Cats vs. Dogs: How Feline Agility in Business Leads to Long-term Growth
Why do some companies within an industry grow
continually while others grow haltingly — or even lag? What are the latter
missing? Companies, big or small, must innovate constantly and be
customer-centric to differentiate themselves, realizing that product life
cycles do not go on forever, says Leonard Sherman, an adjunct professor of
marketing and management at Columbia University.
That means companies that try to compete with
me-too products are like dogs “that scratch and claw for territorial
dominance,” and it ultimately does not work out, says Sherman, the author
of If You’re In A Dogfight, Become A Cat!: Strategies for Long-Term
Growth. Instead, companies should act more like cats, which “change the
rules and fundamentally create entirely new value propositions that are
rewarded by their customers.”
A former senior partner at Accenture, Sherman
discussed the ideas in his book on the Knowledge@Wharton show on Wharton Business Radio on SiriusXM
channel 111
An edited transcript of the conversation
appears below.
Knowledge@Wharton: I
guess I have to start with title because that’s what draws people in right off
the bat.
Leonard Sherman: Well,
it was never supposed to be the title. It was a working title and it comes from
a metaphor I’ve used in my class over the years. When we got near publication
my publisher said, “We love the title.” I said, “No, no, no, I’m going to give
it some boring, serious, business kind of title.” And they said, “No, we think
this is the one and you should do it.”
Knowledge@Wharton: You
link the fact that cats have certain characteristics that businesses should
probably think about.
Sherman: The title, which is
the premise of the book behind it, is [based on the experiences I’ve had in]
most of my career as a management consultant. As a management consultant, you
most often work with troubled firms that are struggling with growth or
profitability, or both. I got to see over many decades some common problems
that led to stalled growth or worse.
As for the metaphor I use with the dog and dog fights, way too
often I found my clients more concerned with looking over their shoulders at
their competitors and getting involved in tit-for-tat replication of functions
and features. That’s a non-winnable arms race where everyone’s just matching
each other and you wind up with this competitive blur.
United Airlines is not viewed and perceived as being different
than American or Delta. [It’s the same with] Crest or Colgate toothpaste.
Everyone adds a feature that quickly gets matched. That’s the way dogs scratch
and claw for territorial dominance.
Cats are these solitary hunters who go off and change the rules
on their own and find their own space. The most successful firms, at least in
achieving what I call the holy grail of business — long term profitable growth
— act more like cats, which is they change the rules and fundamentally create
entirely new value propositions that are valued and rewarded by their
customers.
Knowledge@Wharton: You
talk about innovation being a key ingredient to this. A lot of companies say
that they are great innovators and look to innovate. But I guess there are
times when they’re not. That ends up becoming a differentiating point.
Sherman: Sure. The basic
prescription in my book is that firms that have achieved long-term profitable
growth, like Kia, FedEx, Starbucks, Netflix, Amazon and Apple, have [some]
common traits. One is continuous innovation, not for its own sake, but to drive
meaningful differentiation. This cat-like behavior says we’re not going to be a
me-too product. That is supported by a business alignment where their culture
and incentives and mindset are all oriented towards this continuous renewal of
their product line.
Now it sounds almost common-sensical. Who wouldn’t want to
innovate and do meaningfully different products? But it’s much more difficult
to do than the prescription might sound.
Knowledge@Wharton: I
guess there are common themes for companies that do find growth but are not
able to sustain it.
Sherman: That’s correct.
That’s because large corporations are heavily inclined and incentivized to protect
their current core business. It is very hard to overcome this fear of
cannibalization and this sense of “If it’s not broken don’t fix it,” and “You
can’t argue with success.”
Far too many companies ride the classic product lifecycle curve
that we’ve all seen in business school. Go through high growth and then
maturity. But hey, on that right-hand side of that product lifecycle is
decline. Too often, by the time companies realize that they’ve gone even beyond
maturity into the decline stage, it’s too late because others have seen the
opportunities that your company wasn’t willing to pursue.
