Tribune owned LA Times) have been trying to preserve their print business (Defend & Extend it) HuffingtonPost.com has gone out and built a following.  There's little doubt that with the last 3 years trajectory, HuffingtonPost will soon be the largest site.  And reports are that HuffingtonPost.com is profitable.

In 2006 the CFO at LATimes told me he couldn't divert more resources to his web department.  He felt it would be jeopardize to the print business. "After all," he said "you don't think that the future of news will be bloggers do you?"  Clearly, he was unprepared for the kind of model Arianna Huffington was building – and the kind of readership HuffingtonPost.com could create.

On Tuesday I presented the keynote address at the Innovation and Energy Summit in Grand Rapids, MI – and as reported in West Michigan Business "Energy & Innovation Summit Speakers Urge Business Leaders to Seek New Businesses, Not Protect Old Ones."  Defend & Extend management always "feels" right.  It seems like the smart thing to try and preserve the old Success Formula, usually by cutting costs and increasing focus on primary revenue sources.  But in reality, this further blinds the organization to market shifts and makes it more vulnerable to disaster.  While NewsCorp and others are busy trying to think like newspapers, emerging news market competitors are developing entirely different models that attract customers – and make a profit. 

That's why it is so important to use future scenarios to drive planning (not old products and customers) while passionately studying competitors.  Talking to advertisers gave these publishers no insight as to how to compete, however had they spent more time watching HuffingtonPost.com, and other on-line sites, they might well have used Disruptions to change their investment models – pushing more resources to the web business.  And had they set up dedicated White Space teams not constrained by old Lock-ins to traditional revenue models and goals of "avoiding advertiser cannibalization" they might very well have evolved to a more effective Success Formula necessary for competing on the internet into 2020.

Compete to Win – Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal, News Corp.

News Corp. executives (and shareholders) need to be worried.  Really worried.  While they are busy trying to Defend their newspaper approach, including the planned move to charge everyone a subscription fee to access the Wall Street Journal on-line, there is a competitor ready to eliminate them.  Of course, if you've read the WSJ for years you may think this sounds ridiculous.  This competitor is vying to do the same to the Financial Times, a newspaper much more popular in Europe than the USA, which already charges for on-line access.  But this competitor is serious, and just might pull it off.

According to BusinessInsider.com, "Bloomberg Redesigns Web Site as it Tries to Kill Journal."  Hiring an executive from Yahoo, Bloomberg News is "pulling the gloves off" and preparing to take on old-line competitors as it steers a course to being #1.  And the odds are looking good for its success.

The market for business news has been shifting for years.  Once this market was dominated by two delivery mechanisms.  One was very expensive, costing thousands or hundreds of dollars per month, driving information to terminals sitting at desks of traders and brokers.  The other was a daily reporting of business news through the traditional business newspapers mentioned above.  Both businesses were very profitable.

But today, almost everyone can get almost everything the expensive terminals had simply by scanning the web.  And if you can get news real-time, why wait until tomorrow?  News Corp. bought Dow Jones and has been trying to Defend the terminal business, in the face of intense Bloomberg competition for traders desks and much lower cost competition for everyone else.  In an effort to shore up the P&L at Wall Street Journal the company has announced it will reverse all industry trends and start charging for WSJ content on-line.  They still haven't figured out how to effectively take advantage of Marketwatch.com as a viable delivery mechanism for WSJ content.  An admission they don't know how to develop a robust advertising model on the web and mobile devices that will support the publication.

Don't forget, News Corp. was early to the on-line world with its acquisition of MySpace.com.  But instead of letting the people who run MySpace.com do what they needed to do to become Facebook – or possibly to become the next Marketwatch.com – News Corp. leaders interceded.  They helped "manage" MySpace and applied News Corp. Success Formula parameters to it.  MySpace was not allowed to operate as a White Space project.  Now MySpace is a narrow site mostly for musicians and artists – missing the big opportunities in social media, business/financial news or even traditional news dissemination.  Had it been given permission to do whatever it needed to succeed, permission to create a new Success Formula, who knows what MySpace might have become?

Today's marketplace will not produce acceptable returns for the old Success Formula.  But the value of good business news is growing, as all investors want to know what traders know as fast as they know it.  And that is where Bloomberg.com is headed.  It is squarely directed at building a new business that is advertiser supported which will deliver the right news to the right place fast enough to capture those who want business news.

