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Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

By David Weir | Jul 18, 2009

Before you conclude that what follows is entirely orthogonal to the media industry, please allow me the luxury of considering a few details of what I’ve been up to lately. Bear with me, please, this may be a winding path.

The past few days I was visiting the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. CalTech is up there with M.I.T. as one of the two most respected scientific universities in the country, though once you’re west of the Mississippi, it’s actually no contest.

One thing that struck me during my visit at this center of brilliance was the ongoing importance of basic research for our society, our population, and yes, our industries. There is, of course, an element of the scientific method of research that closely parallels that of our greatest journalists, and that is the rigor of working from a hypothesis toward conclusions, supported by fact, in order to yield new “stories.”

I hadn’t thought of it this way until our tour guide (who also doubles as a Phd student in neuroscience and my oldest son, at his fruit fly research lab at CalTech)  described how and when he and other scientists choose to publish their latest results. “It’s just enough when it is a new story, maybe just a chapter in an unfolding story.”

This, of course, is the way of all media. We are set up, on the creative side, to produce the next story. On the business side, we must be optimized to produce the revenue not only to cover the cost of generating that story, but of carrying our collective operation forward.

But it all comes back to the story.

The second insight that hit me as I was driving the 400 miles back north to my home in San Francisco was of an entirely different nature: Where do disruptive business models come from? My traveling companion and I were discussing how Zipcar and CityCarShare have utterly disrupted the traditional car rental industry in the past few years.

“The rental car companies could have innovated car-sharing,” she said.

“But they didn’t,” I answered.

And that is the point. Most people employed within well-established industries do not have the imagination, nor the incentive, necessary to invent disruptive business models. Thus, these come from outsiders. The only option left for the traditional player is to copy the innovator, acquire the innovator, or somehow use legal and political muscle to suppress the innovator.

I told you this would get to media, dear reader. So, think about how our media industry as a whole has reacted to the multiple threats to its traditional cash-cow status — to Craigslist, which has improved the classified advertising model. (Blame Craig for killing newspapers.) To Google, which has improved the user’s ability to find news. (Blame Google for killing newspapers.) To the Internet generally, for vastly expanding people’s access to news and information about everything imaginable. (Blame the Internet for killing print media.)

And now we come to Twitter, and the social media revolution that is transforming everything we’ve come to understand the past 15 years about networked, interactive media. (Dismiss it as a fad.)

The pattern here is defensive. There has been an almost total collective failure by mainstream media companies to recognize the threat, and therefore the potential, of disruptive technologies since Tim Berners-Lee opened up the global supermarket of digital information to anyone willing to log in and browse.

Why? These media executives got way too comfortable. They forgot that old adage in journalism — that you are only as good as your next story — probably because most of them were never journalists in the first place, but hangers-on with a stake in the way things were, not the way they might be.

Whatever it has been and whatever it becomes, and even however you may define it, the media industry is about creativity — on the content side, the business side, and the technology side. The people who play it safe, who hold their ears against the drumbeat of change, are doomed to be swept away.

And so it should be.

Those open to change, who embrace change, those who apply their own creative thinking to changing circumstances will adapt and survive, and — if they are very lucky — even thrive.

But, at this point in history, this is not a safe industry for ass-kissers, the risk-adverse, or conventional thinkers. It’s time now for those of you who fit those descriptions to exit, stage right. Then, even those who remain better hold on, because this is going to get bumpy.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

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  •  
    1

    koenjin

    07/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    Thank you for a revelatory post!

  •  
    2

    hotweir

    07/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    You are most welcome!

  •  
    3

    bosacks

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    ?It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it?

