How CEO Lampert’s BIAS Is Killing Sears – and Maybe Your Company Too

Sears has performed horribly since acquired by Fast Eddie Lampert's KMart in 2005.  Revenues are down 25%, same store sales have declined persistently, store margins have eroded and the company has recently taken to reporting losses.  There really hasn't been any good news for Sears since the acquisition.

Bloomberg Businessweek made a frontal assault on CEO Edward Lampert's leadership at Sears this week.  Over several pages the article details how a "free market" organization installed by Mr. Lampert led to rampant internal warfare and an inability for the company to move forward effectively with programs to improve sales or profits. Meanwhile customer satisfaction has declined, and formerly valuable brands such as Kenmore and Craftsman have become industry also-rans.

Because the Lampert controlled hedge fund ESL Investments is the largest investor in Sears, Mr. Lampert has no risk of being fired.  Even if Nobel winner Paul Krugman blasts away at him. But, if performance has been so bad – for so long – why does the embattled Mr. Lampert continue to lead in the same way?  Why doesn't he "fire" himself?

By all accounts Mr. Lampert is a very smart man.  Yale summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, he was a protege of former Treasury Secretay Robert Rubin at Goldman Sach before convincing billionaire Richard Rainwater to fund his start-up hedge fund – and quickly make himself the wealthiest citizen in Connecticut.  

If the problems at Sears are so obvious to investors, industry analysts, economics professors, management gurus and journalists why doesn't he simply change? 

Mr. Lampert, largely because of his success, is a victim of BIAS.  Deep within his decision making are his closely held Beliefs, Interpretations, Assumptions and Strategies.  These were created during his formative years in college and business.  This BIAS was part of what drove his early success in Goldman, and ESL.  This BIAS is now part of his success formula – an entire set of deeply held convictions about what works, and what doesn't, that are not addressed, discussed or even considered when Mr. Lampert and his team grind away daily trying to "fix" declining Sears Holdings.

This BIAS is so strong that not even failure challenges them.  Mr. Lampert believes there is deep value in conventional retail, and real estate.  He believes strongly in using "free market competition" to allocate resources. He believes in himself, and he believes he is adding value, even if nobody else can see it.

Mr. Lampert assumes that if he allows his managers to fight for resources, the best programs will reach the top (him) for resourcing.  He assumes that the historical value in Sears and its house brands will remain, and he merely needs to unleash that value to a free market system for it to be captured.  He assumes that because revenues remain around $35B Sears is not irrelevant to the retail landscape, and the company will be revitalized if just the right ideas bubble up from management.

Mr. Lampert inteprets the results very different from analysts.  Where outsiders complain about revenue reductions overall and same store, he interprets this as an acceptable part of streamlining.  When outsiders say that store closings and reduced labor hurt the brand, he interprets this as value-added cost savings.  When losses appear as a result of downsizing he interprets this as short-term accounting that will not matter long-term.  While most investors and analysts fret about the overall decline in sales and brands Mr. Lampert interprets growing sales of a small integrated retail program as a success that can turn around the sinking behemoth.

Mr. Lampert's strategy is to identify "deep value" and then tenaciously cut costs, including micro-managing senior staff with daily calls.  He believes this worked for Warren Buffett, so he believes it will continue to be a successful strategy.  Whether such deep value continues to exist – especially in conventional retail – can be challenged by outsiders (don't forget Buffett lost money on Pier 1,) but it is part of his core strategy and will not be challenged.  Whether cost cutting does more harm than good is an unchallenged strategy.  Whether micro-managing staff eats up precious resources and leads to unproductive behavior is a leadership strategy that will not change.  Hiring younger employees, who resemble Mr. Lampert in quick thinking and intellect (if not industry knowledge or proven leadership skills) is a strategy that will be applied even as the revolving door at headquarters spins.

The retail market has changed dramatically, and incredibly quickly.  Advances in internet shopping, technology for on-line shopping (from mobile devices to mobile payments) and rapid delivery have forever altered the economics of retailing.  Customer ease of showrooming, and desire to shop remotely means conventional retail has shrunk, and will continue to shrink for several years.  This means the real challenge for Sears is not to be a better Sears as it was in 2000 — but to  become something very different that can compete with both WalMart and Amazon – and consumer goods manufacturers like GE (appliances) and Exide (car batteries.) 

