Who to follow in 2010? – Amazon, WalMart

Happy New Year!

As we start 2010 the plan, according to The Financial Times, "WalMart aims to cut supply chain costs."  Imagine that.  Cost cutting has been the biggest Success Formula component for WalMart for its entire career.  And now, the company that is already the low cost retailer – and famous for beating its suppliers down on price to almost no profitability – is planning to focus on purchasing for the next 5 years in order to hopefully take another 5% out of purchased product cost.  How'd you like to hear that if Wal-Mart is one of your big customers?  What do you suppose the discussion will be like when you go to Target or KMart (match WalMart pricing?)

Will this make WalMart more admired, or more successful?  This is the epitome of "more of the same."  Even though WalMart is huge, it has done nothing for shareholders for years.  And employees have been filing lawsuits due to unpaid overtime. And some markets have no WalMart stores because the company refuses to allow any employees to be unionized.  This announcement will not make WalMart a more valuable company, because it simply is an attempt to Defend the Success Formula.

On the other hand according to Newsweek, in "The Customer is Always Right," Amazon intends to keep moving harder into new products and markets in 2010.  Amazon has added enormous value to its shareholders, including gains in 2009, as it has moved from bookselling to general merchandise retailing to link retailing to consumer electronics with the Kindle and revolutionizing publishing with the Kindle store.  Amazon isn't trying to do more of the same, it's using innovation to drive growth

And the CEO, Jeff Bezos freely admits that his success today is due to scenario development and plans laid 4 years ago – as Amazon keeps its planning focused on the future.  With the advent of many new products coming out in 2010 – including the Apple Tablet – Amazon will have to keep up its focus on new products and markets to maintain growth.  Good thing the company is headed that direction.

So which company would you rather work for?  Invest in?  Supply? 

Which will you emulate?

PS – "Create Marketplace Disruption:  How To Stay Ahead of the Competition" was selected last week to be on the list of "Top 25 Books to read in 2010" by PCWorld and InfoWorld.  Don't miss getting your copy soon if you haven't yet read the book.

In Good Company – Innosight and IBM

Seizing the White Space is a new book being launched by HBS Press (and being pre-sold on Amazon.com.)  I'm very glad to read about others who are taking up the message of Create Marketplace Disruption – which first published the critical role of White Space in successfully managing any business (published in 2008 by Financial Times Press and also available on Amazon.com). 

The author, Mark Johnson, is Chairman of Innosight, a consulting firm he co-founded with Clayton Christenson who's on the Harvard Business School faculty (and author of The Innovator's Dilemma also on Amazon.com).  Innosight primarily focuses on consulting businesses to identify Disruptive innovations.  Now the Chairman is starting to realize that implementation is as important as identifying the implementation – and he's linked it to WHITE SPACE.  Great!!!

You can read his insights to how IBM and some of his other large clients have used White Space in an Harvard Business Publishinng Blog "Is Your Company Brave Enough For Business Model Innovation?" You'll quickly see that he applies The Disruptive Opportunity Matrix from chapter 10 of Create Marketplace Disruption – which is how companies have been shown to reach new businesses using White Space.  It's so gratifying to read somebody else who's applied your research and come to the same conclusions!

I'm looking forward to the book.  Readers please let me know what you think of the author's blog post – and the book when it comes out.

Post-script to yesterday's blog about the CEO of GM:

"Cat's Owens, Deere's Lane on short list of CEO candidates" is the AP article appearing on Crain's Chicago Business about the search for a new leader at GM.  As I predicted yesterday, recruiters seem to think the ideal candidate for the job needs to be from another big industrial company.  And preferably, an auto company "to understand the industry complexities."  Not only is there no incentive for these highly paid executives to take a similar job, at a lot less pay, in a government funded organization — but investors shouldn't want it!  GM needs change.  And more change than trying to make GM into John Deere, or CAT.

John Deere has had weak results for decades.  The company has been wedged between other equipment manufacturers so badly that most of its profits now come from yard tractors homeowner's buy from Home Depot.  Just because the company is big, and one of the few left making equipment for which there is declining demand, is no reason to want the CEO at a turnaround like GM.  Likewise, CAT is under intense competition from Komatsu, Volvo and other manufacturers who are squeezing it from all sides – jeapardizing revenues and profitsOnly acquistions have kept CAT growing the last 10 years, and margins have plummeted.  That leadership is not what's needed at GM either.

When will somebody speak up for the investors and start a search in the right direction?  GM needs leadership that thinks entirely differently.  Unwilling to accept old-fashioned industrial notions about how to lead a company.  Like I recommended, go somewhere entirely different.  Maybe recruit somebody from Dell or HP or Cisco that understands rapid design cycles.  Or someone from Wal-Mart or Target that understands how to sell things – cheaply.  Or someone from Oracle or Mozilla or Google that understands the value of software – and that the product is a lot more than the iron – so you can capture the right value.  It's so disappointing to read how the "recruiting industry" is just as Locked-in as GM. 

If one of you readers knows somebody on the GM Board, maybe you should send them this blog (and yesterday's) to see if they can consider searching in the right place for new leadership!

Don't miss the recent ebook, "The Fall of GM"  for a
quick read on how easily any company (even the nation's largest employer) can be
easily upset by market shifts.  And learn what GM could have done to avoid
bankruptcy – lessons that can help your business grow! http://tinyurl.com/mp5lrm

Disruptions vs. Disturbances – Walgreens

Walgreens is apparently going through a dramatic change in leadershipDrug Store News reported that the top 2 folks, including the top merchandiser, have left Walgreens in "."  The article discusses the "old guard" departure and arrival of younger, new leaders.  The magazine clearly paints this as a Disruption. 

But I have my doubts.  There's no discussion of future scenarios in which Walgreens is going to be a different company – not even a different retailer.  There's no discussion about competitors, and how more prescription medications are being purchased on-line from new competiors, or even how Walgreens intends to be very different from historical brick-and-mortar competitors like CVS or Rite-Aid.  No discussion about how the company might need to change its real estate strategy (being everywhere.)

There's really no discussion about changing the Walgreens' Success Formula.  It's Identity has long been tied to being first and foremost a "drug store" (or pharmacy).  A market which has been attacked on multiple fronts, from grocers and discounters like WalMart entering the business to the insurance mandates of buying drugs on-line.  To be the biggest, Walgreens' strategy for several years has been tied to opening new stories practically every day.  It was shear real estate domination – ala Starbucks.  Although it's unclear how profitable many of those stores have been.  Tactically Walgreens has moved heavily into cosmetics as a high turn and margin business, then items it an bring in and churn out very quickly – such as holiday material (Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Valentines Day, St. Patrick's Day, etc.), shirts, sweatshirts, on and on – stuff brought in then sold fast, even if it had to be discounted quickly to get it out the door.  Churn the product because the goal is to sell the customer something else when they come in for that prescription.

There is no discussion of these executive changes creating in White Space to develop a new Walgreens.  Without powerful scenarios drawing people to a new, different future Walgreens – and without a strong sense of how Walgreens intends to trap competitors in Lock-in while leveraging new fringe ideas to grow – and without White Space being installed to develop a new Success Formula to make Walgreens into something different —– this isn't a Disruption.  It's a disturbance.  Yes, it's a big deal, but it's unlikely to change the results.

Reinforcing that this is likely a disturbance the article talks about how the company is starting to obsess about store performance – down to targeting every 3 foot section for better turns and profits.  The new leaders plan to work harder on supply chain issues, and store plannograms, to increase turns.  They intend to put more energy into prioritization and reworking promotions.  In other words, they want to execute better – more, better, faster, cheaper.  And that's not a Disruption.  It's just a disturbance.  This may make folks feel better, and sound alluring, but experience has shown that this is not a route to higher growth or higher sustained profitability.

I don't expect these management changes to remake Walgreens.  Walgreens has been a pretty good retailer.  The Success Formula worked well until competitors changed the face of demand, and market shifts wiped out access to very low cost capital for building new stores.  The Success Formula's results have fallen because the market shifted.  Refocusing energy on being a better merchandiser won't have a big impact on growth at Walgreens.  The company needs to rethink the future, so it can figure out what it needs to become in order to keep growing! 

Real Disruptions attack the status quoThey don't focus on better execution.  They attack things like "we're a pharmacy" by perhaps licensing out the pharmacy in every store to the pharmacist and changing the store managers.  Or by selling a bunch of stores to eliminate the focus on real estate.  Or by promoting the Walgreens on-line drug service in every store, while cutting back the on-hand pharmacy products.  Those sorts of things are Disruptions, because they signal a change in the Success Formula.  Coupled with competitive insight and White Space that has permission to define a new future and resources to develop one, Disruptions can help a stalled company get back to growing again.

But that hasn't happened yet at Walgreens.  So expect a small improvement in operating results, and some financial engineering to quickly make new management look better.  But little real performance improvement, and sustainable growth, will not occur.  Nor will a sustained higher equity value.

Defend & Extend – book publishing, movie distribution,

If you try standing in the way of a market shift you are going to get treated like the poor cowboy who stands in front of a cattle stampede.  The outcome isn't pretty.  Yet, we still have lots of leaders trying to Defend & Extend their business with techniques that are detrimental to customers.  And likely to have the same impact on customers as the cowpoke shooting a pistol over the head of the herd.

Book publishers have a lot to worry about.  Honestly, when did you last read a book?  Every year the demand for books declines as people switch reading habits to shorter formats.  And book readership becomes more concentrated in the small percentage of folks that read a LOT of books.  And those folks are moving faster and faster to Kindle type digital e-book devices.  So the market shift is pretty clear.

Yet according to the Wall Street Journal  Scribner (division of Simon & Schuster) is delaying the release of Stephen King's latest book in e-format ("Publisher Delays Stephen King eBook").  They want to sell more printed books, so they hope to force the market to buy more paper copies by delaying the ebook for 6 weeks.  They think that people will want to give this book as a gift, so they'll buy the paper copy because the ebook won't be out until 12/24.

So what will happen?  Kindle readers I know don't want a paper book.  They wait.  Giving them a paper copy would create a reaction like "Oh, you shouldn't have.  I mean, really, you shouldn't have."  So the idea that this gets more printed books to e-reader owners is faulty.  That also means that the several thousand copies which would get sold for e-readers don't.  So you end up with lots of paper inventory, and unsatisfactory sales of both formats.  That's called "lose-lose."  And that's the kind of outcome you can expect when trying to Defend & Extend an outdated Success Formula.

Simultaneously, as book sales become fewer and more concentrated a higher percent of volume falls onto fewer titles.  And that is exactly where WalMart, Target and Amazon compete.  High volume, and for 2 of the 3 companies, limited selection.  This gives the reseller more negotiating clout against the publisher.   So as the big retailers look for ways to get people in the store, they are willing to sell books at below cost – loss leaders. 

So now publishers are joining with the American Booksellers Association to seek an anti-trust case against the big retailers according to the Wall Street Journal again in "Are Amazon, WalMart and Target acting like Predators?" .  Publishers want to try Defending their old pricing models, and as that crumbles in the face of market shifts they try using lawyers to stop the shift.  That will probably work just as well as the lawsuits music publishers tried using to stop the distribution of MP3 tunes.  Those lawsuits ended up making no difference at all in the shift to digital music consumption and distribution.

"Movie Fans Might Have to Wait To Rent New DVD Releases" is the Los Angeles Times headline. The studios like 20th Century Fox, Universal and Warner Brothers want individuals to buy more DVDs.  So their plan is to refuse to sell DVDs to rental outfits like Netflix, Redbox and Blockbuster.  Just like Scribner with its Stephen King book, they are hoping that people won't wait for the rental opportunity and will feel forced to go buy a copy.  Like that's the direction the market is heading – right?

If they wanted to make a lot of money, the studios would be working hard to find a way to deliver digital format movies as fast as possible to people's PCs – the equivalent of iTunes for movies – not trying to limit distribution!  That the market is shifting away from DVD sales is just like the shift away from music CD sales, and will not be fixed by making it harder to rent movies.  Although it might increase the amount of piracy – just like similar actions backfired on the music studios 8 years ago.

Defending & Extending a business only works when it is in the Rapids of market growth.  When growth slows, the market is moving on.  Trying to somehow stop that shift never works.  Only an arrogant internally-focused manager would think that the company can keep markets from shifting in a globally connected digital world.  Consumers will move fast to what they want, and if they see a block they just run right over it – or go where you least want them to go (like to pirates out of China or Korea.) 

They only way to deal with market shifts is to get on board.  "Skate to where the puck will be" is the over-used Wayne Gretzsky quote.  Be first to get there, and you can create a new Success Formula that captures value of new growth markets.  And that's a lot more fun than getting trampled under a herd of shifting customers that you simply cannot control.

Forced innovation – Consumer goods and retail,

"Retailers cut back on variety, once the spice of marketing" is the Wall Street Journal.com headline.  It seems one of the unintended consequences of this recession will be forced consumer goods innovation!

For years consumer goods companies, and the retailers which push their products, have played a consistent, largely boring, and not too profitable Defend & Extend game.  When I was young there was one jar of Kraft Miracle whip on the store shelf.  It was one quart.  This container was so ubiquitous that it coined the term "mayonnaise jar" – everybody knew what you meant with that term.  Now you can find multiple varieties of Miracle Whip (fat free, low fat, etc.), in multiple sizes.  This product proliferation passed for innovation for many people.  Unfortunately, it has not grown the sales of Miracle Whip faster than growth in the general population. 

