business model

Boeing's Big Boo-Boo: A Very Non-Disruptive Innovation (Part2 of 3)

In this 3-part series, we dissect the failure of Boeing's inflight satellite-based internet service, Connexion by Boeing. The first article looked at the laboratory-designed business model that was untested before scaling to business unit size, but based on made-up assumptions and faulty analysis.  In Part 2 of this series, we look at the marketing mistakes and myopia that contributed to the colossal failure.

Recap: An Unworkable Business Model

In Part 1, we discussed how Boeing was so sure that this innovation couldn't fail that they invested more than a billion dollars over 6 years with only $25 million in offsetting revenue before folding their tents. We can't say for certain that anything was learned because at the end, Boeing maintained that the tragic events of 9/11 were their undoing, even though clearly this was designed as a "Spruce Goose" from the outset.

The business model was truly unwieldy. Depending on super high-cost satellite service, Boeing needed more than 10x the number of planes that had been outfitted by the time the program was shut down to have the necessary equipment installed, and had they achieved that level of penetration, more than 40% of all passengers on every single flight (assuming the flights were 100% full) needed to pay full price for service just to break even. And, it cost $500,000 per plane to install, and the pricing assumption was that passengers would pay more than the cost of their monthly broadband service at home per hour in the air.

Moreover it required a presence in the US market where internet usage is still the highest and the majority of commercial flights begin and end. But even on the carriers where Connexion was deemed a success, usage rates were in the single digits, and Boeing never changed its stance or its business model to encourage greater use.

It brings new meaning to the phrase "what were they thinking".

Part 2: Counting the Marketing Mistakes

"Extensive" market research" by Boeing came up with a definitive statement that "38% of frequent travelers are willing to pay at least $25 per flight for full, high-speed access to the Internet and their corporate network". Clearly, Boeing believed that it they built it, the users would come, and had boxed themselves into a cost structure that embedded this assumption.

Which leads to the first marketing failure: a dependence on MBA-styled market research. Asking dopey questions has never been shown to result in better odds of being successful at innovation than a coin toss would yield (at much lower cost, but then it doesn't seem as scientific), and in this case, not only was the research instrument flawed, but the wrong question was asked.

Consider this: if I had an urgent deadline that absolutely couldn't wait until I landed, I might be willing to pay $25, so I'd probably answer yes just to influence the outcome (so that the service became available), however, the real question should have been "at this price level, how often would you use the service", just to mitigate the built-in bias.

And, whatever answer you got, you'd test it a dozen different ways for validity. At this ridiculous price level and with this billing model, I might use Connexion once or twice a year, but more likely never. Certainly on flights from the US to Europe, most of the time in the sky is overnight, so who is waiting for my urgent communications anyway?

Ignoring all that, and the fact that I represent the prime target market, the really head-scratching fact is that Connexion's business model required between 30 and 40 percent of all passengers on all flights to pay for this service every time they got on a plane, and nearly 10x as many planes carrying the service as had been outfitted.

What's Wrong With This Picture?

What really stands out is the lack of a "gut check". No comparison seems to have been done to the pricing models that have worked for similar services, the rate of adoption that they experienced, or when the growth rates exploded and what triggered them.

Moreover, the obvious comparison to another overly high-priced satellite communication service that was highly touted but also failed miserably, namely Iridium, was clearly missed. Admittedly, a "gut check" is less quantitative, but it can be immeasurably more accurate.

So, they got the pricing wrong, but that's not the only factor that was going to limit uptake. Marketing apparently never considered any of these barriers to adoption in their business model.

