The WSJ Got Quarterly Reporting Wrong
Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney
Release Date: 09/23/2025
Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney
In August 2025, Polish researchers tested something nobody had thought to check: what happens to doctors' skills after they rely on AI assistance? The AI worked perfectly—catching problems during colonoscopies, flagging abnormalities faster than human eyes could. But when researchers pulled the AI away, the doctors' detection rates had dropped. They'd become less skilled at spotting problems on their own. We're all making decisions like this right now. A solution fixes the immediate problem—but creates a second-order consequence that's harder to see and often more damaging than what we...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
You're frozen. The deadline's approaching. You don't have all the data. Everyone wants certainty. You can't give it. Sound familiar? Maybe it's a hiring decision with three qualified candidates and red flags on each one. Or a product launch where the market research is mixed. Or a career pivot where you can't predict which path leads where. You want more information. More time. More certainty. But you're not going to get it. Meanwhile, a small group of professionals—poker players, venture capitalists, military strategists—consistently make better decisions than the rest of us in exactly...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
Try to go through a day without using an analogy. I guarantee you'll fail within an hour. Your morning coffee tastes like yesterday's batch. Traffic is moving like molasses. Your boss sounds like a broken record. Every comparison you make—every single one—is your brain's way of understanding the world. You can't turn it off. When someone told you ChatGPT is "like having a smart assistant," your brain immediately knew what to expect—and what to worry about. When Netflix called itself "the HBO of streaming," investors understood the strategy instantly. These comparisons aren't just...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
$37 billion. That's how much gets wasted annually on marketing budgets because of poor attribution and misunderstanding of what actually drives results. Companies' credit campaigns that didn't work. They kill initiatives that were actually succeeding. They double down on coincidences while ignoring what's actually driving outcomes. Three executives lost their jobs this month for making the same mistake. They presented data showing success after their initiatives were launched. Boards approved promotions. Then someone asked the one question nobody thought to ask: "Could something else...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
You see a headline: "Study Shows Coffee Drinkers Live Longer." You share it in 3 seconds flat. But here's what just happened—you confused correlation with causation, inductive observation with deductive proof, and you just became a vector for misinformation. Right now, millions of people are doing the exact same thing, spreading beliefs they think are facts, making decisions based on patterns that don't exist, all while feeling absolutely certain they're thinking clearly. We live in a world drowning in information—but starving for truth. Every day, you're presented with hundreds of...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
The Crisis We're Not Talking About We're living through the greatest thinking crisis in human history—and most people don't even realize it's happening. Right now, AI generates your answers before you've finished asking the question. Search engines remember everything so you don't have to. Algorithms curate your reality, telling you what to think before you've had the chance to think for yourself. We've built the most sophisticated cognitive tools humanity has ever known, and in doing so, we've systematically dismantled our ability to use our own minds. A recent MIT study found that students...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
Most innovation leaders are performing someone else's version of innovation thinking. I've spent decades in this field. Worked with Fortune 100 companies. And here's what I see happening everywhere. Brilliant leaders following external frameworks. Copying methodologies from people they admire. Shifting their approach based on whatever's trendy. But they never develop their own innovation thinking skills. Today, I'd like to share a simple practice that has transformed my life. And I'll show you exactly how I do it. The Problem Here's what I see in corporate America. Leaders are reacting to...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
Michael Dell and his investors spent twenty-five billion dollars to buy back Dell Technologies. But they weren't really buying a company. They were buying freedom from quarterly earnings pressure. I'm Phil McKinney, former CTO of Hewlett-Packard, and I witnessed how this pressure shaped decisions for years. Today, we are exploring why the misses what actually happens inside corporate boardrooms. The Reality of Quarterly Pressure I want to show you what quarterly reporting actually looks like from the inside. Let me paint you a picture. It's week seven of the quarter, and you're in a...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
What if I told you that the people who disagree with you are actually your secret weapon for better thinking? Just last month, my wife and I had a heated argument about studio changes I wanted to make here on the ranch. Her immediate reaction was about cost. Mine was about productivity and creativity. We were talking past each other completely. But when I applied what I'm about to teach you, we discovered we were both right—and found a solution that addressed both concerns without compromising either. What started as an argument became a session where each of us was heard and...
info_outlineKiller Innovations with Phil McKinney
In 2005, I had a ten-minute conversation at San Jose Airport that generated billions in revenue for HP. But here's what's fascinating: three other HP executives heard the exact same conversation and saw nothing special about it. If you read Monday's Studio Notes, you know this story from the emotional side—what it felt like to have that breakthrough moment, the internal resistance I faced, the personal transformation that followed. Today I'm delivering on my promise to give you the complete tactical methodology behind that insight. I'm going to show you the systematic framework I call...
info_outlineMichael Dell and his investors spent twenty-five billion dollars to buy back Dell Technologies. But they weren't really buying a company. They were buying freedom from quarterly earnings pressure.
