Interview with Moore:
  Monday , Aug 10, 1998 Sun-Thu at 18:00 (GMT+3)
                High Tech Features 
                No Gorillas in Israel 
                By Michael Eilan 
                The more politicians talk about the               wonders of high tech business, the more               nervous the technologists should get. As               a pack, politicians tend to understand only               yesterday's story in business. They talk               about technology business because it's               the only bright spark in a dismal economy,               but by now a lot of people on the inside               know that there is a real pressing problem               in high tech now, and that this problem               needs solutions, fast. 
                Too many people are looking at the               problem in the financial context, as the               many small cap Israeli stocks get               battered week after week on NASDAQ.               The problem, however, is not in the               market. It's in the companies. They grow               nicely, get to the magic IPO, and then               somehow they falter, and growth eases               off, at which point they typically embark on               a new strategy that rarely manages to put               them back on the high growth path. 
                The good news from a man who               specializes in this problem is that we are               not alone. The same thing happens to               countless companies in the U.S. The               problem here might be more acute               because we are so far away from our               market, but the solutions are there.               Michael Tanner is a consultant from the               Chasm Group, a Silicon Valley               consultancy that specializes in the               different and often conflicting strategies               companies need to adopt during various               stages of growth. 
                One of the problems with consultants is               that, while they are highly intelligent,               articulate and convincing, one often gets               the impression that they are talking about               the solution to a problem you don't have.               In Tanner's case, however, the fit between               the problem he describes and the               particular stage of so many Israeli high               tech companies seems perfect. 
                In a telephone interview from the U.S.,               Tanner described four distinct phases in               the growth of a technology based               company. Different marketing strategies               should be used in each stage. It isn't a               bible, and there are some Israeli               companies, such as the RAD group,               which do very well by operating against               the strategies Tanner suggests. But for               every RAD there are dozens which have               hit the brick wall Tanner says he knows               how to break through. 
                The Chasm Group operates in Silicon               Valley. Its name comes from a book               written by the company's founder,               Geoffrey Moore called Crossing the               Chasm. He has since written two other               books, Inside the Tornado and The Gorilla               Gate, that describe other phases in               company development. About a third of               the group's customers are huge               companies like Hewlett Packard, another               third are mid-sized companies, large in               Israeli terms, and the rest are either               start-ups or small companies comparable               to most Israeli technology companies. 
                The key concept that the group brings to               the table is the conflicting desires of               customers in different stages of a               company's growth. Their descriptions of               these stages are: the early stage, the               chasm, the bowling alley, and the tornado.
                A technology company sets out to sell a               product that is new. It gets its first sales               from "visionary buyers of products that               don't exist," according to Tanner, or the               early adopters for whom the main reason               for making the purchase is curiosity. If the               market is big enough and the marketing               is suitable, a company can go public               based on its early success at this stage.               The marketing during this stage,               according to Tanner, has to be broad and               "validate the existence of something               new." 
                Then the company hits a problem which               Tanner describes as the chasm. The early               adopters get bored and move onto               something else because the once new               concept isn't so new any more. The               company has already built up an               expensive infrastructure to cope with the               expected growth pattern, but that growth               somehow does not materialize, and               everybody is unhappy. 
                The problem, Tanner says, is that they are               looking to get a different kind of customer               with old marketing tools. The early               adopters, he says, will always try               something new, but most buyers,               especially in the business-to-business               world where so many Israeli companies               have staked their claim, are typically               averse to risk and feel threatened by new               technology. For Israelis, there is a cultural               problem here as well. The taste for new               things is particularly strong in Israel               especially in consumer markets. A good               example is the cellular phone market, in               which, for a while, Israel had the highest               growth rate in the world. 
                Most entrepreneurs are engineers with a               strong desire to explore new ways of               doing things. So it's hard for them to               understand that most of the customers               are, well, just not like them. Most of these               buyers want two things: a product that               everybody else is buying, because that               supports their decision; and something               that Tanner describes as a "complete               product." 
                "Take an electric car, for example. The               whole product is not only the electric               vehicle, but also solutions to make it easy               to use such as 'Where do I fill it up.?" 
                Companies that want to cross this chasm               have to get into what Tanner describes as               "the bowling alley." They have to fit their               product to specific niches and use it to               solve real problems that managers have               in that niche. He gave the example of               Documentum a company that went public               on the basis of a brilliant, enterprise-wide               document management technology.               Documentum, which, of course, is a client               of his firm, hit the chasm, but solved its               problem by fitting its technology to a               specific niche, the pharmaceutical               market, where there are vast amounts of               documents relating to drugs and their               approval process. The technology offered               a real solution to a pressing need in this               market, and was widely adopted due to a               niche focused marketing strategy. 
                The word niche used to be in fashion in               Israeli technology business till a few years               ago. It fell out of use because it seemed               to describe only small companies, and               was hence not too cool. Tanner talks,               however, about a serial niche approach.               After reaching dominance in one niche               well served by the new technology, the               company should move to the next niche               that can be served by the same solution.               This is where the bowling alley analogy               fits in. Enough of the pins have to be               bowled down to break through to the               pragmatic, risk-averse buyer who will buy               things that other people buy. 
                That's when the tornado takes off, Tanner               says. Probably the only Israeli company               that went through this phase with all of its               ramifications was Scitex. During its glory               days, Scitex's sales went through the               ceiling because its product suddenly               became regarded as the best tool in the               pre-print industry. An article written by               Tanner and Moore in Imaging Business               says: "Tornadoes essentially consist of               pragmatists on a buying binge. They were               once united by a common question - is it               time to move yet? They really didn't want               to buy until it became obvious that the               new technology was an accepted               infrastructure need. But now that it's               obvious, they want to move as a group.               To minimize the risk, they prefer to pick               the same vendor. And, because they want               to establish a comfortable status quo               quickly, they try to get the new technology               infrastructure in place as soon as               possible." 
                The stage after the tornado is when some               companies, like Microsoft, Intel or Cisco,               become Gorillas and dominate, control               and direct their market. But since no               Israeli company has ever reached that               stage, it's more the stuff of fantasy than a               real-life problem. 
                We don't want to mention Check Point, or               do we? Consultant's metaphors are               usually so well honed that they can fit too               many companies. But using the Chasm               Group's terminology one could ask               whether the firewall market was just one               bowling pin (where Check Point has               attained strong dominance) in an               complete alleyway that consists of the               business world's need for secure,               managed communications. If so , its               choice and dilemma would be which pin               to attack next? Virtual Private Networks?               Quality of Service? 
                In any case, most Israeli technology               CEOs would trade in their teeth to have               Check Point's dilemmas. Their problem is               that they have not emerged from the early               stages of success. They must change,               quickly, if only to wipe away the bad luck               of politicians' praise. 
                Published by Israel's Business Arena on               August 9, 1998   |