bg image
  http://www.strategizeblue.com/common/Image/Logo/logo.png   http://www.strategizeblue.com/common/Image/Content/Headercontact.png

Wikipedia: Changed the Model for Which We Obtain Information

October 20th, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

Wikipedia, the free, web-based encyclopedia consisting of over 16 million articles, has changed how people get access to new information and changed the model for which we obtain information.

 

Wikipedia is ranked by Alexa as the seventh most visited website in the world. Over its rapid growth since being launched in 2001, it no longer just serves as an encyclopedia reference but as a news source due to the rapid rate in which articles are submitted. Wikipedia’s business model operates on the similar platform that the Web 2.0 boom real-time forums do such as Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and MySpace which have enabled consumers to not only act as content consumers, but become content producers. As the most visited internet-based reference tool, Wikipedia articles are produced collectively by individuals around the world and uploaded to the site in real-time.

 

The encyclopedic site has successfully challenged all of the traditional industry beliefs and redefined the rules of the game. Wikipedia has been able to value innovate by eliminating factors that the industry takes for granted, reduced factors should be reduced well below the industry’s standard, raised factors that should be raised well above industry standard and created factors that the industry has never offered.

 

A Look Into Blue Ocean Strategy: Blue Ocean Strategy Formulation Process

October 12th, 2010

Blue Ocean Strategy is a systematic process for making the competition irrelevant through the simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost. Blue Ocean Strategy tools and frameworks include the strategy canvas, value curve, four actions framework, six paths framework, buyer experience cycle, buyer utility map and the blue ocean index. The three key conceptual building blocks of Blue Ocean Strategy are value innovation, tipping point leadership and fair process. As an integrated approach to strategy Blue Ocean Strategy requires organizations to develop and align the three strategy propositions: value proposition, profit proposition and people proposition.  

No strategy is good just by being formulated. 

 

Good strategy has to be executed well enough to and focus on the strategy formulation and execution. 

 

Blue Ocean Strategy uses Tipping Point Leadership and Fair Process to ensure that strategy execution is built into the formulation process so that its not that you have an excellent strategy that does not get implemented. 

 

Traditionally strategies are formed in closed rooms and then rolled out – some of them succeed some of them fail. Blue Ocean Strategy the process brings execution into the formulation process right from the very beginning. 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Can My Company Be Like Starbucks?

September 27th, 2010

Can My Company Be Like Starbucks? How Starbucks took coffee from commodity to emotional experience.

It used to be that a cup of coffee was just that — a cup of coffee, and it was something you got in the morning on your way to work or in the company break room.

But Starbucks, with little fanfare or advertising, changed the way we look at coffee. Instead of it being a commodity we barely noticed, it became the center of a deeper experience: a rich indulgence, a treat to share with friends and a way to meet new people. Strategy and Innovation Management Expert Dr. Zunaira Munir thinks that the business principles that drove Starbucks can help other businesses accomplish similar revolutions in their individual industries.

So many companies determine their course based on what their competition is doing, and that approach often leads to failure. “Starbucks ran its own race, ignoring competition from neighborhood cafes and donut shops, and used innovation to shape a completely unique consumer experience. If more companies shadowed that philosophy, they’d be more successful in the long term, Dr. Munir.”

Dr. Munir’s specialization is in revolutionary business strategy, Blue Ocean Strategy. Blue Ocean Strategy lets you see your business and its environment from a different perspective, so that you approach your market in a different manner. Instead of trying to get a bigger share of the existing market demand, you create new demand and new uncontested marketspaces where competition becomes irrelevant. Instead of trying to better serve existing customers of the industry, you look for noncustomers. Instead of pursuing segmentation to capture small market niches, you de-segment the market by focusing on commonalities between customers and noncustomers.

Starbucks did it by approaching the consumer market in a way that no one else was doing.

Starbucks turned the coffee industry on its head by shifting its focus from commodity coffee sales to the emotional atmosphere in which customers enjoy their coffee. Starbucks sold a retailing concept: the coffee bar, offering relaxation and conversation, and drinks made with quality beans, frothy and flavored milks, creams, syrups and ices. While $3 for a cup of Starbucks’ coffee is outrageous compared with the cost of a cup of instant coffee at home, consumers did not see it that way. They judged Starbucks as an indulgence, so the steep price appeared good value for money. Starbucks turned the coffee industry on its head by shifting its focus from commodity coffee sales to the emotional atmosphere in which customers enjoy their coffee. With almost no advertising, Starbucks became an international brand with margins roughly five times the industry average.

