-> IDEA: market is like an ocean and all companies are fishes. The one that have similar size eat each other.
- Is considered the alternative/ complementary approach to Porter’s.
Introduction:
-> Models are not necessarily fast creatively.
-> We have to find an approach to stimulate strtegic innovation.
❓How can we define strategic innovation?
- Competitive Advantage;
- Business Model: structure and model to develop the strategy;
- Innovatinv strategy: find new sources of competitive advantage. If the BM is strategy execution & we want to execute strategy innovation => We have to change our business model.
History:
- 2004 first article of BOS;
- 2005 become a book;
Characteristics:
- Look for the new markets/ industries, existing competitors not relevant;
- AIM at developing products/ value propositions targeted to the largest possible audience;
- Mainly VISUAL APPROACH to stimulate crativity
- Focus on some “simple” tools to support the identification of potential innovation
Types of Oceans:
RED OCEANS:
-> DEF: all the industries in existence today- the known market space.
- Clear market boundaries;
- Rules are defined and accepted;
- Every company try to grab a greater share of existing demand.
BLUE OCEANS:
-> DEF: all the industries not in existence today – the unknown market space, untainted by competition.
- Demand is created.
-> Create an uncontested market space and make the competition irrilevant => You are enjoing monopoly return.
-> E.g. when the first iphone was released was not a phone, was something else in a blue ocean.
- Try to capture a new demand;
- Riconfiguration of the existing market;
Origins:
- Can rise to completely new industry (like eBay);
- Is created from within a red ocean when a company alters the boundaries of an existing industry (as Cirque du Soleil did with the circus industry)
- It’s not about technological innovation: blue ocean creators link the underlaying technology to what buyers value.
Implementation of the process:
1.Strategic Cureves, As-Is:
-> In the first step we have to evaluate the “as-is” market situation with the As-Is Value Curve.
- Rappresent the competition from existing competitors.
-> DEF AS-IS VALUE CURVES: rappresent the intensity of the competitors for things customers are looking for.
- Define the market, the industry Clients.
E.g. Car market.
- Identification of the value attributes within the industry: Deifne what are the char looking for a car? There are lot’s of element to looking for. E.g.
- Price;
- Safety;
- Performance (fuel efficiency);
- Reliability;
- Desing
VALUE ATTRIBUTES: are that things that customers are looking for in the market.
-> Important features:
-> They need to have a financial or managerial impact (e.g. dedicated time, focus, …) on the Company; E.g. not “brand” but “marketing above the line” | |
-> Clients have to assign a value to the attribute; Not an internal factor, but a perceived benefit E.g. not “know-how” but “tailor made solutions” |
-> Furtermore:
- Valide for the whole industry;
- Limited in number (e.g. < 8) to enable proper focalization;
- Clear, simple, but also sufficiently specific (e.g. not “quality” but “quality of the product related to the packaging”);
- Gullible by the actions of a company.
- Identification and positioning of the strategic group: Define competitors:
INTENSITY LEVEL of OFFER (1-5): try to position exisiting competitiors that are in the market.
- The curve come from defining the dots.
Red-dashed curve: competitors;
Green-continuing curve: our company.
-> Quantitive analysis by listening multiple voices:
- Employees of the company;
- Sentiment analysis of customers;
-> We don’t need to have it accurate;
-> POV: rappresenting customers. Based on the customer, how competitor are based respect us.
2.Brainstorming, Through BOS:
-> In this stage we try to find new innovation paths and customer intrested in these
- Supporting our attempt to find something new.
2.1) 6 innovation Paths:
-> DEF: model telling us that if we want to innovate we can’t look only to our business area, but somewhere else.
📌Enahance strategice “lateral thinking”.
- STRATEGIC GROUP: group of strategical competitors;
-> Find clusters and ask yourself if i can reshuffle things or if I can find something intresting for them.
