1 Dr John Case Thursday 15 th April 2010 Stephen Spring [email protected].
1 CREATIVE DESTRUCTION Monday 12 th April 2010 Stephen Spring [email protected].
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Transcript of 1 CREATIVE DESTRUCTION Monday 12 th April 2010 Stephen Spring [email protected].
2
Puzzle: What do these companies have in common?
• Polaroid• Sears• Xerox• US Steel• Intel• Levi Strauss• USPS
• Kodak• IBM• ATT• Bausch & Lomb• Roche• Ciba Geigy• DEC
Ref Mike Tushman HBS
3
Solution:
They all created industries. They were all industry leaders and they all crashed.
Why?
It is the job of leaders to make sure that their companies remains successful.
Ref Mike Tushman HBS
4
Swiss Watch Industry
• 1970– 1,600 small & entrepreneurial firms– 90,000 employees– Focus on mechanical watches– Control of watch industry– Good profits
• 1980– 45,000 employees retrenched– Swiss watch industry is bankrupt
What happened?
Ref Mike Tushman HBS
5
Evolution of Watch Industry 1970 - 1980
Markets
Existing
New
Incremental Architectural Discontinuous
Type of Innovation
Quartz
Mechanical
Ref Mike Tushman HBS
6
Evolution of Watch Industry 1980 - 1985
Markets
Existing
New
Incremental Architectural Discontinuous
Type of Innovation
Swatch
Quartz
Ref Mike Tushman HBS
7
Innovation Streams
Markets
Existing
New
Incremental Architectural Discontinuous
Type of Innovation
Mechanical WatchesDisk DrivesBias Ply TyresPrinted NewspapersHard Contact Lenses
Fashion Lenses Smaller Disk Drives Quartz Watches
Web-based News
Radial TyresDaily Disposable Lenses
Ref Mike Tushman HBS
10
Vienna 1911
“Entrepreneurs blow gales of creative destruction – creating new products, new companies, and new industries”
Schumpeter
11
Schumpeter
An Economy Driven by Entrepreneurship
“The implementation of change is through innovation that takes market share from existing companies”
12
Innovation as Entrepreneurship
Setting up a new productive function:• The introduction of a new good;• The introduction of a new method of production;• The opening of a new market;• The conquest of a new source of supply of new
materials;• The carrying out of a new organization of an industry
Schumpeter 1939
13
In classical markets competition depends on continuity and leads to squeezed profits & operational effectiveness
Supply Demand
Equilibrium
Co
st t
o s
up
ply
pro
du
ct
Co
sts
to m
eet
dem
and
But Turbulence brings new products
Economics 101
14
Ubiquity of Creative Destruction
“…it is not (price and output) competition which counts, but the competition from the new commodity, the new technology, the new source of supply, the new type of organisation.”
Joseph Schumpeter, 1939
15
Businesses under threat
• Print newspapers vs online advertising vs onlline newspapers • Corner stores vs big box stores vs online stores• Phone directories vs Google• Free to air vs cable vs Internet TV• Post Office vs Fedex vs UPS• Full service airlines vs discount airlines• Phone companies vs Skype• Theatre vs Movies vs DVD vs iTunes vs iTV• Music Shops vs iTunes• Borders vs Amazon• Walmart vs Amazon . . . . . . etc.
16
The Entrepreneurship Process
ada
Fashioningthe
Opportunity
Initiating the
Business
Capturing the
Opportunity
Framing the Entrepreneurial
Vision
Managing the Entrepreneurial
Process
Regeneration
Entrepreneurial Environment
Revitalisation Stagnation Bureaucratisation
adaptation
evolution
dynamic capabilitiespunctuated equilibrium
17
GrowthMature
Emergence
Dominant
Design
Product Process Substitution
Major Product Minor process
Major Process Minor Product
Minor Product Minor Process
Major Product Minor Process
High High High High
Dominant innovation types
Learning Requirements
• Innovators create new markets by introducing new products
• Earn substantial margins
• Generate new jobs to satisfy demand
Dominant Innovation Types over Product Life Cycles
18
Long-Term Survivor Performance(1917-1987, 61 defunct)
Foster and Kaplan
Survivors did not perform. As a group, long term return to investors during 1917 – 1987 period was 20% less than of the overall market
Q: Why do financial markets outperform corporations?
19
Long-lived Firms that Have Changed Industries
Company Est. Original Current
Goodrich 1870 Fire Hose Aerospace
Nokia 1865 Lumber Mobiles
3M 1902 Mining Office Supplies
Amex 1850 Express Delivery Financial Services
J & J 1885 Bandages Pharmaceuticals
Black&Decker 1910 Bottle Cap Mach Power Tools
Sunbeam 1890 Horse Clippers Appliances
Marriot 1927 Root BeerHotels
Nucor 1897 Automobiles Mini-mill Steel
Tandy 1899 Leather Retail Stores
20
Financial Markets
• Markets, including Capital Markets, are “informal aggregations of buyers, sellers, their owners, and other intermediaries who come together for the purpose of economic change.”
• Capital Markets are markets where capital is exchanged - money for equities/debt.
• Capital Markets have rules for entrance, conduct and exit.• They are designed for admission of new competitors and elimination
of weak ones• Efficient Capital Markets eliminate the old without reflection or
remorse.