Knowledge@Wharton: Of
the companies you bring up, I wanted to delve into some that have struggled.
One is BlackBerry, which was very popular, but has fallen off of that spectrum
and is now more of a software entity. The other is JCPenney, which is
struggling, especially as a big-box retailer.
Sherman: There are slightly
different characteristics with each of those companies. With BlackBerry, you
only have to go back to 2006, which is the year before the iPhone was
introduced. From the turn of the current century to 2006, BlackBerry was a
phenomenal company and the envy of the world, including Steve Jobs. It was
earning return on assets of over 30%.
Who wouldn’t want to get into that business? Unfortunately they,
for some of the reasons I mentioned before, just couldn’t get beyond sitting on
what had made them so great for so long. You had this ultra-secure keyboard
oriented [product that was] great for enterprises. They missed the whole
consumer market and the potential that Steve Jobs saw in a computer in your
pocket. It’s scary how fast you can fall off the back in the technology space.
That’s certainly what happened to them.
With JCPenney, it’s almost the opposite. When Ron Johnson came
over (as CEO in 2011) from Apple’s retail [store division] where he had done
such a great job, he made this classic management mistake of thinking he knew
better than his customers. It was the Apple thing — “We know what our customers
want even before they do.” He thought he knew what JCPenney’s customers wanted
other than what they had been given for the last 100 years.
So he did this radical transformation where everything
[JCPenney] stood for, for over a century, was gone. This is the new JCPenney,
fair and square. Unfortunately he learned the hard way that it might have been
a great idea in his mind, but not for his consumers. You have to find the right
balance and vet your ideas. Making up your own rules is one thing, but you better
make sure that they’re appealing.
Knowledge@Wharton: What
do you think is the future for those two? BlackBerry has made the shift into
being more of a software company now, so there’s room for growth in that area
for them. JCPenney cannot remake who they are anymore. The only option is
probably a bankruptcy filing down the road.
Sherman: Yes, and they won’t
be the first or last. It may be too little too late. The whole brick-and-mortar
retail sector, particularly the mall-oriented part of that, like JCPenney, is
in a world of hurt right now. There are opportunities for some companies to
continually refresh and renew themselves, but in their case they may have to go
outside of that space and create some new forms of retailing that are very
different than what they are today.
Knowledge@Wharton: How
much of an effect for sustainable growth are the startup industry and small
businesses, because they are feeders to these companies? Also, what is the role
of government in regulation and its impact on these companies?
Sherman: Too often we’ve
seen the Davids come in and slay Goliath. That is yet another example of what
can and often does happen to companies that get complacent and sit on their
current products. It’s an upstart newcomer that comes in and shakes it up. … It
doesn’t have to be that way.
In the famous book by Malcolm Gladwell, David and
Goliath, where he presents this alternative view that actually it was
Goliath who was the underdog and David should have been the favorite because
Goliaths are ponderous and they’re oafs and they don’t move very fast. But
large corporations don’t have to be ponderous oafs. They can be agile. They can
continue to innovate. It’s not only the startups that own that space.
Probably the greatest growth company of our lifetime is Amazon,
which set the all-time record of zero to $100 billion faster than anyone.
They’re still growing at 27% to 30% a year. They have constant experimentation
going on for all phases of their business. Near term, [Amazon does] continuous
improvement, longer-term, on fundamentally changing the business. They’re the
role model of a large company that can continue to innovate.
It’s an internally feasible and often desirable way to continue
to grow through innovation for large companies to selectively acquire startups
that have great ideas. But it would be great to scale those inside a larger
enterprise with lots of resources.
All of the above would clearly benefit from having less
restrictive regulation. We’ll see over the next few years whether the
regulation reform that we’ve been hearing about is as helpful as our current
president hopes it can be.
Knowledge@Wharton: You
are a believer in the customer-centric path that companies have to take. If
you’re not doing that, you’re doing an unbelievable disservice to your company
and your consumers.