Blue Ocean Strategy refers to this as value innovation, because it enables you to offer something of a greater value without increasing your in-house costs for that extra value. This is possible as innovation becomes an ongoing part of your company’s development process.

By pursuing value innovation you are able to offer a quantum leap in value for the buyers while simultaneously lowering your cost structure. That’s how you generate greater profits for your company.

Blue Ocean Strategy Success Stories: How Lexus Rapidly Won Market Share

September 13th, 2010

In today’s overcrowded industries, competing head-on results in nothing but a bloody red ocean of rivals fighting over a shrinking pool. Companies have long engaged in head-to-head competition in search of sustained profitable growth, they have fought for competitive advantage, battled for market share and struggled for differentiation. Blue Ocean Strategy argues that tomorrows leading companies will succeed not by battling competitors, but by creating “blue oceans” of uncontested market space, where competition is rendered irrelevant of companies that made competition irrelevant in their industries to elicit the strategic logic behind Blue Ocean Strategy.

In the luxury car market Toyota created Lexus between the high end group of Mercedes, BMW, and Jaguar and the low end group of Cadillac and Lincoln in the luxury car industry. The Lexus provided nearly one-third of its operating profit within three years of its launching in 1989, while representing only 2% of Toyota’s unit volume. Lexus focused on combining the distinctive strengths of both strategic groups in the luxury car market - namely the lower price point of Cadillac and Lincoln and the high engineering performance and design of the European imports - to unlock breakthrough value to luxury car buyers. By combining the key factors that make luxury car buyers trade up and trade down between these two strategic groups, Lexus rapidly won share from both groups by offering unprecedented price performance value.

Blue Ocean Strategy Success Stories: Cisco Systems Creates New Market Space

September 13th, 2010

In today’s overcrowded industries, competing head-on results in nothing but a bloody red ocean of rivals fighting over a shrinking pool. Companies have long engaged in head-to-head competition in search of sustained profitable growth, they have fought for competitive advantage, battled for market share and struggled for differentiation. Blue Ocean Strategy argues that tomorrows leading companies will succeed not by battling competitors, but by creating “blue oceans” of uncontested market space, where competition is rendered irrelevant of companies that made competition irrelevant in their industries to elicit the strategic logic behind Blue Ocean Strategy.

Cisco systems recognized that the world was hampered by slow data exchanges and incompatible computer networks. Demand was exploding as, among other factors, the number of Internet users doubled roughly every one hundred days. So Cisco could clearly see that the problem would inevitably worsen. Cisco’s routers, switches, and other networking devices were designed to create breakthrough value for customers, offering fast data exchanges in a seamless networking environment. Thus Cisco’s insight is as much about value innovation as it is about technology. Today more than 80% of all traffic on the Internet goes through Cisco’s products, and its gross margins in this new market space have been in the 60% range. Cisco Systems created a new market space by thinking across time trends. It started with a decisive and irreversible trend that had a clear trajectory: the growing demand for high-speed data exchange.

 

A Peak into the Guru’s Mind: Ready, Fire, Aim Zero to $100 million in No Time Flat

September 3rd, 2010

International best-selling Blue Ocean Strategy authors, W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne have been recognized amongst the brightest business thinkers and strategy gurus. Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Make Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant has sold over 2 million copies and has been published in 42 languages, breaking Harvard Business School Press’ historical record of most foreign language translations ever achieved. Kim and Mauborgne co-founded the Blue Ocean Strategy Network, a global community of practices on the Blue Ocean Strategy family of concepts created. The Observer called Kim and Mauborgne, “The next big gurus to hit the business world.”

“Don’t wait until everything is perfect. Fire away!”

 

Author Michael Masterston includes in his business book Ready, Fire, Aim Zero to $100 million in No Time Flat.

 

Masterston believes successful entrepreneurial businesses typically progress through four stages: “Infancy, Childhood, Adolescence and Adulthood.” When launching a business allocating around 80% of the company’s efforts on sales is essential. He feels it is important to seek out an “optimum selling strategy” for your product or service.