Bloomberg is now running 2 separate businesses.  They continue to allow the terminal business to work hard as possible at defending its turf.  Simultaneously they have established a White Space project that is designed to eventually obsolete the old business.  In the process they will cannibalize the terminal business.  But they also will very likely drive less agile competitors Dow Jones and Financial Times out of business.  In the process they could capture significant ad dollars while learning how to dominate the mobile device market as well as the traditional web.

When markets shift, nobody can win by trying to Defend the old.  Customers move on, and they abandon old solutions.  Returns decline.  The winner has to use Disruptions to overcome old Lock-ins to do whatever is necessary to profitably grow!  (like having a web site that looked like an old terminal screen with amber text on a black background) and establish White Space with permission to do what is necessary to succeed! Even recognizing this may create cannibalization – but in the process learning how to earn high rates of return while crushing competitors.

Kudos to the management at Bloomberg.  They are going for the jugular in the business news marketplace, and doing so by moving where the market is headed – while other competitors are trying to Defend & Extend old ways of doing business.  It may not take Bloomberg long to create serious damage to the old institutions in business and financial news.

Lost in the Swamp – Publishing – Random House, Tribune Corporation, News Corp.

Do you read more today, or less than you did 10 years ago?  For most of us, the answer is more.  Our ever present access to email and texting means we watch less TV, and pick up more from reading.  Of course, we read a lot less paper than we used to – books are falling more out of favor every year – and the plight of newspapers and magazines is rocky.  For traditional book publishers like Random House, Pearson, et.al. as well as periodical publishers like Tribune Corporation or News Corp. there is a lot of concern about survivability.  But it's not because we're reading less.  It's because the market has shifted, and people are reading differently.

What should a publisher focus upon?  Words.  Content.  A recent Harvard Business School web discussion "HBS Cases: iPads, Kindles, and the Close of a chapter in Book Publishing" highlights that the role of a publisher is to find really good stuff that people want to read.  The author, former CEO of Random House, points out that a publisher's job is to edit content into the format which makes it easiest to understand and digest.  A good publisher aids us in our seeking knowledge, or enjoyment.  But most publishers have completely lost sight of that goal, instead focusing on printing.  Books, magazines and newspapers.  Keep the presses busy, and the old supply chain filled.

In the business lifecycle we start with the Wellspring of ideas.  When something catches hold, we enter the Rapids of growth.  That's great, because growth is a fun place to be.  But when markets start shifting then things go flat.  We think slowness is our fault, so we work harder at what we've always done – but the cause is a market shift so the hard work makes little difference.  We drift into the Swamp, where we are so overwhelmed with all the problems from no to negative growth that we forget what our original purpose was (we get so busy fighting alligators and killing mosquitoes that we forget the mission was to drain the swamp!)  Eventually resources are depleted and we slide into the Whirlpool of failure.

Publishers are now in the Swamp.  Cutting costs, focusing on "big deals" (like bidding wars to publish a book by a celebrity like Sarah Palin), and spending all kinds of time dealing with the supply chain.  As the HBS article explains, while iPad and Kindle represent an opportunity for incremental growth – and new revenue – by feeding people content when they want it where they want it and how they want it – the publishers are in a pitched battle to slow electronic publishing.  The publishers are trying to Defend & Extend their old process of printing, and distributing, paper.  They want to defend their old Success Formula.  And in doing so, they've completely lost sight of the opportunity digital publishing offers!

A paper published on the University of Missouri web site "What Happens When Newspapers Cut Back on Marketing Investments? An Empirical Analysis" is extremely enlightening.  With ad spending down, in an effort to "save" the business, they are cutting editorial. Yet, this is creating a vicious cycle of decline (a Whirlpool is emerging.)

  1. Newsroom cuts are the most costly on revenue.  More than cutting sales or distribution, cutting content led to the greatest loss.  Duh!  Of course.  Readers are there for content – not for ads or distribution!  Talk about forgetting your purpose.
  2. The bigger the cuts, the impact on revenues gets progressively worse!  Remember what I said about creating a whirlpool?  When you cut what people want, you hasten demise.
  3. Newsroom cuts are most costly on profit.  Not only does revenue decline, but of all cost cuts the content cutting not only takes away readers – but quickly advertisers as well.  Advertisers depend on content to draw people to their ads.  Otherwise all you have is an ad tabloid – remember? 

