Monthly Archives: October 2012

Wake Up! Ballmer’s driving Microsoft off a cliff!

This is an exciting time of year for tech users – which is now all of us.  The biggest show is the battle between smartphone and tablet leader Apple – which has announced new products with the iPhone 5 and iPad Mini – and the now flailing, old industry leader Microsoft which is trying to re-ignite its sales with a new tablet, operating system and office productivity suite.

I'm reminded of an old joke.  Steve the trucker drives with his pal Alex.  Someone at the diner says "Steve, imagine you're going 60 miles an hour when you start down a hill.  You keep gaining speed, nearing 90.  Then you realize your brakes are out.  Now, you see one quarter mile ahead a turn in the road, because there's a barricade and beyond that a monster cliff.  What do you do?"

Steve smiles and says "Well, I wake up Alex."

"What?  Why?" asks the questioner.

"Because Alex has never seen a wreck like the one we're about to have."

Microsoft has played "bet the company" on its Windows 8 launch, updated office suite and accompanied Surface tablet.  (More on why it didn't have to do this later.)  Now Microsoft has to do something almost never done in business.  The company has to overcome a 3 year lateness to market and upend a multi-billion dollar revenue and brand leader.  It must overcome two very successful market pioneers, both of which have massive sales, high growth, very good margins, great cash flow and enormous war chests (Apple has over $100B cash.) 

Just on the face of it, the daunting task sounds unlikely to succeed.

But there is far more reason to be skeptical.  Apple created these markets with new products about which people had few, if any conceptions.  But today customers have strong viewpoints on both what a smartphone and tablet should be like to use – and what they expect from Microsoft.  And these two viewpoints are almost diametrically opposed. 

Yet Microsoft has tried bridging them in the new product – and in doing so guaranteed the products will do poorly.  By trying to please everyone Microsoft, like the Ford Edsel, is going to please almost no one:

  • Since the initial product viewing, almost all professional reviewers have said the Surface is neat, but not fantastically so.  It is different from iOS and Google's Android products, but not superior.  It has generated very little enthusiasm.
  • Tests by average users have shown the products to be non-intuitive.  Especially when told they are Microsoft products.  So the Apple-based interface intuition doesn't come through for easy use, nor does historical Microsoft experience.  Average users have been confused, and realize they now must learn a 3rd interface – the iOS or Android they have, the old Microsoft they have, and now this new thing.  It might as well be Linux for all its similarity to Microsoft.
  • For those who were excited about having native office products on a tablet, the products aren't the same as before – in feel or function.  And the question becomes, if you really want the office suite do you really want a tablet or should you be using a laptop?  The very issue of trying to use Office on the Surface easily makes people rethink the question, and start to realize that they may have said they wanted this, but it really isn't the big deal they thought it would be.  The tablet and laptop have different uses, and between Surface and Win8 they are seeing learning curve cost maybe isn't worth it. 
  • The new Win8 – especially on the tablet – does not support a lot of the "professional" applications written on older Windows versions.  Those developers now have to redevelop their code for a new platform – and many won't work on the new tablet processors.
  • Many have been banking on Microsoft winning the "enterprise" market.  Selling to CIOs who want to preserve legacy code by offering a Microsoft solution.  But they run into two problems. (1) Users now have to learn this 3rd, new interface.  If they have a Galaxy tab or iPad they will have to carry another device, and learn how to use it.  Do not expect happy employees, or executives, who expressly desire avoiding both these ideas. (2) Not all those old applications (drivers, code, etc) will port to the new platform so easily.  This is not a "drop in" solution.  It will take IT time and money – while CEOs keep asking "why aren't you doing this for my iPad?"

All of this adds up to a new product set that is very late to market, yet doesn't offer anything really new.  By trying to defend and extend its Windows and Office history, Microsoft missed the market shift.  It has spent several billion dollars trying to come up with something that will excite people.  But instead of offering something new to change the market, it has given people something old in a new package.  Microsoft they pretty much missed the market altogether.

Everyone knows that PC sales are going to decline.  Unfortunately, this launch may well accelerate that decline.  Remember how slowly people were willing to switch to Vista?  How slowly they adopted Microsoft 7 and Office 2010?  There are still millions of users running XP – and even Office XP (Office Professional 2003.)  These new products may convince customers that the time and effort to "upgrade" simply means its time to switch.