There is no doubt Mr. Lampert is a very smart person.  He has made a fortune.  But, he and Sears are a victim of his BIAS.  Poor results, bad magazine articles and even customer complaints are no match for the BIAS so firmly underlying early success.  Even though the market has changed, Mr. Lampert's BIAS has him (and his company) in internal turmoil, year after year, even though long ago outsiders gave up on expecting a better result. 

Even if Sears Holdings someday finds itself in bankruptcy court, expect Mr. Lampert to interpret this as something other than a failure – as he defends his BIAS better than he defends its shareholders, employees, suppliers and customers.

What is your BIAS?  Are you managing for the needs of changing markets, or working hard to defend doing more of what worked in a bygone era?  As a leader, are you targeting the future, or trying to recapture the past?  Have market shifts made your beliefs outdated, your interpretations of what happens around you faulty, your assumptions inaccurate and your strategies hurting results?  If any of this is true, it may be time you address (and change) your BIAS, rather than continuing to invest in more of the same.  Or you may well end up like Sears.

Why Tesla Beats GM, Ford, Nissan

The last 12 months Tesla Motors stock has been on a tear.  From $25 it has more than quadrupled to over $100.  And most analysts still recommend owning the stock, even though the company has never made a net profit. 

There is no doubt that each of the major car companies has more money, engineers, other resources and industry experience than Tesla.  Yet, Tesla has been able to capture the attention of more buyers.  Through May of 2013 the Tesla Model S has outsold every other electric car – even though at $70,000 it is over twice the price of competitors! 

During the Bush administration the Department of Energy awarded loans via the Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Program to Ford ($5.9B), Nissan ($1.4B), Fiskar ($529M) and Tesla ($465M.)  And even though the most recent Republican Presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, called Tesla a "loser," it is the only auto company to have repaid its loan. And did so some 9 years early!  Even paying a $26M early payment penalty!

How could a start-up company do so well competing against companies with much greater resources?

Firstly, never underestimate the ability of a large, entrenched competitor to ignore a profitable new opportunity.  Especially when that opportunity is outside its "core." 

A year ago when auto companies were giving huge discounts to sell cars in a weak market I pointed out that Tesla had a significant backlog and was changing the industry.  Long-time, outspoken industry executive Bob Lutz – who personally shepharded the Chevy Volt electric into the market – was so incensed that he wrote his own blog saying that it was nonsense to consider Tesla an industry changer.  He predicted Tesla would make little difference, and eventually fail.

For the big car companies electric cars, at 32,700 units January thru May, represent less than 2% of the market.  To them these cars are simply not seen as important.  So what if the Tesla Model S (8.8k units) outsold the Nissan Leaf (7.6k units) and Chevy Volt (7.1k units)?  These bigger companies are focusing on their core petroleum powered car business.  Electric cars are an unimportant "niche" that doesn't even make any money for the leading company with cars that are very expensive!

This is the kind of thinking that drove Kodak.  Early digital cameras had lots of limitations.  They were expensive.  They didn't have the resolution of film.  Very few people wanted them.  And the early manufacturers didn't make any money.  For Kodak it was obvious that the company needed to remain focused on its core film and camera business, as digital cameras just weren't important. 

Of course we know how that story ended.  With Kodak filing bankruptcy in 2012.  Because what initially looked like a limited market, with problematic products, eventually shifted.  The products became better, and other technologies came along making digital cameras a better fit for user needs. 

Tesla, smartly, has not  tried to make a gasoline car into an electric car – like, say, the Ford Focus Electric.  Instead Tesla set out to make the best car possible.  And the company used electricity as the power source.  By starting early, and putting its resources into the best possible solution, in 2013 Consumer Reports gave the Model S 99 out of 100 points.  That made it not just the highest rated electric car, but the highest rated car EVER REVIEWED!

As the big car companies point out limits to electric vehicles, Tesla keeps making them better and addresses market limitations.  Worries about how far an owner can drive on a charge creates "range anxiety."  To cope with this Tesla not only works on battery technology, but has launched a program to build charging stations across the USA and Canada.  Initially focused on the Los-Angeles to San Franciso and Boston to Washington corridors, Tesla is opening supercharger stations so owners are never less than 200 miles from a 30 minute fast charge.  And for those who can't wait Tesla is creating a 90 second battery swap program to put drivers back on the road quickly.

This is how the classic "Innovator's Dilemma" develops.  The existing competitors focus on their core business, even though big sales produce ever declining profits.  An upstart takes on a small segment, which the big companies don't care about.  The big companies say the upstart products are pretty much irrelevant, and the sales are immaterial.  The big companies choose to keep focusing on defending and extending their "core" even as competition drives down results and customer satisfaction wanes.

