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its Corona model—a product targeting the lowest-priced tiers of the market. As the entry tier of the
market became crowded with look-alike models from Nissan, Honda, and Mazda, competition among
equally low-cost competitors drove down profit margins. Toyota developed more sophisticated cars
targeted at higher tiers of the market in order to improve its margins. Its Corolla, Camry, Previa,
Avalon, and Lexus families of cars have been introduced in response to the same competitive
pressures—it kept its margins healthy by migrating up-market. In the process, Toyota has had to add
costs to its operation to design, build, and support cars of this caliber. It progressively deemphasized
the entry-level tiers of the market, having found the margins it could earn there to be unattractive, given
its changed cost structure.
Nucor Steel, the leading minimill that led the up-market charge against the integrated mills that was
recounted in chapter 4, likewise has experienced a change in values. As it has managed the center of
gravity in its product line up-market from re-bar to angle iron to structural beams and finally to sheet
steel, it has begun to decidedly deemphasize re-bar—the product that had been its bread and butter in
its earlier years.
The second dimension along which values predictably change relates to how big a business has to be in
order to be interesting. Because a company’s stock price represents the discounted present value of its
projected earnings stream, most managers typically feel compelled not just to maintain growth, but to
maintain a constant
rate of growth. In order for a $40 million company to grow 25 percent, it needs to
find $10 million in new business the next year. For a $40
billion company to grow 25 percent, it needs
to find $10 billion in new business the next year. The size of market opportunity that will solve each of
these companies’ needs for growth is very different. As noted in chapter 6, an opportunity that excites a
small organization isn’t big enough to be interesting to a very large one. One of the bittersweet rewards
of success is, in fact, that as companies become large, they literally lose the capability to enter small
emerging markets. This disability is not because of a change in the resources within the companies—
their resources typically are vast. Rather, it is because their values change.
Executives and Wall Street financiers who engineer megamergers among already huge companies in
order to achieve cost savings need to account for the impact of these actions on the resultant
companies’ values. Although their merged organizations might have more resources to throw at
innovation problems, their commercial organizations tend to lose their appetites for all but the biggest
blockbuster opportunities. Huge size constitutes a very real
disability in managing innovation. In many
ways, Hewlett-Packard’s recent decision to split itself into two companies is rooted in its recognition of
this problem.
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