Microsoft has fallen into a classic problem the Dean of innovation Clayton Christensen discusses.  Microsoft long ago overshot the user need for PCs and office automation tools.  But instead of focusing on developing new solutions – like Apple did by introducing greater mobility with its i products – Microsoft has diligently, for a decade, continued to dump money into overshooting the user needs for its basic products.  They can't admit to themselves that very, very, very few people are looking for a new spreadsheet or word processing application update.  Or a new operating system for their laptop.

These new Microsoft products will NOT cause people to quit the trend to mobile devices.  They will not change the trend of corporate users supplying their own devices for work (there's now even an IT acronym for this movement [BYOD,] and a Wikipedia page.) It will not find a ready, excited market of people wanting to learn yet another interface, especially to use old applications they thought they already new!

It did not have to be this way.

Years ago Microsoft started pouring money into xBox.  And although investors can complain about the historical cost, the xBox (and Kinect) are now market leaders in the family room.  Honestly, Microsoft already has – especially with new products released this week – what people are hoping they can soon buy from AppleTV or GoogleTV; products that are at best vaporware. 

Long-term, there is yet another great battle to be fought.  What will be the role of monitors, scattered in homes and bars, and in train stations, lobbies and everywhere else?  Who will control the access to monitors which will be used for everything from entertainment (video/music,) to research and gaming.  The tablet and smartphones may well die, or mutate dramatically, as the ability to connect via monitors located nearly everywhere using —- xBox?

But, this week all discussion of the new xBox Live and music applications were overshadowed by the CEO's determination to promote the dying product line around Windows8. 

This was simply stupid.  Ballmer should be fired. 

The PC products should be managed for a cash hoarding transition into a smaller market.  Investments should be maximized into the new products that support the next market transition.  xBox and Kinect should be held up as game changers, and Microsoft should be repositioned as a leader in the family and conference room; an indespensible product line in an ever-more-connected world. 

But that didn't happen this week.  And the CEO keeps heading straight for the cliff.  Maybe when he takes the truck over the guard rail he'll finally be replaced.  Investors can only wake up and watch – and hope it happens sooner, rather than later.

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Press

Press Coverage

Without a doubt, Steve Ballmer is the worst CEO today – James Henderson, Techday, Aug. 27, 2013
Four Entrepreneurs Give Emergency Advice for a Failing Business – Ashley Poulter, CEO Blog Nation, Aug. 27, 2013
Microsoft’s Next CEO Will Have a Tough Row to Hoe – Erika Morphy, E-Commerce Times, Aug. 26, 2013
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer To Step Down in 12 Months – David Taintor, Adweek, Aug. 23, 2013
D.C. draws Wal-Mart into Democrats’ political battle over wages – Patrice Hill, Washington Times, Aug. 21, 2013
Nokia Too Rich for Microsoft’s Blood – Erika Morphy, E-Commerce Times, June 20, 2013
Innovation Quotes of the Week – Innovation Excellence, April 21, 2013
The Skeptic’s Guide to Samsung Pundits – Ernie Varitimos, The Street, April 17, 2013
Samsung beat Apple with marketing, not products – Richard Goodwin, Know Your Mobile, April 12, 2013 
An Open Letter to Microsoft Corporation – Libardo Lambrano, Market Playground, March 19, 2013
Buy Google, Sell Apple and Other Nonsense – Daniel Solin, Yahoo! News, March 14, 2013
Social media expands the classroom – Financial Times, March 11, 2013
HP’s Less Crummy Than Expected Q1 Spurs Wishing, Hoping – Erika Morphy, E-Commerce Times, Feb. 22, 2013
Standing Still Is Not an Option for Manufactures – Rich Rovito, BizTimes, Jan. 25, 2013
Dan Morain: One possibly futile effort to keep the Kings – Dan Morain, Sacramento Bee, Jan. 23, 2013
Adam Hartung: Game Over For Microsoft – Fahad Ali, Windows8 Update, Jan. 22, 2013
New report suggests Xbox 720 dev will become proprety of Sony – Steven Ruygrok, Examiner, Jan. 22, 2013
Is Microsoft a Dead Man Walking? – Alan Shimel, Network World, Jan. 22, 2013
Don’t bury Microsoft yet – Woody Leonhard, InfoWorld, Jan. 22, 2013
Microsoft’s Xbox Brand Could be Sold to “Somone Like Sony” –  Hanuman Welch, Complex Gaming , Jan. 21, 2013
News Snatch: Microsoft Selling Xbox to Sony – thesixthaxis, Jan. 21, 2013
Microsoft’s Xbox Gets Painted Grim Picture by Analyst – Tyler Lee, Ubergizmo, Jan. 21, 2013
Forbes Analyst Calls Game Over For Microsoft – Adam Gauntlett, Escapist Magazine, Jan, 21 2013
Amazon’s Big Wheels Keep on Rollin’  – Erika Morphy, E-Commerce Times, Jan. 8. 2013
McDonald’s & the ghost of Christmas – VCCircle, Dec. 21, 2012
7 technologieën die in 2013 kopje onder gaan – John Brandon, ComputerWorld, Dec. 20, 2012
McDonald’s wants stores open Christmas Day – Mark Huffman, ConsumerAffairs, Dec. 19, 2012
7 Technologies Poised for Failure in 2013 – John Brandon, CIO Magazine, Dec. 18, 2012
Hostess chiefs killed own company with debt, pay cuts – Ivan Sizemore, Courier News – Sun Times, Dec. 9, 2012
Google’s Own Chromebook: A Slap Across the Bow of Microsoft – Robert McGarvey, InternetEvolution.com, Nov. 29,2012
Should Hewlett-Packard’s Meg Whitman be fired? – Charley Blaine, MSN Money, Nov. 21, 2012
Companies need innovators like babies need love
 – Erich Hugo, ITG Digital, Oct. 16, 2012
Technology Adaption (Podcast) – Craig Peterson, Tech Talk, Oct.12, 2012
Even You Can Innovate to Grow – Learn from Skanska – Innovation Excellence, Oct. 11, 2012
Walmart Goes Wild With Same-Day Delivery Plan – Erika Morphy, E-Commerce Times, Oct. 10, 2012
Wal-Mart tries to boost ailing sales – Kim Peterson, MSN Money, March 21, 2011

