It is entirely plausible to imagine a future where the largest technology incumbents: Meta, Google, Microsoft spend the next decade quietly harvesting their respective Cash Cows. Each company has a franchise so profitable, so structurally defensible, that rational corporate behavior would be to maintain the machine: improve efficiency, protect margins, return capital, avoid existential risk. Meta (ads engine), Google (another ads engine), Microsoft (Office and Windows, Azure) each is a business most Fortune 50 companies would happily settle into for the remainder of their corporate lives.
Yet we do not live in a world where these firms are behaving like that.
Instead, all three are acting cohesively as if their most profitable businesses represent local minima on a broader landscape of possibilities, and that remaining in place would eventually become a trap. They are redeploying capital and talent, restructuring internal architectures, replacing infrastructure, and placing multi-decade bets that most incumbents would consider impractical, irresponsible, or unnecessary. The remarkable reality is that three of the most profitable companies in history are behaving as if their current dominant positions are insufficient.
The point is not to praise their foresight, because the game is still in motion.
The point is that they are providing an alternative perspective to the incumbent's most seductive illusion: that Cash Cow economics reflects a stable baseline rather than the tapering end of historical compounding. The behavior of these firms is simply a contemporary entry point into a deeper question -- why incumbents get stuck, and why escaping a Cash Cow local minimum requires a different comparison set than the one most organizations use.
The Cash Cow Paradox (a.k.a. the Local Minima Trap)
B-school cliche: March's exploration versus exploitation, Christensen's innovator's dilemma, Teece's dynamic capabilities all circle a common structural tension: the better a Cash Cow performs, the harder it becomes to escape its gravitational pull.
High margins behave like a local minimum in a loss landscape. Organizations optimize themselves so thoroughly around peaks that any deviation or friction, even one leading toward a higher global optimum, registers internally as regression. Incumbents are professionally and culturally allergic to short set-backs. A single quarter of downtrend destabilizes narratives and triggers outsized stock price reactions.
As a result, the comparison set becomes broken.
When a Cash Cow is this good, everything else looks unconvincingly worse. Not because the new venture is inherently weak, but because the incumbent curve was inflated by past tailwinds.
Kodak never committed to digital photography despite inventing it. Against the backdrop of film economics: high margins, recurring cost structure, deeply entrenched manufacturing, digital looked inferior by every available metric. The film business created a reference frame that made any alternative appear irrational.
A Better Way to Think About Exploration (It's Not About that Next $100)
Most incumbents frame exploration as a tiny fork in the road:
"Should we invest the next $100 into our Cash Cow or into the new thing?"
This is the wrong question because it treats exploration like a project and exploitation like a baseline. But exploitation is not a baseline. It is the product of historical compounding, unrepeatable tailwinds, and a deeply entrenched infrastructure.
The right comparison should be closer to:
- How much capital have we sunk into becoming the incumbent? (Call that $X.)
- What's the ROIC on that fully-loaded historical investment? (Call it $Y.)
- If we deployed the same kind of capital and time into the frontier, what is the long-run ROIC? (That's $Z.)
Now compare Y vs. Z, not the ROI of the next $100. Because, uncomfortable as it is to admit: the Cash Cow's economics include decades of compounding advantages that no new bets get on day one. This is why the marginal-ROI heuristic is structurally biased toward the incumbent. It evaluates decades of compounding against an experiment.
No banker or consultant will ever say: "Invest in this unproven idea; it might redefine your company." And none will admit: "We have no idea how big it could get."
So as the decision-maker, you are alone. No credible external validation. Shareholders waving the keys to your metaphorical 2nd yacht if you simply keep doing the most predictable, the easiest to explain, and the deadliest blow: the most profitable incumbent thing.
The Coca-Cola Story: You Don't Get the Tailwind Twice
For Coca-Cola, aside from coming up with the soda machine and making the Santa red, a crucial accelerant that was never mentioned: the company's privileged position during World War II. The U.S. military effectively underwrote Coca-Cola's international expansion by ensuring that factories, bottling plants, and distribution routes followed the movement of American troops. Markets that would have taken decades to reach were opened in a matter of years, not because of foresight, but because an extraordinary geopolitical moment aligned perfectly with the company's ambitions.
No amount of pre-planned strategy can reproduce that kind of tailwind. It was a singular, non-repeatable force of history.
Early Facebook benefited from its own version of that privilege. The social graph was uncontested terrain, CAC were negligible, and user attention was effectively a blue sea. The first credible mover absorbed the entire demand curve before competitors could mobilize. That early compounding is impossible to recreate today.
These episodes underscore why incumbent ROICs are so deceptively attractive. They are inflated by circumstances that cannot be engineered twice. Benchmarking exploratory ventures against Cash Cow economics is analytically incorrect. The Cash Cow's performance is a historical artifact shaped by timing, tailwinds, and irreversible compounding. Not a baseline for judging future bets.
A similar dynamic shaped the demise of film photography. The transition to digital coincided with macroeconomic forces that expanded the global middle class and shifted consumer preferences toward convenience and near-zero marginal cost behavior. Early digital cameras appeared inferior and expensive, yet the lifetime economics of "taking pictures" collapsed from a recurring cost structure into a near-free one. Once that shift occurred, incumbents were no longer competing on product quality; they were competing against an entirely new economic regime. No amount of execution strength could counteract a structural tailwind that rewrote the unit economics of the category itself.
The Real Lesson
Incumbents fail not because they misunderstand disruption, but because they misinterpret their own baselines. They assume Cash Cow economics reflect enduring skill rather than the cumulative effect of historical tailwinds. They compare new curves to old curves without adjusting for the distortions created by decades of compounding.
The XYZ model, simple as it is, corrects this fallacy. It reframes the decision in the only terms that matter:
What is the fully-loaded return on the system we built, and what could be the fully-loaded return on the system we would build next?
Kodak misread its comparison set. Most organizations still do. Meta, Google, and Microsoft are choosing not to.
And that -- not AI hype, not founder psychology, not market pressure -- is the strategic distinction worth paying attention to.