Meanwhile, the upstart keeps plugging away at solving problems.  Each month, quarter and year the new entrant learns how to make its products better.  It learns from the initial customers – who were easy for big companies to deride as oddballs – and identifies early limits to market growth.  It then invests in product improvements, and market enhancements, which enlarge the market. 

Eventually these improvements lead to a market shift.  Customers move from one solution to the other.  Not gradually, but instead quite quickly.  In what's called a "punctuated equilibrium" demand for one solution tapers off quickly, killing many competitors, while the new market suppliers flourish.  The "old guard" companies are simply too late, lack product knowledge and market savvy, and cannot catch up.

  • The integrated steel companies were killed by upstart mini-mill manufacturers like Nucor Steel.  
  • Healthier snacks and baked goods killed the market for Hostess Twinkies and Wonder Bread. 
  • Minolta and Canon digital cameras destroyed sales of Kodak film – even though Kodak created the technology and licensed it to them. 
  • Cell phones are destroying demand for land line phones. 
  • Digital movie downloads from Netflix killed the DVD business and Blockbuster Video. 
  • CraigsList plus Google stole the ad revenue from newspapers and magazines.
  • Amazon killed bookstore profits, and Borders, and now has its sites set on WalMart. 
  • IBM mainframes and DEC mini-computers were made obsolete by PCs from companies like Dell. 
  • And now Android and iOS mobile devices are killing the market for PCs.

There is no doubt that GM, Ford, Nissan, et. al., with their vast resources and well educated leadership, could do what Tesla is doing.  Probably better.  All they need is to set up white space companies (like GM did once with Saturn to compete with small Japanese cars) that have resources and free reign to be disruptive and aggressively grow the emerging new marketplace.  But they won't, because they are busy focusing on their core business, trying to defend & extend it as long as possible.  Even though returns are highly problematic.

Tesla is a very, very good car. That's why it has a long backlog. And it is innovating the market for charging stations. Tesla leadership, with Elon Musk thought to be the next Steve Jobs by some, is demonstrating it can listen to customers and create solutions that meet their needs, wants and wishes.  By focusing on developing the new marketplace Tesla has taken the lead in the new marketplace.  And smart investors can see that long-term the odds are better to buy into the lead horse before the market shifts, rather than ride the old horse until it drops.

 

 

2 Wrongs Don’t Fix JC Penney

JCPenney's board fired the company CEO 18 months ago.  Frustrated with weak performance, they replaced him with the most famous person in retail at the time. Ron Johnson was running Apple's stores, which had the highest profit per square foot of any retail chain in America.  Sure he would bring the Midas touch to JC Penney they gave him a $50M sign-on bonus and complete latitude to do as he wished.

Things didn't work out so well.  Sales fell some 25%.  The stock dropped 50%.  So about 2 weeks ago the Board fired Ron Johnson.

The first mistake:  Ron Johnson didn't try solving the real problem at JC Penney.  He spent lavishly trying to remake the brand.  He modernized the logo, upped the TV ad spend, spruced up stores and implemented a more consistent pricing strategy.  But that all was designed to help JC Penney compete in traditional brick-and-mortar retail. Against traditional companies like Wal-Mart, Kohl's, Sears, etc.  But that wasn't (and isn't) JC Penney's problem.

The problem in all of traditional retail is the growth of on-line.  In a small margin business with high fixed costs, like traditional retail, even a small revenue loss has a big impact on net profit.  For every 5% revenue decline 50-90% of that lost cash comes directly off the bottom line – because costs don't fall with revenues.  And these days every quarter – every month – more and more customers are buying more and more stuff from Amazon.com and its on-line brethren rather than brick and mortar stores.  It is these lost revenues that are destroying revenues and profits at Sears and JC Penney, and stagnating nearly everyone else including Wal-Mart. 

Coming from the tech world, you would have expected CEO Johnson to recognize this problem and radically change the strategy, rather than messing with tactics.  He should have looked to close stores to lower fixed costs, developed a powerful on-line presence and marketed hard to grab more customers showrooming or shopping from home.  He should have targeted to grow JCP on-line, stealing revenues from other traditional retailers, while making the company more of a hybrid retailer that profitably met customer needs in stores, or on-line, as suits them.  He should have used on-line retail to take customers from locked-in competitors unable to deal with "cannibalization."