 

Ready, Fire, Aim points out that regardless of your company’s convictions, customers will ultimately decide the value of your product or service, but to understand the difference between customers’ “wants” “and needs.”

 

Furthermore, treating every customer cordially but saving the royal treatment for your big spenders is vital to turn Zero to $100 million in No Time Flat. However, it is important to try to know more about sales and marketing than anyone else in your firm.

 

Masterston stresses that innovation and brainstorming go hand in hand and feels you can turn outstanding employees into superstars!

 

 

Blue Ocean Strategy Engagements: Syncom Business Intelligence BOS Keynote Presentation

September 2nd, 2010

Blue Ocean Strategy is not just relevant for corporations and business strategies; it is just as applicable at every scale right from a country’s national strategy, to a small business’ success, to an individual’s career development and even to personal relationships. By taking a big picture view on the competitor’s strategies and with a conscientious effort to make competition irrelevant to success, Blue Ocean Strategy systematically breaks out of red oceans and turns strategy blue. 

Senior Global Blue Ocean Strategy Member Dr. Zunaira Munir is scheduled to conduct a Blue Ocean Strategy Keynote Presentation in for Syncom Business Intelligence’s 3rd Annual Marketing, Branding and Web Optimization Conference being held in Johannesburg, South Africa on October 26th-28th, 2010. The conference will feature leading African business CEOs and executive directors from all sectors of the economy. Blue Ocean Strategy has not yet been initiated in South Africa as the presentation will assist the marketing and branding experts initiate their own blue ocean ideas.

 

Conference Overview

 

2010 is poised to be an exciting year of marketers, it is a decade defined by a shift in communications from traditional media to a worldwide conversation that flows faster and further due to the social media revolutions such as Twitter, Facebook, blogs and online videos, web optimization and incorporating sports marketing tactics.

 

From the Rise of social marketing to advances in technology and new applications, everything about internet marketing is changing. Over the past few years, businesses have developed a significant digital footprint. 2010 is the year to develop a strategy that allows you to control that image in the burgeoning ‘do-it-yourself’ culture. Marketers, brand managers and executive management will be transformed into value pioneers who will be cash generators of tomorrow after mastering the value innovation strategy which will enable companies represented to open new uncontested market spaces.  

 

Outcomes and Benefits

 

Gain insight on the marketing trends of 2010 and beyond, how to reap the benefits of digital media and how to detect and deal with negative or threatening responses from social mediums, understanding online performance based on marketing for guaranteed ROI, increasing the visibility of the companies web page using search engine optimization fundamental, grasping affiliated marketing programs for a higher percentage of overall online sales generation, an encompassing overview of the African market with a variety of relevant case studies for a mix of audience from public to private sectors and non-profit sectors.

 

A Peak into the Guru’s Mind: Predict Industry Change

August 27th, 2010

International best-selling Blue Ocean Strategy authors, W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne have been recognized amongst the brightest business thinkers and strategy gurus. Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Make Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant has sold over 2 million copies and has been published in 42 languages, breaking Harvard Business School Press’ historical record of most foreign language translations ever achieved. Kim and Mauborgne co-foundedthe Blue Ocean Strategy Network, a global community of practices on the Blue Ocean Strategy family of concepts created. The Observer called Kim and Mauborgne, “The next big gurus to hit the business world.”

“Consumers do not purchase a product – they purchase a job. Companies should see how customers use products and take the appropriate cues.”

 

Seeing What’s Next by Clayton M. Christensen, Scott D. Anthony and Erik A. Roth focuses on using the theories of innovation to predict industry change. The authors emphasize that theory can be useful – if put into practice.

 

Seeing What’s Next states there are two kinds of innovations: sustaining and disruptive and companies derive their capabilities from resources, processes and values. Initially, disruptive innovations offer poor performance but ultimately redefine the value proposition for an industry, while sustaining innovations support established industries but often reach a point at which they outstrip market needs

 

While Christensen, Anthony and Roth believe the education, airline and health care industries are favorable for disruptive innovation non-market forces, such as government regulations, can make or break innovation. In the face of disruptive innovation the same resources, processes and values that help make companies successful can also incapacitate them.

 

The authors share that companies should innovate with better products for high-margin customers, with cheap alternatives for low-end buyers with offers for current non consumers.