Markets lack culture, leadership, and emotion, do not experience the bursts of desperation, depression, denial and hope that corporations face.
Foster and Kaplan
21
Foster and Kaplan
Corporations
• Corporations have a “cognitive superstructure”• Have a Chairman and Board of Directors• They plan and they control• Their staff take their responsibilities seriously• Executives are trained/selected for positions• The are not administered by distant committees
(unlike capital markets)• Corporate planning aims to minimise surprise & risk
22
Continuity Myopia of Corporations
• Central purpose of the corporation has been production, logistics, selling, and billing.
• Aided by structure – systems of information, decision making, and measurement and control.
• Expected to run smoothly, anticipate problems, and avoid risks
• It is an operational system based on the presumption of rational thought – deterministic. Analytic.
• “If these things are done the results will be expected”
In reality! Systems stumble. Operational Excellence?
23
Intel Case Study
• Founded 1968 • Semi conductor memory product new “gale of
destruction” in core memory products industry• 1972 – 1-kilobit 1103 DRAM, largest selling integrated
circuit in world- 90% of $23.4M sales• As first mover – nearly 100% of memory chip market.• Late 70’s Andy Grove, President, says “Intel still stands
for memories; memories mean Intel.”
(DRAM - Dynamic Random Access Memory)
24
Intel 1980’s
• Early ’80s – Large Japanese DRAM produces (Fujitsu, NEC, etc) entered US market with high-volume, high-quality, low-cost products
• Technology still maturing• Intel forced to keep ahead by investment in R&D• DRAM approaching commodity status, prices collapsed
and return to shareholders collapsed• Pure oversupply • July 1984 – price of DRAMs fell 40%, industry• Intel slipped due to its dependence on DRAMs
25
Intel: 1968 - 1985
Customers
Existing
New
Incremental Architectural Discontinuous
Nature of Change
Memory
30
The Innovators?
• Jan. 1983 Exit – 17 workers in new applications team (new microprocessors) left because INTEL still obsessed with DRAMs & not supplying resources for new development
• New application was parallel processing• Formed “Sequent Computer Systems”
31
Intel’s Soul Searching
Grove’s recollections Fall 1984:
“As the debates raged, we just went on losing money and more money. It was a grim and frustrating year. During that time, we worked hard without a clear notion of how things were ever going to get better. We had lost our bearings. We were wandering in the valley of death.”
32
Intel’s Soul Searching
Grove’s recollections 1985 - I:
“Intel equaled memories in all our minds. How could we give up our identity? How could we exist as a company that was not in the memory business? Saying it to Gordon (Gordon Moore was CEO) was one thing; talking it to other people and implementing it was another.”
33
Intel’s Soul Searching
Grove’s recollections 1985 – II:
The company had a couple of beliefs that were as strong as religious dogmas. Both of them had to do with the importance of memories as the backbone of our manufacturing and sales activities. – The first belief was that memories were our “technology drivers,”
which meant that we always developed and refined our technologies on our memory products first because they were easier to test.
– The other belief was that the “full-product-line” dogma. According to this (belief), our salesmen needed a full product line to do a good job in front of our customers; if they didn’t have a full product line, the customer would prefer to do business with our competitors who did.
34
Crunch Time:
CEO Moore and President grove were standing in Grove’s office…Grove turned to Moore and asked him point-blank: “If we got kicked out and the Board brought in a new CEO, what do you think he would do?”
To which Moore unhesitatingly replied: “He would get us out of memories.”
After a few moments of silence, Grove asked Moore: “Why shouldn’t you and I walk out that door, come back in and do it ourselves?”
35
Decision: Kill DRAM Business
• Gradual and incremental reduction in capital investment• Middle managers put up a fight – suggested breakup of
company into two entities (DRAMs & microprocessors)• Compromise – no R&D on new memory products but
R&D on products in “the works”• Mid 1985 – General Manager proposes acquisition of
advanced DRAM “fabrication facility” in Japan• Finally Grove took charge of implementing exit • “People who have no emotional stake in in a decision
can see what needs to be done sooner” e.g. markets
36
Intel 1985
Customers
Existing
New
Incremental Architectural Discontinuous
Nature of Change
Micro-ProcessorsMemory
37
Intel’s Transformational Innovation
• The microprocessor – designed to power original IBM PC. Sales outpaced DRAM sales
• 1992 – largest semiconductor company in world, even larger than Japanese companies who took over DRAMs
• This performance enhanced health of entire semiconductor industry
• 1996 Danger of cultural lock-in
40
Discontinuity from Internet
• 1996 - Response to challenge, Intel added a fourth strategic objective.
• “Encapsulating all the things that are necessary to mobilize our efforts in connection with the Internet.”– Built several funds that invested some $1 billion in
new non-Intel start-ups– First Q2000 sales of these investments had added
materially to Intel’s reported results
41
Intel 1996
Customers
Existing
New
Incremental Architectural Discontinuous
Nature of Change
Micro-Processors
?
42
Escaping from Old Ideas
• Keynes: “The difficulty lies not in the ideas, but in escaping from the old ones…”
• Koestler: “We learn by assimilating experience and grouping them in an ordered schemata, into stable patterns of unity in variety. The matrices which pattern our perceptions, thoughts and activities are condensations of learning into habit.”