    1. Loss of sleep time. Because most of the travel time on US to Europe flights is overnight, that means the service is competing with sleep time on at least half the potential flights. If I have a meeting first thing on arrival, best case is that I lose several hours of sleep time because of the number of time zones crossed, so unless I'm desperate, I'm highly unlikely to even open my PC. Even if I do work on my PC, the constraint on my available time to use this service is so severe that the cost seems even more ridiculous.
    2. Other activities competing for my time.  Movies, food, bathroom breaks, getting up to stretch, drinking, reading, listening to music, watching a DVD, talking to my travel partner, doing PC work that doesn't require a connection - there are numerous things to do that I don't have to pay anything extra for.  As my colleague Mike Urlocker is fond of saying,"Don't trust what people say; trust what they do".
    3. Scoble notes that most flights don't have access to power. Oops.  Unless I'm in business class, I'm pretty much assured of not having enough battery power to get full value for my connection fee, and even in business class, not all planes have power connections, nor is it easy to know ahead of time if you will have power or not. In the grand scheme of things, as battery life gets longer and longer (mine will go 5 hours at near full power) this is a minor irritation, but it is definitely a nuisance factor that will prevent potential users from plunking down their cash.
    4. Desire to be off the grid. Scoble also notes that many of the techno-geek frequent flyers at Microsoft (if they don't want it, who does?) get some welcome relief from being out of touch for a few hours on their flight. A feeling we can all identify with, I'm sure. And, at the outrageously high price tag, anyone who might otherwise use the service has a good excuse in the high price for not bothering.
    5. Lack of space. Ironically, economy class on long-haul international flights is much more cramped than on domestic flights. I've been on flights where I couldn't get upgraded, and the first thing the passenger in front of me did was recline his seat causing multiple fractures in my kneecaps. As anyone who's been on an older L1011 or a 747 knows, the space between rows is too small to fit in even if the passenger in front of you doesn't recline. Assuming the seat in front of you is in upright position, it is nearly impossible to work on anything other than a micro-laptop, and as soon as the person in front wants to sleep, you not only can't work, your circulation gets cut off too. This is perhaps the strongest incentive to not risk paying the fee and not being able to use the service.
    6. Poor promotion by airlines. In the initial 3-month market test by Lufthansa, the first and most successful airline to offer the service, they claimed an average of 50-80 simultaneous users per flight, 95% of whom were happy with the service. How does this jive with the actual results after launch. How often do you try something once just to see whether it's worth it? Most of us do. But after the first time, value, accessibility and awareness become much more important. Also not disclosed is how many of those users simply logged on to Lufthansa's FlyNet portal, which was a free service. 180 flights per day is a tiny fraction of the actual flights in the air - Boeing noted in their initial announcement of Connexion that there are 41,500 flights worldwide each day. If you were going to be on one of the 0.4% of flights that had the service installed, did you even know it was available and plan your time accordingly? Unlike all the press release hoopla, there was little product differentiation going on in the market, and even less promotion to make people aware when they were going to be on an internet-enabled flight. Even at the gate, there was often no posted notice that you were boarding a Connexion flight. Boeing depended on the marketing efforts of the airlines, and the airlines attitude seemed to be "if we have it, they'll figure it out and use it." At least with Lufthansa, you knew what you were getting because they commited to install Connexion on all long haul flights, and implemented relatively quickly, but their average users per plane (if they were all paying customers) was still only 1/2 what Boeing needed across the system to succeed.
    7. Lack of uptake by US carriers. When the very first announcement of planned service was made in June 2001, Boeing said that American, United and Delta Airlines had signed letters of intent to adopt this service and equip 1,500 planes with Internet connectivity. Of course, on 9/11 that commitment evaporated, and to date, no US-based airlines have signed on. This is a bit of red herring, since if this had gone ahead and all 1,500 planes were outfitted by now, there would still be only 10 times the number of planes that currently have the service, and we've already pointed out that they needed 400x the number of users to make this fly. However, it would certainly have increased awareness, and possibly led to price drops or more innovative business models that would have given this a chance to reach critical mass.
    8. Lack of direct communication with end-users. Connexion considered their customers to be the airlines, although they were clearly dependent on very large scale adoption by the real customers - the end-users. In an utterly amazing statement of 'not getting it' Boeing said "Each of the airlines brings an unprecedented level of knowledge about the in-flight connectivity needs of passengers." as it announced the pending partnerships with US carriers.  Right.  Just like they understand my need for sufficient room to sit, and my need to pay a fair price for services, and my need to be treated like a customer rather than a filled seat. Boeing, as a near monopoly provider to US carriers also didn't get that if you want a mass market to develop, you can't dictate the terms.

      And, I didn't even have to think hard to come up with this list of show stoppers. I'll bet there are others, but since I don't need to think that hard to make the argument that product marketing didn't even do a half-assed job, I'll leave it at that.

        Bottom line: the market research was garbage, the assumptions the business model was built on stank, and almost everything about how this was packaged, priced and marketed was wrong. Even if the US carriers hadn't dropped out of the picture, it is highly doubtful that this service had a fighting chance.

        In Part 3

        In parts one and two, we look at the absurd business model and financial assumptions, as well as the "big dumb company"-styled product marketing and lack of gut check that led to the stillborn Connexion service market failure. In the third and final part, we ask "what could they have done differently", what lessons could be learned, and whether any other approach could have succeeded.

        Boeing's Big Boo-Boo: A Study in Self-Disruption (Part 1 of 3)

        In this 3-part series, we dissect the failure of Boeing's inflight satellite-based internet service, Connexion by Boeing. In part one, we examine the faulty analysis that resulted in a business model that was impossible to execute. The type of innovation represented by the Connexion service, and how the business model came to be is typical of large-company thinking, and why disruptive innovation so rarely comes from incumbent industry players.