 

 

Blue Ocean Strategy Sucess Stories: The Cheapest Car in the World

August 26th, 2010

Image by Google

 

In today’s overcrowded industries, competing head-on results in nothing but a bloody red ocean of rivals fighting over a shrinking pool. Companies have long engaged in head-to-head competition in search of sustained profitable growth, they have fought for competitive advantage, battled for market share and struggled for differentiation. Blue Ocean Strategy argues that tomorrows leading companies will succeed not by battling competitors, but by creating “blue oceans” of uncontested market space, where competition is rendered irrelevant of companies that made competition irrelevant in their industries to elicit the strategic logic behind Blue Ocean Strategy.

Tata Nano – Tata Motors’ wildly successful four-passenger city vehicle has revolutionized the Indian car market while proving that cheap does not always mean bad quality.

 

As the leading automobile company in India Tata Motors achieved what is known as the cornerstone of Blue Ocean Strategy – value innovation. Value innovation is the simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost.

 

The Nano is the least expensive production car in the world priced just around USD 2,200. But how does the Nano differ from the many failed Indian Brands that have focused on low price?

 

Simple. Tata Motors was able to reconstruct buyer value elements by generating a new value curve.

 

Cheap does not mean bad quality. They were able to produce a quality product and value innovate by focusing on creating a leap of value for buyers and for the company and in this case, opened up new and uncontested market space. Blue Ocean Strategy states that value to buyers comes from the offering’s utility minus its price, and because value to the company is generated from the offering’s price minus its cost, value innovation is achieved only when the whole system of utility, price and cost is aligned.

 

In Blue Ocean Strategy to break the trade-off between differentiation and low cost to create a new value curve as they did, there are four questions (Four Actions Framework) that challenge an industry’s strategic logic and business model: Which factors does the industry take for granted and should be eliminated, which factors should be reduced below industry standard, which factors should be raised well above and created that the industry has never been offered?

 

Most families in India have two-wheeled vehicles and predominately drive in the city under 300 km. Recognizing the potential of the industry and asking these four questions Tata designed the Nano primarily for the Indian market. In the efforts to make an affordable car Tata Motor’s eliminated many of the non-essential features by not including airbags, air-conditioning, designing a rear-engine that only has two cylinders, no power steering which is not necessary because the car is so light, only using three lug nuts on the wheels instead of four, using only one windshield wiper instead of two, reducing the amount of steel used in the design and depending on lower priced Indian labor.  

 

As a result the reliable vehicle serves the functional purpose of transportation at an affordable price – the world’s cheapest car.

 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Is Innovation Trial and Error?

August 24th, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

In this composition we attempt to review and analyze the concepts Blue Ocean Strategy and Innovation. We look into the history of innovation, traditional theories, the development and the present state of the field in comparison with the systematic process Blue Ocean Strategy developed in 2005. By evaluating innovation and Blue Ocean Strategy as separate entities we hope to provide a comprehensive distinction in how the concepts are perceived. This would give us an in-depth understanding of the fundamental differences between traditional competition-based theories and the theories and methodologies of Blue Ocean Strategy.

 

In this section we provide the commonly used definitions and understandings of innovation, as well as its connection to the term entrepreneur. Peter Drucker, author and scholar, and Joseph Schumpeter, economist and political scientist, offer the most popular understandings of innovation and entrepreneur. The field of innovation is roughly fifty years old.

 

Drucker describes innovation as what entrepreneurs do - innovation represents the specific tool of entrepreneurs, the means by which they exploit change as an opportunity for a different business or difference service. Innovation involves, changing the value and satisfaction obtained from resources by the customer. More specifically, Drucker defines innovation as the specific instrument of entrepreneurship…the act that endows resources with a new capacity to create wealth. Entrepreneurs are described by Drucker as inviduals who create something new or different or “opportunity seekers.”

 

Schumpeter defines innovation as the introduction of new goods, new methods of production, the opening of new markets, the conquest of new sources of supply and the carrying out of a new organization of any industry. Schumpeter is also popularly known for his theory of “creative destruction.” Schumpeter described creative destruction as brought on by entrepreneurs who constantly overturn the economic status quo.

 

For reference purposes other popular definitions include, “the act of introducing something new” (American Heritage Dictionary) and “a new method or device” (Webster Online).