My book publisher is Pearson.  Eighteen months ago I proposed that we take Create Marketplace Disruption and turn it into 16 short stand-alone mini-books.  People could then buy just part of the book, as it suits their needs.  Sell these for $1 or $2 each strictly as electronic downloads.  That idea flew about as far as the famed dodo.  Financial Times Press sells books I was reminded.  No interest in this other wacky idea I proposed. 

But I'm confident that for most of you, the idea of nice short readings – like say a blog – is a lot more appealing than digesting a 225 page bookPeople don't want less words, they just want things differently.  That's why I do public speaking and workshops – because many of us don't want all the detail of the book and appreciate receiving the content in another format.

So, do you know what direction your market is headed?  Are you moving forward to meet emerging needs and preferences?  Or are you trying to defend & extend the way you've historically done business?  For most publishers, the current direction spells disaster – failure.  Learn from their mistakes, Disrupt your approach and find some White Space to learn how you can make money and grow!

Biting off your nose – News Corp. and Rupert Murdoch

"Rupert Murdoch to remove News Corp's content from Google in months" is the London Telegraph headline.  Claiming that Google gets a "free ride" on the newspaper content, the News Corp. Chairman claims he can block Google from referring his content – and that the conclusion will be bad for Google because it will hurt the search engine's ability to add value.  He also expects that his newspaper and its website will do fine without Google, including doing fine without any Google-placed ads on the newspapers' web sites.

Really.

Ever heard the phrase "cutting off your nose to spite your face?"  It means that you get so mad at something, or someone, that you take a stupid action just trying to get even.  Given the gruffness of Mr. Murdoch, I mashed that phrase up into my own explanation of his threat – that he's trying to bite off his own nose.

There is no changing the shift to on-line news readership.  People will never again return to reading print-format newspapers.  Print demand will continue to decline.  Simultaneously, nobody will revert to searching for news on their own – such as by browsing around any particular web site.  Users now know they can find news with the aid of powerful search engines, like Google, that deliver them directly to the page that tells them what they want to know.  And advertisers now know that they must use services like Google to deliver ads to the pages that present their most likely targets.  Advertisers are not willing to accept "views" alone, now knowing that ads can be targeted to specific readers associated with specific page content.  Those shifts have happened, and are now trends moving forward.  No hoping for "the good old days" will change these shifts.

Google doesn't need the News Corp. newspaper output to succeed as a search engine nor News Corp's pages for its ad placement business.  There is so much access to news, from press releases (source news) to bloggers to other newspapers that any individual news source is relatively irrelevant.  And Google can place all of its advertisers' ads – whether News Corp. makes its pages available to Google or not.

Simply, News Corp. needs Google.  Without Google page referrals, visitors will drop.  Lower visitors means fewer ad views means lower revenue.  No news organization can stand lower revenues.  Simultaneously, News Corp. needs as many advertisers competing for its ad space as possible.  To turn down any ad placement service will only hurt revenues further.

Mr. Murdoch said in the article "I don’t believe the media industry can continue to exist in this way."  He's right.  Media companies are going through a major market shift.  But trying to walk away from the #1 search engine and #1 ad placement company is —– foolish.  And Mr. Murdoch knows this – because News Corp. owns MySpace and other internet properties.  Google may not need News Corp., but News Corp. definitely needs Google 

Dated Dow – Just another victim of market shift

What do you think of when someone says "The Dow"?  Most people think of the Dow Jones Industrial Average – a mix of some roughly 30 companies (the number isn't fixed and does change).  But very few people know the names on the list, or why those companies are selected.  As time has passed, most people think of "The Dow" as "blue chip" companies that are supposed to be the largest, strongest and safest companies on the New York Stock Exchange.  For this last reason, it's probably time to think about killing "The Dow."  It's certainly clear that what the selection committee thought were "blue chip" a year ago was off by about 50% – with many names gone or nearly gone (like AIG, GM, Citibank) and many struggling to convince people about their longevity (like Pfizer).