- BUYER GROUP:
-> We can find o create a new segmentation
- PRODUCT/ SERVICE OFFERING:
COMPLEMENTAR: increasing value of your offer. E.g.: coffy and croissant, together are increasing the value.
- FUNCTIONAL-EMOTIONAL:
-> Are about the functional or emotional characteristics of a product.
-> You can rebalance these two categories to change the feeling that customer have about the products;
Realization:
INDUSTRY: | Which are the industries that satisfy the same needs or complementary needs? On which features does the company need to focus, in order to get closer to these other sectors? | |
STRATEGIC GROUPS | Which are the drivers that bring the clients to the decision of buying our products/ services or to “differently” satsfy the same need? | |
BUYER GROUPS | On which buyer groups does the current market focus? Direct clients or clients’client? Which type of values can be created, by a shift of the purchase decision? | |
SCOPE OF PRODUCT/ SERVICE OFFERING | How does the product/ service fit in the adoption experience of the customer? What happens before and after the usage? Is it possible to add complementary products/ services? Is it possible to shift the focus towards the service or towards the product? | |
FUNCTIONAL/ EMOTIONAL ORIENTATION | If the competition is concentrated on the functional (emotional) appeal, which emotional (functional) elements could be integrated? | |
LOOK ACROSS TIME | Which trend will most probably hit the sector? What does the endless exrtapolation of this trend imply? How is it possible to exploit this trend? |
2.2) Non-Clients’ Framework:
-> Companies want to focus on the the segment of client called “non-client”: are that client that are not, already, your client.
- Following the idea that company has to find new ocean (BLU one) even new clients.
- Rappresent the new demand.
- SOON-TO-BE NON-CLIENTS: currently buying a car, but could be frustrated or not happy about the product and are searching another solution.
- HINDERED NON-CLIENTS: are customer who never though to buy a car because there are adoption barriers;
- UNEXPLORED NON-CLIENTS: people who never even thouth to buy a car because create pollution. -> Electrical one.
3.Re-Creating the Value Curves:
-> Once defined the characteristics (innovation, values, clients) of the new market, we try to understand how move from the hold industry to the new one.
3.1) The “4 Action” framework:
-> We know what are the sources
- ELIMINATE old value attributes that don’t fit anymore with the market.
- REDUCE value attributes that are important, because they improve the value, but not so much
-> Usually key resources.
- INCREASE/ INCREASE:
- CREATE: new things that are created;
3.2) Profitable Growth Equation:
- VALUE INNOVATION: created in the region where a company’s actions faborabiliy affect both cost structure and its value proporisition to buyers;
- COST SAVINGS: made by eliminating and reducing the factors an industry competes on;
- BUYER VALUE: lifted by raising and creating elements the industry has never offered;
- OVER TIME & COSTS are reduced further as scale economies kick in due to the high sales volumes that superior value generate.
4.New Blue Ocean, Strategy:
-> We have to create the new market.
4.1) To-Be Calue Curves (and tag-lines):
- The two curves has the same shape => This because in R.O. companies have the same structure, same competitive advantage.
-> AS-IS is the red curve;
-> TO-BE is the blue curve.
-> If we touch the 5 line => the things are too complicated, we are overshooting.
- DIVERGING from the redonws: red curves have the same shape, the blue is unique;
- LEAD to asking new questions.
- Don’t OVERSHOOTING: create something that people don’t want.
📌Is more difficult eliminate old things than create new one, because people are hard to change.
4.2) Three test for a good Value Curve
-> Connecting the dots of the Blue Ocean and Strategy Analysis:
There is a difference bwtween analysis of competition and competitors;
COMPETITION ANALYSIS: level of external forces in an integrated view, we use the 5 forces’ porter model to define them.
- Evaluation of intensity of the aggregated competitive forces of the market.
- Supporting you to undestand if competition, as whole, is a strength or weaknesses.
COMPETITIOR ANALYSIS: this competitor is strong here and we bare.
->Blue Ocean Strategy models Are a Glorified SWOT;
-> Introduction to enterpreneural strategy;