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4 Myths and 1 Truth About Investing

Today is the 25th anniversary of the 1987 stock market crash that saw the worst ever one-day percentage decline on Wall Street.  Worse even than during the Great Depression.  It's a reminder that the market has had several October "crashes;" not only 1929 and 1987 but 1989, 1998, 2001 and 2007. 

For some people this serves as a reminder to invest very, very cautiously.  For others it is seen as market hiccups that present buying opportunities. For many it is an admonition to follow the investing advice of Mark Twain (although often attributed to Will Rogers) and pay more attention to the return of your money than the return on your money.

I've been investing for 30 years, and like most people I did it pretty badly.  For the first 20 years the annual review with my Merrill Lynch stock broker sounded like "Kent, why is it I'm paying fees to you, yet would have done better if I simply bought the Dow Jones Industrial Average?"  Across 20 years, almost every year, my "managed" account did more poorly than this collection of big, largely dull, corporations. 

A decade ago I dropped my broker, changed my approach, and things have gone much, much better.  Simply put I realized that everything I had been taught about investing, including my MBA, assured I would have, at best, returns no better than the overall market.  If I used the collective wisdom, I was destined to perform no better than the collective market.  Duh.  And that is if I remained unemotional and disciplined – which I didn't assuring I would do worse than the collective market! 

Remember, I am not a licensed financial advisor.  Below are the insights upon which I based my new investing philosophy.   First, the 4 myths that I think steered me wrong, and then the 1 thing that has produced above-average returns, consistently.

Myth 1 – Equities are Risky

Somewhere, somebody came up with a fancy notion that physical things – like buildings – are less risky than financial assets like equities in corporations.  Every homeowner in America now knows this is untrue.  As does anybody who owns a car, or tractor or even a strip mall or manufacturing plant.  Markets shift, and land and buildings – or equipment – can lose value amazingly quickly in a globally competitive world. 

The best thing about equities is they can adapt to markets.  A smart CEO leading a smart company can change strategy, and investments, overnight.  Flexible, adaptable supply chains and distribution channels reduce the risk of ownership, while creating ongoing value.  So equities can be the least risky investment option, if you keep yourself flexible and invest in flexible companies.

Hand-in-glove with this is recognizing that the best equities are not steeped in physical assets.  Lots of land, buildings and equipment locks-in the P&L costs, even though competitors can obsolete those assets very quickly.  And costs remain locked-in even though competition drives down prices.  So investing in companies with lots of "hard" assets is riskier than investing in companies where the value lies in intellectual capital and flexibility.