  •  
    4

    TheNudger

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    Having worked in/with big media companies and digital media startups, I would argue that the formers' failure to disrupt their own businesses is less due to a lack of imagination and more to the incentive structure.
    Rare is the startup idea that hasn't already been envisioned somewhere in a big company - particularly those known for strategy (e.g. Disney). And many of the people in these big companies are as smart and imaginative as any entrepreneur.
    But the bottom line is that once you have something to conserve - you act conservatively. This means when presented with a choice between high success probability and relatively low return vs. low success probability and very high return, big companies almost always choose the former. It's actually what their shareholders want them to do - keep the farm producing a 3% over inflation return vs. betting the farm.
    Another aspect of big companies that redirects/absorbs imagination that might go into disruptive innovation is the organization itself. A large fraction of the time and energy of the best employees is spent figuring out how to survive and advance in a complex corporate culture (Disney is a great example here, too). Startups aren't burdened with this, though some (e.g. Facebook) seem to be able to create it pretty quickly.
    In the end, the process is synergistic - the startups disrupt because they have nothing to lose and if they're successful, they either become big and conservative (by hiring big company people and adopting their methods), or they get acquired. And the successful big companies adapt (by organically doing what the startup does, only better, or by acquisition.
    And so the cycles goes - it's a coherent and sensible process/relationship from 100,000 feet, but very painful for those caught down in the turbulence, particularly at the tipping point (where newspapers are right now). It reminds me of that old saying - if you like sausage, don't watch it being made.

  •  
    5

    psimple

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    I find a great way to look at this question comes from Clayton Christensen's 1997 book, The Innovator's Dilemma.

    You can see how the ways of success of one business model are held onto something consciously and sometime unconsciously in organizations that have been market leaders. Unless their leaders are ready to accept the possible complete destruction of the status quo, real innovation isn't possible.

    I know how hard it is to let go of what appears to be working. Great leaders know this trap and are constantly challenging their organization to question every assumption.

    My view is that there has been a lack of great leaders in the traditional media industry. Most folks in executive positions are great politicians and perhaps good managers. What they aren't is leaders who are willing to be courageous and inspire greatness in those around them.

    Thomas White

  •  
    6

    hotweir

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    Thanks, Nick and Thomas. You guys both have the first-hand experience in media companies big and small to amplify in useful ways what I posted about. It is so true that most disruptive innovations have already been envisioned inside big companies, but that they are usually suppressed as being off-message, or outside the company's focus. And that quarterly tyranny of hitting the numbers -- oy! -- I'd almost forgotten. So many bad memories.

    I also agree about the lack of great leadership. Great leaders, the kind of people who inspire those around them to take risks and outperform the competition, are themselves disruptive influences inside companies.

    The truth inside every fair-sized media company I am familiar with is that those who would take risks, rock the boat, and implement fundamental changes get beaten down and eventually drummed out of the club.

    I have met such an endless number of editors, publishers, and hacks who limit their company's possibilities by succumbing to their own collective conventional wisdom. They are the consummate "yes" men, and they are destroying their own futures in this time of turbulence.

  •  
    7

    TheNudger

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    Another point you raised, David, deserves expansion. It's one thing for a big company (or an entire industry) to die out for lack of vision and innovation. What's worse is when the company or industry works to actively impede change/progress.
    I saw that happen firsthand in the music industry in its response to online music in the mid/late-90s. The music industry controlled a food-chain that consisted of a boring part (distribution) and a creative part (finding and managing talent). The Internet was clearly going to disrupt the distribution, and the industry's instinctive reaction was to go all out - mostly via the RIAA and IFPI - to use legal and technical means to prevent this. The were doomed to failure, and they knew it. I remember one record company CEO telling me (I was a consultant to RIAA for the Secure Digital Music Initiative) that he planned to retire before this "Internet" thing really hit. Unfortunately, the results of their attempts to hang on to distribution - primarily in the form of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act - continue to impede the evolution of the music business to this day.
    What's really interesting - and little discussed - is the fact that attempts to use the Internet/Web to usurp the talent side of the business - i.e. find and exploit the hits and hitmakers - failed miserably. Remember Michael Robertson and mp3.com? He figured that by giving unsigned bands a place online to put their music, he could create a market and use his priviledged position to find (and sign) the hitmakers before the record companies could. This failed, primarily because finding and managing real talent is an art that's not easily mastered. It's why the CEOs of the record companies were primarily from A&R (e.g. Tommy Mottola, Terry Semel), and not from distribution.
    I think there's a huge lesson here for the newspapers. By fighting to hold on to distribution, they're trying to defend the low ground, and will inevitably be overrun. But the high ground they own - finding and managing the content creators - is an art that will not be easily mastered by Web/social media types. The fact is that the entire social news/blog food chain (from Blodgett to Huffington) would collapse if the core world-class content creators (reporters and journalists) stopped producing. Exactly the way the entire music industry would shut down if the hitmakers didn't exist. Indie bands and topical blogs are nice, but they're not Michael Jackson or the NYT.
    The big challenge, then, for the newspaper industry is to profitably defend their content high-ground while letting go of the distribution without a) going out of business and/or b) resorting to the nuclear option of getting a permanent legal foundation to control/limit linking. That's why I think that one or more of the big content owners/creators will (sooner rather than later) call the Web/blogosphere's bluff and cut off access to their content. Only then will the value (or lack thereof) of the content be established so that the entire food chain can get on with its inevitable re-configuration.