Sherman: This notion often
gets short shrift in the business community — that a company that genuinely has
a customer-centric purpose [asks itself], “What is our purpose? Why are we in
business? What are we trying to accomplish?” If you read the mission statements
of just about any company, they always say, “Oh, our customer satisfaction is
our highest priority and we love our employees” and all this kind of good
stuff.
But if you look at the companies that have been posting the most
impressive and profitable growth track records over the last 20 years, they are
those that walk the talk, that do embrace this obsession with delivering
superior customer service at the heart of who they are and why they’re in business.
They put in policies that make that come alive, whether it’s Amazon or Jet Blue
or Costco or FedEx, you name it.
Too often companies confuse what their purpose is with what
[they want] their outcome to be. So companies that get totally obsessed with
maximizing shareholder value as the No. 1 priority or becoming the biggest,
strongest company in the world, start to lose sight of their business
priorities and maybe even their moral compass.
When the CEO of Volkswagen says, “We are going to be the biggest,
most profitable car company in the world. And no matter what, that’s what we’re
going to achieve,” that sets the trap for letting the ends justify the means.
And we saw what happened to Volkswagen. I’ve never heard Steve Jobs or Tim Cook
say “I am going to [create] the most valuable company in the world.” It just
happened to work out that way.
Knowledge@Wharton: Among
the companies that you say have done a good job is Ikea. Why is it that you
think that they have done such a good job?
Sherman: They’re a $40
billion, 75-year company that has been consistently profitable and
self-funding, and privately owned with a squeaky clean balance sheet. It is one
of the strongest and most beloved brands around the world, and one of the few
brands that can operate in a consistent fashion whether you’re in Singapore or
Conshohocken, Penna., where their U.S. headquarters are. They have a lot to
feel awfully proud about.
This is an example of a company that set forth a crystal clear,
customer-centric corporate purpose, which is to say, “It’s very easy to build
beautiful furniture that costs a lot of money. It’s a lot harder to build very
functional and stylish furniture that is affordable by virtually everyone. We
will commit ourselves — 75 years ago and today and everything in between — to
that purpose.” For those people who find that value proposition very appealing,
they have been a consistent, reliable, go-to corporation for a long time. I
have some issues with their future growth potential. But that’s a story for another
day, maybe.
Knowledge@Wharton: One
of the companies you mentioned is Yellow Tail. What is it about them that they
have done so well?
Sherman: They did something
that’s very smart and very cat like, to use the title of my book, in that they
entered a terrible business. Imagine trying to enter a business as a totally
unknown small little vineyard that operates out of southeastern Australia, [and
has] never sold in the U.S. before. They’re entering a market with almost
10,000 distinct labels that no one could tell apart, and no one knows the brand
names. There’s no brand allegiance. And no one can tell the taste difference
between most of the wines that are on the shelf. How do you break into that
market?
The brilliant thing that Yellow Tail did, the cat-like thing, is
to say, “Hey, 85% of American drinking age adults don’t drink wine….” We’re
just going to ignore the 15% of the market that is already [made up] of wine
snobs who have their behavioral patterns in place and we’re going to go after
every man and every woman who is more interested in drinking soda pop than they
are wine, and make a fun, approachable, non-pretentious affordable casual everyday
wine, and we’re not going to take ourselves too seriously.” It’s just amazing.
The wine industry is one of the oldest industries in the world,
it goes back to biblical times, and no one had figured out that there is this
huge latent demand of folks that said, “Hey, just make it easy and fun.”
[Yellow Tail] set the all-time record to go from zero to 8 million cases of
wine in the U.S. market in about four years, which was astonishing.
Knowledge@Wharton: I
guess when you’re talking about a great idea, somehow it will get pooh-poohed
by somebody else or they hit a wall of some kind. It’s about fighting through
that wall to try and bring that forward, correct?
Sherman: As [Amazon CEO]
Jeff Bezos said, “I’ve made billions and billions of dollars on businesses that
everyone told me I was crazy to enter.” So “Don’t listen to them” is his
advice, and I think it’s sound advice.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/cats-vs-dogs-how-feline-agility-in-business-leads-to-long-term-growth/
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