Transcript pps

Chapter Twelve
© 2007
2005 John Wiley & Sons
Creating New Businesses
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Chapter 12 – Creating New Businesses
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The New Business
© 2007
2005 John Wiley & Sons
• Change what the customer is buying
• Transformational innovation
• Different business strategy including new assets &
competencies
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Blue
vs.
• New market space
• Create demand
• