Girstner did wonders for IBM once. Eisner did it for Disney. Someone will do it for Disney again.
What differentiates Disney from the companies who also had strong assets but are still looking for, or never found, their "wonderman or wonderwoman"?
While Disney's balance sheet is not horrid, their debt load has become a concern for many investors and analysts, and has resulted in the downgrade of their bond ratings, making borrowing more expensive.
So, too, will Disney management. Eisner can't live forever. No, I don't know who we will get, but it is hard to imagine it getting worse.
The next team does not have to be worse than Eisner and his orcs.
You claim to be a big picture person, and if so, you have to acknowledge that finding somebody capable of reversing a downward trend in a company as large as Disney is far from easy, even for good, smart CEOs. Also, Eisner is being asked to pick a successor, and his current leaning appears to be towards Iger. Even if he picks someone else, what in the world makes you think he'll pick somebody much better than himself.
If Eisner doesn't do it, eventually the Board will do it. The Board that Eisner largely has in his pocket.
Again, this doesn't all mean that Disney IS in for much tougher times, but a logical, non-pixie dust influenced analysis does not point to anything better than a 50/50 chance things will improve significantly in the next 5 years....beyond that, its far too murky.
Back in 1997 when the Silver and Black went 4 and 12, did you throw in the towel on them or was there some optimism there that eventually they'd have another AFC championship in them .
Ah yes...my Raiders. Lets take a look, shall we?
At one point, the Raiders HAD a very large and loyal following. The customers loved the team, and they loved the owner. The owner ran the team well, and knew his product.
Ah, but then the owner let his greed take over. He wanted bigger markets, and in the process, alienated his loyal customers.
But his plan failed. He stopped putting the same quality product out that he used to. These new markets had no real loyalty to him or his team...being the fickle market that they were, they merely wanted whatever was hot at the time.
So, still struggling with his product, he returned to the market that used to love and adore him and his product. But many of those loyal customers had been lost. They either lost interest in the mediocre product that didn't cater to them any longer, or they found a new product. A new product from a company that was just across the Bay, and used to be the "weak sister" of the area. Times remained tough for the Raiders. The product was still not up to snuff, and, as a wise man once told us, once you lose a customer, you've got to work 10x as hard to get him back.
The owner finally brought his product back to where is should be, winning the division three years in a row, advancing to the AFC title game twice, and to the Super Bowl once.
But guess what? They still can't sellout their stadium. There are still rumors that the owner will once again seek greener pastures. In they eyes of the majority of the Bay Area, THEY are now the weak sisters of the region.
Its hard to fathom exactly how hard "10x as hard" really is until you actually have to do it.
Now, as a Raider fan, it pains me to write stuff like this. But the simple fact is, the team was mismanaged for years, and strayed from what once made it great. Now, even though the product has improved, its not enough. Further, there are questions about how the man who led the recent revival was run out of town because the owner wouldn't give him more responsibility, and the owner also didn't like the way the upstart was stealing his thunder. (Sound familiar?)
Yeah, as a fan, I never lost hope or lost interest. But as an impartial observer, I also can't ignore the impact of the errors that have been made. Clearly not every Raider fans was as passionate as I.
There's quite a few things that can be learned from the Raiders' example...thanks for bringing it up!
