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Can big companies adapt?

You start. You struggle against initial inertia to gain velocity. You succeed. You grow. Your success breeds more success. Momentum is now your friend. But the world changes: technology, markets, society… And your hard won momentum keeps hurtling your (now large and profitable) company down the same trajectory. And momentum is now your enemy. Ah, the joys of…inertia.

The recent sensation caused by an ex-Microsoft insider’s NYT op-ed is just one more example of this seemingly inevitible ‘circle of (corporate) life.’:

Microsoft’s huge profits — $6.7 billion for the past quarter — come almost entirely from Windows and Office programs first developed decades ago. Like G.M. with its trucks and S.U.V.’s, Microsoft can’t count on these venerable products to sustain it forever. Perhaps worst of all, Microsoft is no longer considered the cool or cutting-edge place to work. There has been a steady exit of its best and brightest.

What happened? Unlike other companies, Microsoft never developed a true system for innovation. Some of my former colleagues argue that it actually developed a system to thwart innovation. Despite having one of the largest and best corporate laboratories in the world, and the luxury of not one but three chief technology officers, the company routinely manages to frustrate the efforts of its visionary thinkers.

Much has been written on how large companies can or cannot innovate, and Clayton Christensen’s “The Innovator’s Dilemma” is probably the primary reference with respect to modern management thinking on the subject.

Innovation is a new way of doing something or “new stuff that is made useful”

I’ve of course added my two cents to this discussion, with my thoughts on the subject drawing on my personal experiences (and those of friends and colleagues) of having tried (very hard) to sponsor a pro-active approach to disruptive innovation in a very large company. For those of you not familiar with my hypothesis on the question, I’ll save you the trouble of digging through my blog, it boils down to the complex weave of organizational and personal dynamics that unavoidably emerge when you assemble large groups of people in one organization:

  1. Loss aversion dominates: most people (and sub-groups) fear loss much more than they enjoy gain. This is why the status quo is so closely guarded (at any level of resolution, from the individual through to the overall company.)
  2. Dancing with the one that brought you: at any level of seniority, it is likely that the person in charge got to be that person in charge by being particularly skillful or adept at navigating the existing business and/or organizational model. It’s like the America’s Cup: the winner sets the rules (and has no incentive to adopt “new rules” for which they are probably less well adapted.

In fact, Machievelli eloquently summed it up 500 years ago:

It must be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to plan, more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to manage than the creation of a new system. For the initator has the enmity of all who would profit by the preservation of the old institutions and merely lukewarm defenders of those who would gain by the new ones.

These principles form the core of the corporate immune system which considers any disruptive innovation as a threatening virus. So what is a big company to do? Should they accept the inevitability of decline (hopefully slow, profitable and graceful) or can they postpone or avoid this fate?

In some (most?) cases, I would suggest that they accept decline but this does not mean giving up. On the contrary it means aggresively (and even creatively managing the exisiting assets to create as much value as possible as the business model and or product ‘runs off’. This indeed was my prescription for Microsoft when I wrote two years ago that they should break-up the company and re-jig the capital structure, running the Windows/Office businesses for cash (with a debt financed balance sheet) and let a thousand new baby Microsofts bloom. A conventional view would see this as a failure of management and/or ambition. Obviously I think this attitude is ass backward: running the core products for cash while releasing enormous amounts of human and financial capital, which in turn could be used to create hundreds of new companies could – using any metric you like – only be considered a triumphant success. But convention, inertia and ego means that this path to success is rarely if ever taken by the leaders of market giants. Just in the last couple weeks the idea that Google might becoming the ‘next Microsoft’ has gained currency (at least in the valley.) I asked this same question (in May 2008:)

I know it has been asked a million times before but is Google the next Microsoft? (At least from a financial point of view…) At the start of 1996, MSFT traded at c. $6/share. Four years later they peaked at almost $60/share. GOOG IPO’ed at c. $85/share in 2004, and just over three years later peaked at over $700/share. Both moves of approximately 10x. Since 2000, MSFT has been more or less range bound at around $30/share, despite continuing to grow it’s top and bottom lines and produce prodigious amounts of cash. I’m not suggesting history will repeat itself exactly – perhaps we have not yet seen the peak in GOOG’s share price (sell at $850?), and I’m certain they will continue to grow their top and bottom lines and produce prodigious amounts of cast in the next 5-10 years. But…will the stock eventually settle at around $500 – 600/share…? Is it conceivable that Google, like Microsoft before it, will become the place where good companies are bought only to disappear?

However, like with human life, I think there are probably a number of recipes to extend the natural corporate life (and the quality of those extra years) and to leave a more valuable legacy when and if the company ultimately disappears. Starting with investing some of their excess capital in the innovation ecosystem that surrounds them. As I have found however, this idea is anathema to most large companies. And with some reason. The history of ‘corporate venturing’ is indeed (as Azeem Ahzar eloquently writes) riddled with failure. My view is that this is because it is exceeding hard to do this in house: the corporate antibodies as described above will almost always do their job and sabotage any in-house venture program. And yet just investing as an LP in an outside venture fund – even if one that happens to focus on markets relevant to the company – is an understandably unsatisfactory and probably equally ineffective alternative.