Quick history:  "The Dow" is named afrer the first editor of the Wall Street Journal Charles Dow (co-founder of Dow Jones, owner of the Journal) who wrote in the late 1800s. Building on his early thoughts about markets, something called "Dow Theory" was developed in the early part of the 1900s.  Simply put, this said to get a selection of manufacturing companies, and average their prices (the Dow Jones Industrials).  Then, get a selection of transportation companies and average their prices (the Dow Jones Transportations [see, you forgot their were 2 "Dows" didn't you]). Then, watch these averages.  If only one moves, you can't be predictive, but if both moves it means that businesses are both making and shipping more (or less) so you can bet the overall market will go the direction of the two averages.  So it was a theory trying to predict business trends in an industrial economy by following two rough gages – production and transportation – using stock prices. [note:  the first study of Dow Theory in 1934 said it didn't work – and it's never been shown to work predicatably.]

Don't forget, in this most quoted of all market averages the third word is "Industrial."  The reason for creating the average was to measure the performance of industrial companies.  And across the years, the names on the list were all kinds of industrials.  Only in the most recent years was the definition expanded to include banks.  But that was considered OK, because above all else "the Dow" was a measure of leading companies in an "industrial" economy and the banks had become key components in extending the industrial economy by providing leverage for "hard assets".

Marketwatch.com today asked the headline question "Is the Dow doing its job?"  The article's concern was whether "the Dow" effectively tracked the economy because so many of its components have recently traded at remarkably low prices per share - 5 below $10 – and even 1 below $1!  Historically these would have been swapped out for better performing companies in the economy.  Faltering companies were dropped (like how AIG was dropped in the last year) – which meant that "the Dow" would always go up; because the owners could manipulate the components! [the owners are still the editors at The Wall Street Journal now owned by News Corp.]  But even the editor of the Dow Jones Indexes said "While we wouldn't pick stocks that trade under $10 to be in the Dow [Citi and GM] are still representative of the industries they're in, and their decline in the recent past is part of the story of the market recently."

Recently, "the Dow" has taken a shellacking.  And the reasons given are varied.  But one thing we HAVE to keep in mind is that any measure of "industrial" companies deserves to get whacked, and we should not expect those industrial companies to dramatically improve.  In the 1950s when the thinking was "what's good for GM is good for America" we were in the heyday of an industrial economy.  And that phrase, even if never really used by anyone famous, made so much sense it became part of our lexicon.  But we aren't in an industrial economy any more.  And the failure of GM (as well as the struggles at Ford, Chrysler and Toyota) shows us that fact.  If "the Dow" is a measure of industrial companies - or even more broadly, companies that operate an industrial business model – it is doing exactly what one should expect.   And to expect it to ever recover to old highs is simply impossible. 

The industrial era has been displaced, and in the future high returns will be captured by businesses that operate with information-intensive business models.  Google should not be placed on the DJIA.  We need a new basket – a new index.  We need to put together a collection of companies that represent the strength of the economy – where new jobs will be created.  Companies that use information to create competitive advantage and high rates of return — like how in an industrial economy businesses used "scale" and "manufacturing intensity" and "supply chain efficiency" to create superior returns.  If we want to talk about "blue chip" companies that are more likely to show economic leadership, gauge the capability to succeed and the ability to drive improved economic output, we need a list of companies that are the big winners and demonstrate the ability to remain so by their superior understanding of the value in information and how to capture that value for investors, employees and vendors.

This index is not the NASDAQ.  It would include Google, currently leading this new era as Ford did the last one 100 years ago.  But other likley participants would be Amazon for demonstrating that the value of books is in the content, not the paper and that the value of retailing is not the building and store.  Apple has shown how music can eclipse physical devices, and is leading the merger of computer/phone/PDA/wireless connectivity.  Infosys is a leader in delivering information systems in 24×7 global delivery models.  Comcast is leading us to see that computers, televisions, gaming systems, telephones and all sorts of communications/media will be delivered (and used) entirely differently.  News Corp. is blurring the lines of media spanning all forms of content development as well as delivery in a rapidly shifting customer marketplace.  Nike, or maybe Virgin, is showing us that branding is not about making the product – but instead about connecting products with customers.  Roche for its ownership of Genentech and its deep pool of information on human genetics?  What's common about these companies is that they are not about making STUFF.  They are about using information to make a business, and capturing the value from that information. 

RIP to the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  It's future value looks, at best, unclear.  What we need to do now is redefine what is a "blue chip" in this new economy.  What are your ideas?  Who should represent the soon to be exploding marketplace for biotech solutions based on genetics?  Who will lead the nanotech wave?  Who would you put on this new "blue chip information index"?  Send me your ideas.  And in the meantime, we can recognize that even those who created and manage the venerable "Dow" aren't really sure what to do with it.