Myth 2 – Invest Only In What You Know

This is profoundly ridiculous.  We are humans.  There is infinitely more we don't know than what we do know.  If we invest only in what we know we become horrifically non-diversified.  And worse, just because we know something does not mean it is able to produce good returns – for anybody! 

This was the mantra Warren Buffet used to turn down a chance to invest in Microsoft in 1980.  Oops. Not that Berkshire Hathaway didn't find other investments, but that sure was an easy one Mr. Buffett missed.

To invest smartly I don't need to know a lot more than the really important trends.  I don't have to know electrical engineering, software engineering or be
an IT professional to understand that the desire to use digital mobile
products, and networks, is growing.  I don't have to be a bio-engineer to know that pharmaceutical solutions are coming very infrequently now, and the future is all in genetic developments and bio-engineered solutions.  I don't have to be a retail expert to know that the market for on-line sales is growing at a double digit rate, while brick-and-mortar retail is becoming a no-growth, dog-eat-margin competitive world (with all those buildings – see Myth 1 again.)  I don't have to be a utility expert to know that nobody wants a nuclear or coal plant nearby, so alternatives will be the long-term answer.

Investing in trends has a much, much higher probability of making good returns than investing in things that are not on major trends.  Investing in what we know would leave most people broke; because lots of businesses have more competition than growth.  Investing in businesses that are developing major trends puts the wind at your back, and puts time on your side for eventually making high returns.

Oh, and there are a lot fewer companies that invest in trends.  So I don't have to study nearly as many to figure out which have the best investment options, solutions and leadership.

Myth 3 – Dividends Are Important to Valuation

Dividends (or stock buybacks) are the admission of management that they don't have anything high value into which they can invest, so they are giving me the money.  But I am an investor.  I don't need them to give me money, I am giving them money so they will invest it to earn a rate of return higher than I can get on my own.  Dividends are the opposite of what I want. 

High dividends are required of some investments – like Real Estate Investment Trusts – which must return a percentage of cash flow to investors.  But for everyone else, dividends (or stock buybacks) are used to manipulate the stock price in the short-term, at the expense of long-term value creation. 

To make better than average returns we should invest in companies that have so many high return investment opportunities (on major trends) that the company really, really needs the cash.  We invest in the company, which is a conduit for investing in high-return projects.  Not paying a dividend.

Myth 4 – Long Term Investors Do Best By Purchasing an Index (or Giant Portfolio)

Stock Index chart 10.20.12

Go back to my introductory paragraphs.  Saying you do best by doing average isn't saying much, is it?  And, honestly, average hasn't been that good the last decade.  And index investing leaves you completely vulnerable to the kind of "crashes" leading to this article – something every investor would like to avoid.  Nobody invests to win sometimes, and lose sometimes. You want to avoid crashes, and make good rates of return.

Investors want winners.  And investing in an index means you own total dogs – companies that almost nobody thinks will ever be competitive again – like Sears, HP, GM, Research in Motion (RIM), Sprint, Nokia, etc. You would only do that if you really had no idea what you are doing.

If you are buying an index, perhaps you should reconsider investing in equities altogether, and instead go buy a new car. You aren't really investing, you are just buying a hodge-podge of stuff that has no relationship to trends or value cration. If you can't invest in winners, should you be an investor?

1 Truth – Growing Companies Create Value

Not all companies are great.  Really.  Actually, most are far from great, simply trying to get by, doing what they've always done and hoping, somehow, the world comes back around to what it was like when they had high returns.  There is no reason to own those companies.  Hope is not a good investment theory.

Some companies are magnificent manipulators.  They are in so many markets you have no idea what they do, or where they do it, and it is impossible to figure out their markets or growth.  They buy and sell businesses, constantly confusing investors (like Kraft and Abbott.)  They use money to buy shares trying to manipulate the EPS and P/E multiple.  But they don't grow, because their acquired revenues cost too much when bought, and have insufficient margin. 

Most CEOs, especially if they have a background in finance, are experts at this game.  Good for executive compensation, but not much good for investors.  If the company looks like an acquisition whore, or is in confusing markets, and has little organic growth there is no reason to own it.

Companies that are developing major trends create growth.  They generate internal projects which bring them more customers, higher share of wallet with their customers, and create new markets for new revenues where they have few, if any competition.  By investing in trends they keep changing the marketplace, and the competition, giving them more opportunities to sell more, and generate higher margins. 