I'm Phil McKinney, former CTO of Hewlett-Packard, and I witnessed how this pressure shaped decisions for years. Today, we are exploring why the WSJ's recent defense of quarterly reporting misses what actually happens inside corporate boardrooms.
The Reality of Quarterly Pressure
I want to show you what quarterly reporting actually looks like from the inside.
Let me paint you a picture. It's week seven of the quarter, and you're in a conference room with your executive team. On the screen are two critical numbers - your revenue projection and Wall Street's expectations. They don't align.
During my time as CTO at HP, I found myself in these situations repeatedly. R&D projects worth billions in the future would get paused. Innovation initiatives that could transform the company would get delayed.
Not because they lacked value. But because we had weeks to hit the quarterly numbers.
What struck me was how predictable this became. Quarter-end approaches? Cut the long-term stuff. Meet short-term targets. Rinse and repeat.
When your stock price swings ten percent over missing earnings by three cents per share, you optimize for quarterly performance, even when it destroys long-term competitiveness.
Now, this is where it gets interesting. One CEO escaped this system entirely.
The Dell Example: Twenty-Five Billion Dollar Proof
Here's the proof that this system is broken.
Michael Dell and Silver Lake paid $ 24.9 billion for one thing: freedom from quarterly earnings pressure, killing Dell's long-term potential.
Dell's explicit goal: "No more pulling R&D and growth investments to make in-quarter numbers."
What happened next was remarkable. R&D spending jumped from just over one billion to over four billion dollars. That's a 400 percent increase. Dell transformed from a declining PC manufacturer to an enterprise solutions leader.
The return on investment by 2023? Seventy billion dollars.
What Dell did wasn't just a corporate restructuring. It was a twenty-five billion dollar bet that quarterly reporting destroys long-term value. And they were proven spectacularly right.
If you've experienced similar pressure at your company, I'd love to hear about it in the comments.
Why the WSJ Analysis Falls Apart
So with examples like Dell showing the impact, why does the WSJ still support quarterly reporting?
The WSJ points to the UK's optional move from quarterly to semi-annual reporting and notes that companies didn't dramatically change behavior. Their conclusion: quarterly reporting isn't the real problem.
That reasoning ignores a fundamental truth. We've trained an entire generation to think in ninety-day cycles. Business schools teach earnings management. Compensation rewards quarterly performance. Analysts' careers depend on short-term predictions. Journalists need something to write about, like quarterly results.
You don't undo decades of this quarterly mindset simply by making reporting optional. The UK comparison is meaningless without addressing the ecosystem that reinforces short-term thinking.
The Big Tech Illusion
The WSJ claims Big Tech's AI investments prove quarterly reporting doesn't hinder long-term thinking.
The argument misses the point completely. Google, Microsoft, and Meta can hide enormous R&D in their massive profit margins.
When you're generating margins of twenty to thirty percent on hundreds of billions in revenue? You can invest billions in moonshots while still beating quarterly expectations.
But what about manufacturing companies with five percent margins? Healthcare companies fighting regulations? Emerging tech businesses that can't disguise innovation investments?
The current system creates a two-tiered economy. Only the most profitable companies can think long term. Everyone else gets trapped in quarterly optimization cycles.
And that's precisely why this threatens America's competitive future.
What's Really at Stake
America's competitive advantage came from patient, long-term investments in breakthrough technologies. Semiconductors, the internet, biotechnology - all required decades of sustained investment.
Today's quarterly regime systematically discourages ”patient innovation”.
I call it the "fifty-year overnight success" - transformative innovations need sustained investment over decades. Try explaining that to analysts who want to know why margins dropped two percent.
While we optimize for quarters, competitors in China make decade-long investments in critical technologies. We're giving away our innovation advantage.
Three Real Solutions
Switching to semi-annual reporting solves nothing. Six months isn't different from three months for long-term thinking.
Three reforms could actually move the needle:
First - eliminate forward-looking earnings guidance. This forces public commitments about future performance, creating pressure to hit predictions regardless of better opportunities.
Second - separate long-term innovation investments from operational expenses in accounting. Give investors visibility into both current performance and future potential.
Third - create metrics and incentives that reward patient capital deployment, not just quarterly performance.
The Bottom Line
The stakes aren't an abstract policy debate. It's about America's economic future.
Academic research provides a valuable perspective, but there's often a gap between theory and practice when it comes to corporate decision-making under pressure.
In my experience, there's often a significant gap between how these systems work in theory versus practice. The quarterly reporting system creates pressures that can undermine long-term thinking, even when that's not the intention.
Next time the Wall Street Journal analyzes corporate behavior, here's an idea: talk to someone who's actually lived it.
If these insights were useful to you, I'd appreciate your support through a like or subscription.
I'm curious about your experiences with this. Have you seen quarterly pressure affect decision-making at your company? What changes would make the most difference?
For more perspectives on innovation and corporate strategy, you can find it here. I've also written a full op-ed rebuttal to the WSJ article on my Substack publication Studio Notes.