No wonder the results tanked, and CEO Johnson was fired.  Doing more of the tired, old strategies in a shifting market never works.  In Apple parlance, he needed to be focused on an iPad strategy, when instead he kept trying to sell more Macs.

But now the Board has made its second mistake.  Bringing back the old CEO, Myron Ullman, has deepened JP Penney's lock-in to that old, traditional and uncompetitve brick-and-mortar strategy. He intends to return to JCP's legacy, buy more newspaper coupons, and keep doing more of the same.  While hoping for a better outcome.

What was that old description of insanity?  Something about repeating yourself…..

Expectedly, Penney's stock dropped another 10% after announcing the old CEO would return.  Investors are smart enough to recognize the retail market has shifted.  That newsapaper coupons, circulars and traditional advertising is not enough to compete with on-line merchants which have lower fixed costs, faster inventory turns and wider product selection. 

It certainly appears Mr. Johnson was not the right person to grow JC Penney.  All the more reason JCP needs to accelerate its strategy toward the on-line retail trend.  Going backward will only worsen an already terrible situation.

And the Winner Is – Netflix!!

Last week's earning's announcements gave us some big news.  Looking around the tech industry, a number of companies reported about as expected, and their stocks didn't move a lot.  Apple had robust sales and earnings, but missed analyst targets and fell out of bed!  But without a doubt, the big winner was Netflix, which beat expectations and had an enormous ~50% jump in valuation!

My what a difference 18 months makes (see chart.)  For anyone who thinks the stock market is efficient the value of Netflix should make one wonder.  In July, 2011 the stock ended a meteoric run-up to $300/share, only to fall 80% to $60/share by year's end.  After whipsawing between $50 and $130, but spending most of 2012 near the lower number, the stock is now up 3-fold to $160!  Nothing scares investors more than volatility – and this kind of volatility would scare away almost anyone but a day trader!

Yet, through all of this I have been – and I remain – bullish on Netflix.  During its run-up in 2010 I wrote "Why You Should Love Netflix," then when the stock crashed in late 2011 I wrote "The Case for Buying Netflix" and last January I predicted Netflix to be "the turnaround story of 2012."  It would be logical to ask why I would remain bullish through all the ups and downs of this cycle – especially since Netflix is still only about half of its value at its high-point.

Simply put, Netflix has 2 things going for it that portend a successful future:

  1. Netflix is in a very, very fast growing market.  Streaming entertainment.  People have what appears to be an insatiable desire for entertainment, and the market not only has grown at a breathtaking rate, but it will continue to grow extremely fast for several more quarters.  It is unclear where the growth rate may tap out for content delivery – putting Netflix in a market that offers enormous growth for all participants.
  2. Netflix leadership has shown a penchant for having the right strategy to remain a market leader – even when harshly criticized for taking fast action to deal with market shifts.  Specifically, choosing to rapidly cannibalize its own DVD business by aggressively promoting streaming – even at lower margins – meant Netflix chose growth over defensiveness.

In 2011 CEO Reed Hastings was given "CEO of the Year 2010" honors by Fortune magazine.  But in 2011, as he split Netflix into 2 businesses – DVD and streaming – and allowed them to price independently and compete with each other for customer business he was trounced as the "dunce" of tech CEOs

His actions led to a price increase of 60% for anyone who decided to buy both Netflix products, and many customers chose to drop one.  Analysts predicted this to be the end of Netflix. 

But in retrospect we can see the brilliance of this decision.  CEO Hastings actually did what textbooks tell us to do – he began milking the installed, but outdated, DVD business.  He did not kill it, but he began pulling profits and cash out of it to pay for building the faster growing, but lower margin, streaming business.  This allowed Netflix to actually grow revenue, and grow profits, while making the market transition from one platform (DVD) to another (streaming.)

Almost no company pulls off this kind of transition.  Most companies try to defend and extend the company's "core" product far too long, missing the market transition.  But now Netflix is adding around 2 million new streaming customers/quarter, while losing 400,000 DVD subscribers.  And with the price changes, this has allowed the company to add content and expand internationally — and increase profits!!

Marketwatch headlined that "Naysayers Must Feel Foolish."  But truthfully, they were just looking at the wrong numbers.  They were fixated on the shrinking installed base of DVD subscribers.  But by pushing these customers to make a fast decision, Netflix was able to convert most of them to its new streaming business before they went out and bought the service from a competitor. 

Aggressive cannibalization actually was the BEST strategy given how fast tablet and smartphone sales were growing and driving up demand for streaming entertainment.  Capturing the growth market was far, far more valuable than trying to defend the business destined for obsolescence. 