Growing companies apply new technologies and new business practices to innovate new solutions solving new needs, and better solve old needs.  They don't compete head-on in gladiator style, lowering margins as they desperately seek share while cutting costs that kills innovation.  Instead they ferret out new solutions which give them a unique market proposition, and allow them to produce lots of cash for adding to my cash in order to invest in even more new market opportunities.

If you had used these 4 myths, and 1 truth, what would your investments have been like since the year 2000?  Rather than an index, or a manufacturer like GE, you would have bought Apple and Google. Remember, if you want to make money as an investor it's not about how many equities you own, but rather owning equities that grow.

Growth hides a multitude of sins.  If a company has high growth investors don't care about free lunches for workers, private company planes, free iPhones for employees or even the CEO's compensation.  They aren't trying to figure out if some acquisition is accretive, or if the desired synergies are findable for lowering cost. None of that matters if there is ample growth.

What an investor should care about, more than anything else, is whether or not there are a slew of new projects in the pipeline to keep fueling the growth. And if those projects are pursuing major trends.  Keep your eye on that prize, and you just might avoid any future market crashes while improving your investment returns. 

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Beyond the Debate – Common Economic Misconceptions vs. Reality

There was a time, before primaries, when each party's platform was really important.  Voters didn't pick a candidate, the party did.  Then voters read what policies the party planned to implement should it control the executive branch, and possibly a legislative majority. It was the policies that drew the most attention – not the candidates. 

Digging deeper than shortened debate-level headlines, there is a considerable difference in the recommended economic policies of the two dominant parties.  The common viewpoint is that Republicans are good for business, which is good for the economy.  Republican policies – and the more Adam Smith, invisible hand, limited regulation, lassaiz faire the better – are expected to create a robust, healthy, growing economy.  Meanwhile, the common view of Democrat policies is that they too heavily favor regulation and higher taxes which are economy killers.

Right?

Well, for those who feel this way it may be time to review the last 80 years of economic history, as Bob Deitrick and Lew Godlfarb have done in a great, easy to read book titled "Bulls, Bears and the Ballot Box" (available at Amazon.com) Their heavily researched, and footnoted, text brings forth some serious inconsistency between the common viewpoint of America's dominant parties, and the reality of how America has performed since the start of the Great Depression

Gary Hart recently wrote in The Huffington Post,

"Reason and facts are sacrificed to opinion and myth. Demonstrable
falsehoods are circulated and recycled as fact. Narrow minded opinion
refuses to be subjected to thought and analysis. Too many now subject
events to a prefabricated set of interpretations, usually provided by a
biased media source. The myth is more comfortable than the often
difficult search for truth."

Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan is attributed with saying "everyone is
entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.
"  So even though we
may hold very strong opinions about parties and politics, it is
worthwhile to look at facts.  This book's authors are to be commended for spending several years, and many thousands of student research assistant man-days, sorting out economic performance from the common viewpoint – and the broad theories upon which much policy has been based.  Their compendium of economic facts is the most illuminating document on economic performance during different administrations, and policies, than anything previously published.

Startling Results


CH2_FHP
Chart reproduced by permission of authors

The authors looked at a range of economic metrics including inflation, unemployment, growth in corporate profits, performance of the stock market, change in household income, growth in the economy, months in recession and others.  To their surprise (I had the opportunity to interview Mr. Goldfarb) they discovered that laissez faire policies had far less benefits than expected, and in fact produced almost universal negative economic outcomes for the nation!

From this book loaded with statistical fact tidbits and comparative charts, here are just a few that caused me to realize that my long-term love affair with Milton Friedman's theories and recommended policies in "Free to Choose" were grounded in a theory I long admired, but that simply have proven to be myths when applied!

  • Personal disposable income has grown nearly 6 times more under Democratic presidents
  • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has grown 7 times more under Democratic presidents
  • Corporate profits have grown over 16% more per year under Democratic presidents (they actually declined under Republicans by an average of 4.53%/year)
  • Average annual compound return on the stock market has been 18 times greater under Democratic presidents (If you invested $100k for 40 years of Republican administrations you had $126k at the end, if you invested $100k for 40 years of Democrat administrations you had $3.9M at the end)
  • Republican presidents added 2.5 times more to the national debt than Democratic presidents
  • The two times the economy steered into the ditch (Great Depression and Great Recession) were during Republican, laissez faire administrations

The "how and why" of these results is explained in the book.  Not the least of which revolves around the velocity of money and how that changes as wealth moves between different economic classes. 

