When The Mothership Doesn’t Want It
Rita McGrath
C-Suite Strategist | Thinkers 50 Top 10 | Best-selling author | Columbia University Business School Professor
You would think that after funding and supporting people to develop innovative new ideas, that the parent corporation would want to take advantage of launching them.?Nope. Markets are full of concepts that didn’t fit the parent firm – either not consistent with their strategy or just too small.?
?The Xerox PARC story
In their fascinating book, Fumbling the Future, Douglas K. Smith and Robert C. Alexander describe one of the most vivid examples of a company that saw critical inflection points
But as Malcolm Gladwell points out in his re-telling of the PARC story, the idea that Xerox didn’t see the potential of PARC’s inventions while Apple did is an over-simplification. If you look at the original mouse, invented in the 60’s at Stanford Research Institute, the mouse that PARC came up with and the mouse that Apple originally took to market, they are three radically different approaches to moving a cursor around a screen – as Gladwell points out, it was not so much stealing the idea as it was helping it to evolve.??
The Engelbart mouse
The PARC mouse
The MacIntosh mouse
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The story that seldom gets told about PARC, however, is how a stubborn, highly creative guy by the name of Gary Starkweather created the laser printer which turned out to be a breakthrough product
Despite opposition from the mainstream corporation and its decision-makers, eventually Starkweather got to PARC, and with a small team created a working prototype. His bosses weren’t impressed – IBM was already in printers, and they couldn’t see how this idea would work.?But, Xerox was already in machines that produced reams of printed paper – eventually, as Gladwell observes, “the thing that they invented that was similar to their own business—a really big machine that spit paper out—they made a lot of money on it.” And so they did. Gary Starkweather’s laser printer made billions for Xerox. It paid for every other single project at Xerox?parc, many times over.”?
Cisco, Webex and Zoom
A more recent story about an entrepreneur who had to leave the mothership behind is that of Eric Yuan and the creation of Zoom.?Born and raised in China, Yuan reportedly was inspired to travel to America after hearing a 1994 speech by Bill Gates on this thing called the “internet.”?In college, visits to his girlfriend involved grueling 10-hour train journeys, and he reportedly became intrigued at the idea of creating technology that would allow for virtual visits.?He decided to move to Silicon Valley and applied for a visa. And applied. And applied.?It wasn’t until his 9th try that he succeeded. He didn’t speak much English, but he did know how to code and in 1997 landed at WebEx, a startup in the videoconferencing space.?WebEx grew rapidly, and was acquired by Cisco in 2007 for a price of $3.2 billion. He took a great job as the VP of engineering, in charge of collaboration software.
But all was not well.?As Eric puts it in an interview:?“As VP of engineering, I spent a lot of time meeting with customers, and found that most of them were not happy with the WebEx platform’s usability, reliability, and video quality.?To me, unhappy customers are a sure sign of a failure. Frankly, I didn’t sleep well after I met with WebEx customers. I decided that the only way to solve the customers’ problems was to build a new, better video conferencing solution from the ground up.?Cisco leadership didn’t want to make the necessary changes, so I founded my own company to build a solution from scratch.”?That was in 2011.?As he notes, “I was absolutely miserable at Cisco – I viewed Webex as my baby and had no control to impact the customer experience
Zoom today has revenues of over $3 billion, a market cap of close to $22 billion and the distinction of being used as a verb by hundreds of millions of people.?Not that Cisco is exactly hurting – the company has a market cap of $165 billion and sales of $50 billion.?So even if it didn’t take advantage of that particular opportunity, it seems to be doing just fine.?Meanwhile, Zoom’s post-pandemic future looks challenging as competitors such as Microsoft catch up.?
Orphan inventions
Of course, another reason that large companies don’t commercialize the inventions they fund is that the opportunity just isn’t material enough to make a difference to a multi-billion-dollar firm.?Take the company Isoflux, which was founded by a Kodak scientist. It was based on novel technology, paid for and funded by Kodak, by David Glockner, with the permission of the parent firm!?Today, it is a thriving little business with around $5 million in revenue, and a great reputation in its niche of specialty coatings.?Good for Glockner, and not so terrible for Kodak either, as a $5 million opportunity relative to its 1993 revenue of $16 billion would not have been destiny-defining.??
Innovation is cumulative
These stories reflect the reality that breakthrough innovations
Meanwhile, at Columbia and Valize
I’m getting ready for my weeklong course at Columbia “Leading Strategic Growth and Change” in which we take a week to equip participants with the know-how to confidently pursue growth ventures
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