        Part 1: A business model that couldn't take flight

        On July 17, 2006, Boeing announced the discontinuation of its in-flight "hi-speed" internet service.  A quick analysis of the business model shows that this dodo was doomed to extinction before it took its first flight.

        Why it had no chance - by the numbers

        Connexion offered a satellite-based internet connection which enabled internet connectivity even on transcontinental flights. Started with plenty of fanfare 6 years ago, Boeing's Connexion service won the "World's Leading High Speed Inflight Internet Service Provider" award from the World Travel Awards organization in London for 3 years running.

        Said Connexion by Boeing president, Laurette Koellner, "Winning this award for the third consecutive year is a welcome validation of our success."  That was in November 2005, just a scant few months ago.

        Exactly what success was being validated though?

        Service Usage

        According to data released by Boeing, "more than 20,000 passengers have used the Connexion by Boeing service during its first year of availability."  20,000 certainly sounds like a big number, but as an absolute number, it is free of context and that context is important. Anyone who knows how to make statistics lie would agree that the best way to distort the meaning of figures is to offer them without context, or juxtaposed in the wrong context.

        In truth, 20,000 was the only number that Boeing could have published that made things look positive. In a separate announcement, Boeing offered other data which tells a more complete story. 

        A corporate backgrounder published a few months later in early 2006 shows that Connexion was available on 180 flights daily. That is 65,700 flights per year, give or take a few. 

        Assume that a few more planes were outfitted between the time of these two announcements, and perhaps the run rate was 60,000 flights per year at the time Boeing said 20,000 passengers had used the service. That is one person on every 3 flights using the service. Not such a stunning success anymore.

        So, lets be generous since we don't know the rate at which service was added during the period when Boeing had 20,000 users. Maybe it was actually 1 person every two flights. Hmmmm. Still not much of a business model.

        Revenue Streams

        Now let's look at revenue, and assume that everyone who used the service paid the top daily rate during that first year of $30. 20,000 paying customers at $30 each is a grand total of $600,000 revenue.

        We know, however, that prices were reduced during this period, and many of these passengers likely opted for the lesser priced packages, so lets give a nice round number and say they had $500,000 in air-time revenue from end consumers. This for a technology that cost over $500,000 per plane to install. I'm starting to smell some really rotten fish. (140 aircraft had been outfitted at the time this backgrounder was written.)

        Of course, there were other revenue streams from government, ship traffic, corporate jets, branding fees from airlines but it's clear that this business model and the cost structure was based on hefty uptake from business travelers. The WSJ says Connexion had $25M in revenue, but also notes that over $1B was invested over 6 years.

        Profit Potential

        What about potential for profitability? We know that there were very high fixed costs associated with this service including expensive satellite bandwidth purchased from several providers, roaming agreements with land-based providers to ensure smooth logon and hand-off of communications, and payroll for 560 employees, the majority of whom required expensive technical knowledge to do their jobs.

        Boeing didn't break out Connexion separately in its operating statements, but lumped it into a category called Other which was mostly Connexion. In the most recent quarter, Other showed a loss of $90M for the quarter (improving from a loss of $110M in the quarter a year earlier).  Let's be really generous (and for the sake of nice round numbers) and say that only $50M of that loss is directly attributable to Connexion.

        Again, for the sake of round numbers, let's say that the losses due to Connexion were approximately the same every quarter, or $200M annually. To generate $200M in revenue and break even, Connexion needed 400x the usage they were getting at last year's higher prices. (Since these are quick calculations, we aren't considering that higher usage would also mean higher expenses).

        At that rate, instead of 1 person every 3 flights, what was actually needed was an average of about 130 paying customers on each and every flight.

        Where Was the Gut Check?

        That stunning calculation leads us to the first great "Aha". What marketing/business genius put together a plan that could only succeed if a very large percentage of the target customers on every flight had so great a need that they would be willing to pay almost as much for a single flight as the cost of a month's broadband access on the ground?

        Even if there are some Fortune 500 companies that would be willing to allow that as an expense, I certainly wouldn't want to be justifying more than 1 per month of those to my boss or the corporate controller. I might be able to get away with it, but it's a nuisance factor I don't need.

        Another indicator that these round numbers aren't so far off: Boeing anticipates $0.15 per share benefit to next year's results coming from this decision, which at the current number of shares outstanding is over $113M in increased earnings. Since most of Connexion's staff will be moved into other jobs at Boeing, and therefore the majority of payroll expense will continue, that seems about right.