The book is great at looking at today's economic myths, and using long forgotten facts to set the record straight.  For example, in explaining President Reagan's great economic recovery of the 1980s it is often attributed to the stimulative impact of major tax cuts.  But in reality the 1981 tax cuts backfired, leading to massive deficits and a weaker economy with a double dip recession as unemployment soared.  So in 1982 Reagan signed (TEFRA) the largest peacetime tax increase in our nation's history.  In his tenure Reagan signed 9 tax bills – 7 of which raised taxes!

The authors do not come down on the side of any specific economic policies.  Rather, they make a strong case that a prosperous economy occurs when a president is adaptable to the needs of the country at that time.  Adjusting to the results, rather than staunchly sticking to economic theory.  And that economic policy does not stand alone, but must be integrated into the needs of society.  As Dwight Eisenhower said in a New Yorker interview

"I despise people who go to the gutter on either the right or the left and hurl rocks at those in the center."

The book covers only Presidents Hoover through W. Bush.  But as we near this election I asked Mr. Goldfarb his view on the incumbent Democrat's first 4 years.  His response:

  • "Obama at this time would rank on par with Reagan
  • Corporate profits have risen under Obama more than any other president
  • The stock market has soared 14.72%/year under Obama, second only to Clinton — which should be a big deal since 2/3 of people (not just the upper class) have a 401K or similar investment vehicle dependent upon corporate profits and stock market performance"

As to the challenging Republican party's platform, Mr. Goldfarb commented:

  • "The platform is the inverse of what has actually worked to stimulate economic growth
  • The recommended platform tax policy is bad for velocity, and will stagnate the economy
  • Repealing the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) will have a negative economic impact because it will force non-wealthy individuals to spend a higher percentage of income on health care rather than expansionary products and services
  • Economic disaster happens in America when wealth is concentrated at the top, and we are at an all time high for wealth concentration.  There is nothing in the platform which addresses this issue."

There are a lot of reasons to select the party for which you wish to vote.  There is more to America than the economy.  But, if you think like the Democrats did in 1992 and "it's about the economy" then you owe it to yourself to read this book.  It may challenge your conventional wisdom as it presents – like Joe Friday said – "just the facts."

 

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Sorry Meg, Your Hockey Stick Forecast for HP Won’t Happen – Sell

If you're still an investor in Hewlett Packard you must be new to this blog.  But for those who remain optimistic, it is worth reveiwing why Ms. Whitman's forecast for HP yesterday won't happen.  There are sound reasons why the company has lost 35% of its value since she took over as CEO, over 75% since just 2010 – and over $90B of value from its peak. 

HP was dying before Whitman arrived

I recall my father pointing to a large elm tree when I was a boy and saying "that tree will be dead in under 2 years, we might as well cut it down now."  "But it's huge, and has leaves" I said. "It doesn't look dead."  "It's not dead yet, but the environmental wind damage has cost it too many branches,  the changing creek direction created standing water rotting its roots, and neighboring trees have grown taking away its sunshine.  That tree simply won't survive.  I know it's more than 3 stories tall, with a giant trunk, and you can't tell it now – but it is already dead." 

To teach me the lesson, he decided not to cut the tree.  And the following spring it barely leafed out.  By fall, it was clearly losing bark, and well into demise.  We cut it for firewood.

Such is the situation at HP.  Before she became CEO (but while she was a Director – so she doesn't escape culpability for the situation) previous leaders made bad decisions that pushed HP in the wrong direction:

  • Carly Fiorina, alone, probably killed HP with the single decision to buy Compaq and gut the HP R&D budget to implement a cost-based, generic strategy for competing in Windows-based PCs.  She sucked most of the money out of the wildly profitable printer business to subsidize the transition, and destroy any long-term HP value.
  • Mark Hurd furthered this disaster by further investing in cost-cutting to promote "scale efficiencies" and price reductions in PCs.  Instead of converting software products and data centers into profitable support products for clients shifting to software-as-a-service (SAAS) or cloud services he closed them – to "focus" on the stagnating, profit-eroding PC business.
  • His ill-conceived notion of buying EDS to compete in traditional IT services long after the market had demonstrated a major shift offshore, and declining margins, created an $8B write-off last year; almost 60% of the purchase price.  Giving HP another big, uncompetitive business unit in a lousy market.
  • His purchase of Palm for $1.2B was a ridiculous price for a business that was once an early leader, but had nothing left to offer customers (sort of like RIM today.)  HP used Palm to  bring out a Touchpad tablet, but it was so late and lacking apps that the product was recalled from retailers after only 49 days. Another write-off.
  • Leo Apotheker bought a small Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software company – only more than a decade after monster competitors Oracle, SAP and IBM had encircled the market.  Further, customers are now looking past ERP for alternatives to the inflexible "enterprise apps" which hinder their ability to adjust quickly in today's rapidly changing marektplace.  The ERP business is sure to shrink, not grow.

Whitman's "Turnaround Plan" simply won't work

Meg is projecting a classic "hockey stick" performance.  She plans for revenues and profits to decline for another year or two, then magically start growing again in 3  years.  There's a reason "hockey stick" projections don't happen.  They imply the company is going to get a lot better, and competitors won't.  And that's not how the world works.

Let's see, what will likely happen over the next 3 years from technology advances by industry leaders Apple, Android and others?  They aren't standing still, and there's no reason to believe HP will suddenly develop some fantastic mojo to become a new product innovator, leapfrogging them for new markets. 

  1. Meg's first action is cost cutting – to "fix" HP.  Cutting 29,000 additional jobs won't fix anything.  It just eliminates a bunch of potentially good idea generators who would like to grow the company.  When Meg says this is sure to reduce the number of products, revenues and profits in 2013 we can believe that projection fully.
  2. Adding features like scanning and copying to printers will make no difference to sales.  The proliferation of smart devices increasingly means people don't print.  Just like we don't carry newspapers or magazines, we don't want to carry memos or presentations.  The world is going digital (duh) and printing demand is not going to grow as we read things on smartphones and tablets instead of paper.
  3. HP is not going to chase the smartphone business.  Although it is growing rapidly.  Given how late HP is to market, this is probably not a bad idea.  But it begs the question of how HP plans to grow.
  4. HP is going not going to exit PCs.  Too bad.  Maybe Lenovo or Dell would pay up for this dying business.  Holding onto it will do HP no good, costing even more money when HP tries to remain competitive as sales fall and margins evaporate due to overcapacity leading to price wars.
  5. HP will launch a Windows8 tablet in January targeted at "enterprises."  Given the success of the iPad, Samsung Galaxy and Amazon Kindle products exactly how HP will differentiate for enterprise success is far from clear.  And entering the market so late, with an unproven operating system platform is betting the market on Microsoft making it a success.  That is far, far from a low-risk bet.  We could well see this new tablet about as successful as the ill-fated Touchpad.
  6. Ms. Whitman is betting HP's future (remember, 3 years from now) on "cloud" computing.  Oh boy.  That is sort of like when WalMart told us their future growth would be "China."  She did not describe what HP was going to do differently, or far superior, to unseat companies already providing a raft of successful, growing, profitable cloud services.  "Cloud" is not an untapped market, with companies like Oracle, IBM, VMWare, Salesforce.com, NetApp and EMC (not to mention Apple and Amazon) already well entrenched, investing heavily, launching new products and gathering customers.

HPs problems are far deeper than who is CEO

Ms. Whitman said that the biggest problem at HP has been executive turnover.  That is not quite right.  The problem is HP has had a string of really TERRIBLE CEOs that have moved the company in the wrong direction, invested horribly in outdated strategies, ignored market shifts and assumed that size alone would keep HP successful.  In a bygone era all of them – from Carly Fiorina to Mark Hurd to Leo Apotheker – would have been flogged in the Palo Alto public center then placed in stocks so employees (former and current) could hurl fruit and vegetables, or shout obscenities, at them!

Unfortately, Ms. Whitman is sure to join this ignominious list.  Her hockey stick projection will not occur; cannot given her strategy. 

HP's only hope is to sell the PC business, radically de-invest in printers and move rapidly into entirely new markets.  Like Steve Jobs did a dozen years ago when he cut Mac spending to invest in mobile technologies and transform Apple.  Meg's faith in operational improvement, commitment to existing "enterprise" markets and Microsoft technology assures HP, and its investors, a decidedly unpleasant future.

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