Netflix simply did its planning looking out the windshield, at what the market was going to look like in 3 years, rather than trying to protect what it saw in the rear view mirror.  The market was going to change – really fast.  Faster than most people expected.  Competitors like Hulu and Amazon and even Comcast wanted to grab those customers.  The Netflix goal had to be to go headlong into the cold, but fast moving, water of the new streaming market as aggressively as possible.  Or it would end up like Blockbuster that tried renting DVDs from its stores too long – and wound up in bankruptcy court.

There are people who still doubt that Netflix can compete against other streaming players.  And this has been the knock on Netflix since 2005.  That Amazon, Walmart or Comcast would crush the smaller company.  But what these analysts missed was that Amazon and Walmart are in a war for the future of retail – not entertainment – and their efforts in streaming were more to protect a flank in their retail strategy, not win in streaming entertainment.  Likewise, Comcast and its brethren are out to defend cable TV, not really win at anytime, anywhere streaming entertainment.  Their defensive behavior would never allow them to lead in a fast-growing new marketplace.  Thus the market was left for Netflix to capture – if it had the courage to rapidly cannibalize its base and commit to the new marketplace.

Hulu and Redbox are also competitors.  And they very likely will do very well for several years.  Because the market is growing very fast and can support multiple players.  But Netflix benefits from being first, and being biggest.  It has the most cash flow to invest in additional growth.  It has the largest subscriber base to attract content providers earlier, and offer them the most money.  By maintaining its #1 position – even by cannibalizing itself to do so – Netflix is able to keep the other competitors at bay; reinforcing its leadership position.

There are some good lessons here for everyone:

  1. Think long-term, not short-term.  A king can become a goat only to become a king again if he haa the right strategy.  You probably aren't as good as the press says when they like you, nor as bad as they say when hated.  Don't let yourself be goaded into giving up the long-term win for short-term benefits.
  2. Growth covers a multitude of sins!  The way Netflix launched its 2-division campaign in 2011 was a disaster.  But when a market is growing at 100%+ you can rapidly recover.  Netflix grew its streaming user base by more than 50% last year – and that fixes a lot of mistakes. Anytime you have a choice, go for the fast growing market!!
  3. Follow the trend!  Never fight the trend!  Tablet sales were growing at an amazing clip, while DVD players had no sales gains.  With tablet and smartphone sales eclipsing DVD player sales, the smart move was to go where the trend was headed.  Being first on the trend has high payoff.  Moving slowly is death.  Kodak failed to aggressively convert film camera customers to its own digital cameras, and it filed bankruptcy in 2012.
  4. Dont' forget to be profitable!  Even if it means raising prices on dated solutions that will eventually become obsolete – to customer howls.  You must maximize the profits of an outdated product line as fast as possible. Don't try to defend and extend it.  Those tactics use up cash and resources rather than contributing to future success.
  5. Cannibalizing your installed base is smart when markets shift.  Regardless the margin concerns.  Newspapers said they could not replace "print ad dollars" with "on-line ad dimes" so many went bankrupt defending the paper as the market shifted.  Move fast. Force the cannibalization early so you can convert existing customers to your solution, and keep them, before they go to an emerging competitor.
  6. When you need to move into a new market set up a new division to attack it.  And give them permission to do whatever it takes.  Even if their actions aggravate existing customers and industry participants.  Push them to learn fast, and grow fast – and even to attack old sacred cows (like bundled pricing.)

There were a lot of people who thought my call that Netflix would be the turnaround tech story of 2012 was simply bizarre.  But they didn't realize the implications of the massive trend to tablets and smartphones.  The impact is far-reaching – affecting not only computer companies but television, content delivery and content creation.  Netflix positioned itself to be a winner, and implemented the tactics to make that strategy work despite widespread skepticism. 

Hats off to Netflix leadership.  A rare breed.  That's why long-term investors should own the stock.

Why Jeff Bezos is our greatest living CEO

The Harvard Business Review recently published its list of the 100 Best Performing CEOs.  This list is better than most because it looks at long-term performance of the CEO during his or her time in the job – with many on the list in service more than a decade.

#1 was Steve Jobs.  #2 is Jeff Bezos – making him the greatest living CEO.  It is startling just how well these two CEOs performed.  During Jobs' tenure Apple investors achieved a return of 66.8 times their money.  During Mr. Bezos' tenure shareholders achieved a remarkable 124.3 times return on their money.  In an era when most of us are happy to earn 5-10%/year – which equates to doubling your money about once a decade – these CEOs exceeded expectations 30-60 fold!