 

In this section of the composition we provide the definition and brief background of Blue Ocean Strategy. The terms included in this section will be explained further as comparable to innovation pertaining to sections. Blue Ocean Strategy is the systematic approach for making competition irrelevant by creating new marketspaces through the simultaneous achievement of differentiation and low cost. The three key conceptual building blocks of Blue Ocean Strategy are value innovation, tipping point leadership and fair process. Blue Ocean Strategy is the result of a decade-long study of 150 strategic moves spanning more than 30 industries over 100 years (1880-2000). The concepts of Blue Ocean Strategy were developed by INSEAD professors W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne and published in the form of a book by Harvard Business Press in 2005. 

 

This section compares and contrasts the fundamental difference between the traditional innovation belief that innovation is random, driven by an entrepreneur and Blue Ocean Strategy as a systematic approach that is patterned. Although there is a need for constant innovation it has often been viewed as random – an idea dependent upon genius. Schumpeter argues that innovation is a random process where entrepreneurs and spin-offs are the primary drivers.

 

In contrast, Blue Ocean Strategy offers systematic and reproducible methodologies and processes in pursuit of blue oceans by both new and existing firms. The Blue Ocean Strategy research gathered suggests that value innovation was found to be the underlying logic behind all successful moves studied and formed the cornerstone of Blue Ocean Strategy. Value Innovation focuses on making the competition irrelevant by creating a leap in value for buyers and the company, thereby opening up new and uncontested market space. Value Innovation places equal emphasis on value and innovation. Innovation without value tends to be technology driven, market pioneering, or futuristic. Value innovation only occurs when companies are able to align innovation with utility, price and cost position.

 

Traditionally, innovation has been viewed to be trial and error – learn from failure. Innovation theories, welcome failure. You have to be willing to take the risk – you need to pursue failure if you want to innovate and consequently succeed. The thought – opportunities and risks come together and you learn from failure. Blue Ocean Strategy does just the opposite. Blue Ocean Strategy minimizes risks while maximizes opportunity for highly profitable growth because it is a systematic process.

 

Leading us to the next section of our analysis – the belief innovation is the result of DNA or a corporate innovation culture. The belief that you have to hire innovative geniuses to come up with an idea. The American Heritage Dictionary acknowledges the term, intrapraneur, as a person within a large corporation who takes direct responsibility for turning an idea into a profitable finished product through assertive risk-taking and innovation. Intrapreneurship is now known as the practice of a corporate management style that integrates risk-taking and innovation approaches, as well as the reward and motivational techniques that are more traditionally thought of as being the province of entrepreneurship. Blue Ocean Strategy upends this traditional theory because it offers analytical frameworks that make up the systematic process. The tools and frameworks provided by authors Kim and Mauborgne include the strategy canvas, value curve, four actions framework, six paths, buyer experience cycle, buyer utility map and blue ocean idea index.

 

This section explores the belief that innovation relies on units of experimentation and the use of a subsystem approach. Companies experiment to find out what strategic approach works for them, rather than determining the appropriate structural condition in which to operate. In contrast, Blue Oceans Strategy emphasizes the systems strategic alignment as an integrated approach to strategy. Blue Ocean Strategy requires organizations to develop and align the three strategy propositions: value proposition, profit proposition and people proposition. Value proposition refers to the utility buyers receive from an offering minus the price they pay for it. Profit Proposition refers to the revenues an organization generates from an offering minus the cost to produce and deliver it. People Proposition refers to the positive motivations and incentives put in place for people needed to support and implement the strategy. By achieving strategy alignment companies eliminate units of experimentation. As a result, the right strategic approach for the company can be chosen.

 

In conclusion of this composition we attempted to create a comprehensive distinction between traditional innovation theories and Blue Ocean Strategy, Innovation has most popularly been viewed as a random experimental process driven by entrepreneurs, a trial and error process that accepts opportunities and risks come together and it must be within a corporate culture. While, Blue Ocean Strategy offers a systematic approach for making the competition irrelevant by creating uncontested marketspaces through the simultaneous achievement of differentiation and low cost.

 

 

  Blue Ocean Strategy FAQ's | Articles | Blogs | News Copyright © 2009-2011 Strategize Blue