Do you remember when you'd go to Pizza Hut and they offered "Hawaiian Pizza?"  Pizza Hut would concoct some pretty unusual toppings, mixed up in various arrangements, then give them catchy labels.  Unfortunately, what passed internally as an exciting new product introduction was recognized by customers as much ado about nothing, and those varieties quietly and quickly left the menu.  Like the Miracle Whip example, it expanded the number of choices, but it did not increase the demand for pizza, nor revenues, nor profits.

Expanding varieties is too often seen by marketers as innovation.  I remember when Oreos came out with 100 calorie packs, and the CEO said that was an innovation.  But did it drive additional Oreo sales?  Unfortunately for Nabisco, no.  It was plenty easy to count out the number of cookies you want and put in a baggie.  Or buy fewer cookies altogether in these new, smaller packages.

These sorts of tricks are the stock-in-trade of Defend & Extend managementClog up the distribution system with dozens (sometimes hundreds) of varieties of your product.  Try to take over lots of shelf space by paying "stocking fees" to the retailer to put all those varieties (package sizes, flavor options, etc.) on his shelf – in effect bribing him to stock the product.  But then when a truly new product comes along, something really innovative by a smaller, newer company, the D&E manager uses the stocking fees as a way to make it hard for the new product to even reach the market because the small company can't afford to pay millions of dollars to bump the big guy defending his retail turf.  The large number of offerings defends the product's position in retail, while simultaneously extending the product's life to keep sales from declining.  But, year after year the cost of creating, launching and placing these new varieties of largely the "same old thing" keeps driving down the net margin.  The D&E manager is trying to keep up revenues, but at the expense of profits. 

Simultaneously, this kind of behavior keeps the business from launching really new products.  The previous CEO at Kraft said in 2006 that the best investment his company could make was advertising Velveeta.  His point of view was that protecting Velveeta sales was worth more than launching new products – and at that time the last new product launched by Kraft was 6 years old!  Internally, the decision-support system was so geared toward defending the existing business that it made all marginal investments supporting existing brands look highly profitable – while killing the rate of return on new products by discounting potential sales and inflating costs! 

This D&E behavior isn't good for any business.  Consumer goods or otherwise.  And it's interesting to read that now retailers are starting to push back.  They are cutting the number of product variations to cut the inventory carrying costs.  As I mentioned, if you now have 6 different stock keeping units (SKUs) for Miracle Whip in various sizes, flavors and shapes but no additional sales you more than likely have doubled, tripled or even more the inventory – and simultaneously reduced "turns" – thus making the margin per foot of shelf space, and the inventory ROI, poorer.  Even with those "shelf fee" bribes the consumer goods manufacturer paid.

For consumers this is a great thing!  Because it frees up shelf space for new products.  It frees up buyers to look harder at truly new products, and new suppliers.  The retailer has the chance of revitalizing his stores by putting more excitement on the shelves, and giving the consumer something new.  This action is a Disruption for the individual retailer – pushing them to compete on products and services, not just having the same old products (in too many varieties) exactly the same as competitors.

This action, happening at WalMart, Walgreens, RiteAid, Kroger and Target according to the article, is an industry Disruption.  It impacts the manufacturers like Kraft and P&G by forcing them to bring more truly new products to the market if they want to maintain shelf facings and revenues.  It alters the selling proposition for all suppliers, making the "distribution fees" less of an issue and turning those retail buyers back into true merchandisers – rather than just people who review manufacturer supplied planograms before feeding numbers into the automated ordering system.  And it changes what the manufacturer's salespeople have to do.

The companies that will do well are those that now implement White Space to take advantage of this Disruption.  As you can imagine, it's a huge boon for the smaller, more entrepreneurial companies that may well have long been blocked from the big retailer's stores.  It allows them to get creative about pitching their products in an effort to help the retailer compete on product – not just price.  And for any existing supplier, they will have to use White Space to get more new products out faster.  And get their salesforce to change behavior toward selling new products rather than just defending the old products and facings.

Markets work in amazing ways.  Almost never do things happen as one would predict.  It's these unintended consequences of markets that makes them so powerful.  Not that they are "efficient" so much as they allow for Disruptions and big behavior changes.  And that gives the entrepreneurial folks, and the innovators, their opportunities to succeed.  For those in consumer goods, right now is a great time to talk to Target, Kohl's, Safeway, et.al. about how they can really change the competition by refocusing on your innovative new products again!