        Questions

        • why was there no business model experimentation to determine whether the market as envisioned would or could ever materialize?
        • how were the usage, revenue and profitability projections determined?
        • how did Boeing manage to scale this service to require massive fixed costs and 560 employees to support the service before determining product/market fit and the real size of the likely market?
        • were any of their assumptions realistic, and if not, how did they miss such a gaping hole in their business plan?
        • can a big company realistically behave like a startup to test business models in "fast-fail mode" before scaling?

        In Part 2

        In Part 1, our quick analysis of the accounting clearly shows the magnitude of the miscalculation implicit in the Connexion by Boeing service. It looks as though it had no chance to reach profitability ever. So, how did this come to be? In Part 2, we examine the marketing mistakes that contributed to this colossal failure.

        The Long Tail of Market Disruption

        . . . in which we examine how marketing professionals and creators of all types of products and services can use this upside-down view of the world to market more effectively.

        The Long Tail According to Chris Anderson

        Quickly summarized, the 'Long Tail' refers to the shape of a curve which has a concentration of high values for a small number of occurrences, and tails off to much lower values (approaches zero) for the vast majority of occurrences. The long tail is the part of the graph that is continuously approaching zero.

        In Chris's writing, he examines the long tail of sales for all the products in a given category that were not 'bestsellers', or 'hits', or 'blockbusters', but rather catered to a much smaller niche audience.

        Traditional views of the world see business as a "winner-take-all" venture, where the top two or three products represent 80 to 90 percent of all sales.

        Or where Tiger Woods' income is more than twice Phil Mickelson's, and Phil's is more than twice the next highest. And together, they earn more than the rest of the PGA tour combined.

        We have become acclimatized to thinking there is nothing beyond number 1 and number 2.

        Chris Anderson coined the term Long Tail a couple of years ago in an article he wrote as editor of Wired Magazine. He has expanded his discussion of the Long Tail into a whole book which is now published, and rapidly ascending the NY Times bestseller list (ironically, it is not a 'Long Tail' book, but a very solid 'Head'). 

        Although it has been called the Long Tail theory, much of what Chris has observed is not really theoretical at all, but plainly evident. There is no disputing the shape of sales data curves, nor can we dispute that the internet has introduced a new dynamic to sales of anything that can be digitized (and therefore has a low-cost footprint for storage and distribution).

        What Anderson points out is that through most of the past century, and especially since the advent of broadcast media, we have tended towards a one-size-fits-all kind of mass marketing that emphasizes only the winners, or the head of the curve, and ignores the tail. Yet there are vast numbers of tiny niche products which in total represent much larger markets or unit sales than the hits.

        The new order

        The book is primarily about how the internet changes the economic equation for the the tail of the curve and enables niche products to find their audience efficiently (or vice versa). It focuses on digital and digitizable media and entertainment products - books, CDs, DVDs, film, music where the examples are most obvious because they are all information products.

        Amazon, eBay, Netflix and iTunes have demonstrated amply that with "unlimited shelf space" and near zero-cost accessibility to niche products, huge revenues can be generated from what we used to think of as marginal (loser) products. But we knew that -- all of us have idiosyncratic preferences and things that we buy on foreign vacations because you can't get them here.

        These internet stores just prove what was already obvious -- if you had access to things you like at a reasonable price, you will buy them, no matter how few other people do the same.

        The bigger questions for me concern the niches rather than their aggregation. Internet retailers can generate hit-sized sales volumes from the aggregation of very large number of products selling in relatively small quantities -- their economics aren't so different from the old model, except that more products are in the channel. But that same model doesn't necessarily apply to the producers of small volume niche products.

        What incentives do they have to fill the niche channels and how do they market effectively to make money at this game? Does thinking about things this way imply anything different for the marketer of a bona fide hit, mass market product or those products that are in 3rd through 10th place - the great middle mass market?

        Are there existing markets we can learn from that have always been about selling the long tail?

        These are questions that Anderson largely leaves unanswered, and an area of huge opportunity for businesses that understand we are going through a disruptive realignment of how companies create products and relate to customers.

        What corporate America is only beginning to wake up to is that this realignment changes everything. The iconic companies of the industrial revolution must adapt or die.

        This is also true of the vast army of traditionally-oriented marketing agencies supporting them that still have blinders on as well.

        In my view, we are only beginning to see the upending of long held beliefs about "the right way" to market products. The next few installments of my blog will focus on these long tail marketing issues.

        If you haven't already visited, Chris has an excellent Long Tail blog with links to many other sites discussing Long Tail implications. And, just so that we recognize that the hype the Long Tail is getting doesn't mean that's the only point of view, here's another way of looking at it The Shape of the Tail.