  •  
    8

    TheNudger

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    A correction to my last post - i meant to cite Mottola as an example of the A&R guy (Mariah Carey, Carly Simon, Diana Ross)who typified record company CEOs, and Semel as the exception. Terry was an accountant by training, worked in distribution and co-ran Warner before his stint at Yahoo!.

  •  
    9

    hotweir

    07/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    Thanks, Nick:

    The second I read this part of your comment -- "... finding and managing real talent is an art that's not easily mastered..." -- I knew that you had nailed it. What's happening to media is exactly what occurred in the music industry, as you have documented.

    Yet, I bet you not one in a thousand employed, so-called "media execs" would agree with us. Most of these guys want to pre-determine their audience (34-54 year old, mid-level executives with anHHP of $95k+, blah blah blah), so they reject any attempt by a writer to grow outside that box as inappropriate activity.

    To them I say this, "Live inside the box, die inside the box."

    But exceptions still exist. One would be the guy I was going to write a biography of until the project stalled (long story) -- Jann Wenner. Jann knew how to spot and manage (read:exploit) talent much better than anyone I've ever known. And he benefited accordingly.

    He's still doing it. This feels sorta like a shameless plug for a piece I wrote about him but we are only in comments, so here it is:
    http://www.salon.com/people/bc/1999/04/20/wenner/index.html

    As much as I and other writers suffered under Jann's "management" style, he was, and still is, far better at motivating us than the modern day creeps who never have a good word to say, only a wagging finger like the old schoolmarms of an earlier era, i.e., people clueless about what unleashes voice, as opposed to producing their worthless marketing ********.

    Of course, they only have their jobs inside conventional media companies because they do not possess what you describe as "real talent." They know that, you know that, and I know that, so I suppose we should be sorry for them.

    But this, in the end, is why all of these traditional media companies will fail, because they don't know talent from a hole in the ground. And *that* is a business story worth telling.

  •  
    10

    bialygold

    07/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    We're working on an idea at Jilted Journalists.
    We all have been worrying about business models, rightfully so. But many end users of new technology and especially social media don't.
    In effect, though, haven't they all become micro-community publishers, letting their "friends" and "connections" and "followers" in on their worlds? They still need traditional news of what goes on in the broader world around them, but do they need their local newspaper to create a shared experience for their personal news when they can create it themselves on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and whatever else they want to use?
    Long gone from most print publications are free engagement notices, free obits, free birth notices... and all that personal news that went away with society columns of long ago.
    These micropublishers, if you will, don't need advertisers to underwrite their "publications" to disseminate their personal news, but advertisers would still like to reach them.
    We'll be discussing this more at
    http://www.jiltedjournalists.com.
    We'd love to hear your thoughts.

  •  
    11

    Annabellewalls

    07/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    You've done it before and you're doing it again- what a great
    way to encapsulate our volatile and ever-changing industry.
    You rock, David.
    - Anne Walls
    Co-Founder, WordHustler.com

  •  
    12

    hotweir

    07/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why No Disruptive Business Models Emerge Inside Media

    Thank you, Anne!

    I take your complement with great pride because you are one of the true disruptive agents out there. The media industry, as you know, is a huge, sprawling inter-connected series of industries really, so it can be hard to get my mind around a big enough chunk of it at any one time to strike the right note. But when people I respect so much think I do, it makes all the work worthwhile. Thank you again.

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