But we think there is a third way: a focused, strategic innovation program run independently from, but in close collaboration with the company. Maybe we can help your company. You know where to find us: where innovation grows. ;)

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  • reecedunn
    I had the idea of using classical mechanics to describe projects through various metrics.
    distance (d) -- how much progress is made in a product (lines changed, features added, bugs fixed, ...).
    speed (s) (or velocity) -- how fast the development of the project is happening at a given point in time: s = d / t.
    acceleration (a) -- how fast the project is changing over time: a = s / t.
    mass (m) -- a measure of a projects size and/or complexity through one or more metrics (lines of code, number of files, bug count, ...).
    force (F) -- the amount of effort required to make a desired change in the project (new feature, fix a bug, ...): F = ma.
    inertia -- the resistance to making a given change in a project.

    The idea is to try and better quantify projects and how complex it is to make changes to them. The same could also be applied to companies as well, as this article suggests.
  • Interesting approach - sounds like a great research project for some business school professor. Or for McKinsey & ilk. Let me know if you come up with a useful algorithm!
  • dmarti
    Why do you want "innovation" from office machinery? The more it changes, the more you have to retrain the employees. The more computer questions you have to answer for your elderly relatives. The more incompatible formats you have to deal with. There are some areas of information technology where you might want innovation, but maybe Microsoft's areas just aren't them. Maybe the company's future lies in improving stability and quality, and maybe there's nothing wrong with that.

    Staplers haven't changed much since the 1920s. Office managers don't have to get all new ones every few years, then deal with cleaning up the blood from workers putting staples through their hands.

    Maybe the problem is that MSFT top management started working in the industry when PCs were new, and you _did_ have to innovate.
  • Don, I'm not sure if I'm agreeing or disagreeing with you but I'll take a stab at the former. To take the example of Microsoft (but you would say the same for many Fortune 500 companies that are leading incumbents in their markets), I think it is at best an inefficient and at worst futile deployment of (human and financial) capital to keep grafting new, tenuously related businesses to a mature core. The key success factors/inputs needed to optimize returns on a mature product are very different (and mostly incompatible) than those required to grow a new product or service; and the optimal capital structure is completely different. Probably even more important though is the organizational dynamics and geometric growth of complexity in (very) large companies which is always ultimately a limiting factor (Citigroup is a good poster child for this phenomenon.)

    What frustrates me is that the principle/agent problem leads managers of public companies to equate bigger with better and disaggregation with failure. wtf? If other complex systems took this approach, we'd all just be larger, messier amoebas, as cell-division would be seen as a failure...

    Obviously I will never be able to prove this ex-post but I'm convinced that had Microsoft stopped 'extending' their business footprint 5 years ago and instead had spun out non-Windows/Office businesses and used their prodigious cash flow to fund hundreds of independent new business ventures they would have created much more value for their shareholders (who would then own shares in multiple companies including their initial holding in Microsoft.) This is even more true with each passing year as technology neutralizes the traditional advantage of lower transaction costs within a company (relative to transactions in the 'market'.)
  • dmarti
    Principal/agent is a huge problem here, especially since there's an extra layer of "agent" in the form of mutual fund managers. Would MSFT be smarter and more responsive if they added a Direct Stock Purchase program to MSDN and their beta programs? (What if there were a special class of stock that entitled each registered holder to shareholder-only betas?)

    The problem with the "Mini Microsoft" concept (ever read that blog?) is that many small companies might be less capable of rent seeking than one big company. People in the tech business make a lot of noise about antitrust but there's a huge amount of "pro-trust" policy in the form of copyright and patent expansionism, and near-total corporate welfare capture of the office of the US Trade Representative.

    There might also be transaction costs for cross-licensing among the "spawn of Microsoft" companies that one big company wouldn't face.

    It seems to me that everything seems to cost more for a startup as soon as the company gets funding from one of the A-list VC firms. Would MSFT-funded companies pay even more? Maybe the best places to put the money are in (1) extreme, unmatchable stability and compatibility for the "cash cow" products, and (2) stock repurchase plans.
  • Awesome thinking.
    Let's just pick up your point on Microsoft--you point to one of the sad affectations developed by managerial capitalism, something which is implicitly understood by the markets. Companies, and their culture, become range bound. To a Microsoft manager, breaking up the firm smells of defeat. But it smells of success: we created a cash monster and it will go on creating cash for decades, but it wont 'innovate', it won't capture new markets.
    And the clarity sent to investors--but old MSFT and buy steady dividends; vs buy microsofties, tiny firms, high risk, high potential.
    But if thye thought like that, they wdn't be managers.
  • Yes but 'old MSFT' - as is - is leaving lots of money on the table (which people notice less because the nominal amount is big.) For one thing, they could be much leaner if they were explicitly focused on executing on the mature, 'cash-cow' business, and secondly their capital structure is way more expensive than it needs to be. Say what you like about Private Equity but these two things are exactly how they extract excess returns by buying public companies.
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