Both of these CEOs achieved greatness by transforming an industry.  We all know the Apple story.  From near bankruptcy as the Mac company Mr. Jobs led Apple into the mobile devices business, and created a transformation from Walkmen, Razrs and PCs to iPods, iPhones and iPads – to the detriment of Sony, Motorola, Nokia, Microsoft, HP and Dell. 

The Amazon story is all the more remarkable because it has been written in the far more mundane world of retail – not known for being nearly as fast-changing at tech.

Lest we forget, Amazon started as an on-line seller of books frequently unavailable at your local bookstore.  "What's a local bookstore?" you may now ask, because through continuous upgrading of its capability to build on the advances in internet usage – across machines, browsers, wi-fi and mobile – Amazon drove into bankruptcy such large booksellers as B.Dalton and Borders – leaving Barnes & Noble a mere shell of its former self and on tenous footing.  And the number of small bookshops has dropped dramatically.

But Amazon's industry transformation has gone far beyond bookselling.  Amazon was one of the first, and by most users considered the best, at offering a complete on-line storefront for any retailer who wants to sell goods through Amazon's site.  You can set up your inventory, display products, provide user information, manage a shopping cart and handle check out all through Amazon – with minimal technical skill.  This allowed Amazon to bring vastly more products to customers; and without adding all the inventory or warehousing cost.

As digital uses grew, Amazon moved beyond the slow-paced publishers to launch the Kindle and give us eReaders displacing paper books and periodicals.  But this was just the first salvo in the effort to promote additional on-line buying, as Amazon next launched Kindle Fire which at remarkably low cost gave people a tablet already set up for doing retail shopping at Amazon.

As Amazon launched its book downloads and on-line services, it built its own cloud services business to aid businesses and people in using tablets, and doing more things on-line; which further reinforced the digital retail world in which Amazon dominates.

And make no doubt about it, Kindle Fire – and the use of all other tablets – is the WalMart and other traditional brick-and-mortar retail killer.  Amazon is now a player in all pieces of the transition which is happening in retail, from traditional shopping to on-line. 

Demand for retail space in the USA began declining in 2009 and has not stopped.  Most analysts blamed it on the great recession.  But in retrospect we can now see it was the watershed year for customers to begin looking more, and buying more, on-line.  Now each year growth in on-line retail continues, while demand at traditional stores wanes.

Just look at this last holiday season.  To (hopefully) drive revenue stores were opening on Thanksgiving, and doing 24 and 48 hours of non-stop staffing and promotions to drive sales.  But it was mostly in vain, as traditional retail saw almost no gains.  Despite doing more and more of what they've always done – trying to be better, faster and cheaper – they simply could not change the trend away from shopping on-line and back into the stores.

For the last year the #1 trend in retailing has been "showrooming" where customers stand in a store with a smartphone comparison pricing on-line (most frequently Amazon) to the product on the shelf.  Retailers were forced to match on-line prices, despite their higher overhead, or lose the business.  And now Target has implemented a policy of price-matching Amazon for all of 2013 in hopes of slowing the trend to on-line purchasing.

Circuit City went bankrupt, which saved Best Buy as it picked up their lost business.  But now Best Buy is close to failure.  Same store sales at WalMart have been flat.  JCPenney recruited Apple's retail store wizard as CEO – but he's learned when you have to compete with Amazon life simply sucks.  Nobody in traditional retail has found a way to reverse the on-line shopping trend, which is still dominated by Amazon.

We all can learn from these two CEOs and the companies they built.  First, and foremost, is understand trends and align with them.  If you help people move in the direction they want to go life is easy, and growth can be phenomenal.  Trying to slow, stop or reverse a trend doesn't work, and is expensive. 

Second, don't ask customers what they want, instead give them what they need.  Customers may be on a trend, but they will frame their requests in the old paradigm.  By creating new trend-promoting products and solutions you can capture the customer and avoid head-to-head competition with the "old guard" titans selling the increasingly outdated solutions.  Don't build better brick-and-mortar, make brick-and-mortar obsolete.

So, what's stopping you from growing your business like Apple or Amazon?  What keeps you from being the next Steve Jobs, or Jeff Bezos?  Can you spot trends and provide trend-supporting solutions for customers?  Or are you stymied because you're spending too much time trying to defend and extend your old business in the face of game changing trends.