Jack Welch & The Boston Globe, Final Chapter

Previously in Part 1 and Part 2, we discussed the possibility of Jack Welch acquiring The Boston Globe. We’ve discussed several things Jack might do, if the deal goes through. All of which, has to do with the Profit Tree model, which is below:

shmula.com, profit tree

We know that the Globe’s circulation recently dropped by as much as 25%. I introduced the idea of Root Cause Analysis to find the drivers for the drop in circulation. This is important because, as can be seen above, circulation is the main driver for Ad Rates, which then drives Revenue.

In this post, I just want to introduce one basic framework and suggest some market research to identify why circulation might have dropped.

In business, there are basic frameworks that are pragmatic and helpful. The Profit Tree is one (see above). Another one, that might be helpful for this case is the what is known as the 3 C’s, developed by Kenichi Ohmae, a Japanese Strategist. The 3 C’s stands for the following: Company, Competition, Customer.

Company

The firm aims to maximize its strengths relative to the competition in the functional areas that are critical to success in the industry. Broken down, it helps to think of the Company in the following ways:

Competition

According to Kenichi Ohmae, proper analysis of the firm can be constructed by looking at possible sources of differentiation in functions ranging from purchasing, design, and engineering to sales and servicing.

Customer

Ohmae once said that “There is no doubt that a corporation’s foremost concern ought to be the interest of its customers rather than that of its stockholders and other parties. In the long run, the corporation that is genuinely interested in its customers is the one that will be interesting to investors”. This is a very Japanese statement to make — in the world of Lean Manufacturing, which I fully endorse, it is about the customer and the thinking is very long-term, not short-term gain thinking, which most American companies are apt to do. Ohmae argued the following in regards to the Customer:

The framework above is very helpful. Most likely, if done sufficiently well — it doesn’t have to be done perfectly, but sufficiently well — some critical insights will come from the analysis and action items that will help the firm improve can be generated, structured, and planned.

Five or so years ago, I worked as a software engineer and database marketing analyst for a Chicago firm. One of our clients was the Chicago Tribune. We were tasked to learn more about the general demographics of the Tribune and their cross media partners (TV Stations and Radio) — basic market awareness and also buying or subscription behavior from the database. One item that came from that study was a general segmentation of the subscribers. This segmentation was done through analyzing the data in the very large subscription datastore as well as through a survey instrument. Using both helped our team “bucketize” (not a technical term, but descriptive) or segment the customers based on helpful factors.

Once we had a helpful segementation available, we then suggested very targeted means at marketing to each segment — with specific and targeted messaging that will speak to that segment, not generically, but very specific. Results? Revenue increased by 30% several months after implementing the targeted marketing messaging.

Conclusion

I have no idea what Jack might if The Boston Globe gets acquired. But, this has been a fun excercise in turnaround and basic business frameworks. No doubt, If Jack does acquire the Globe, he will probably cut costs using Six Sigma and Lean Manufacturing methodologies, as he has done at GE. Business frameworks such as the ones discuess in this series are easy to understand, somewhat easy to implement, but will undoubtedly help the firm become better, more competetive, and more customer-centric.


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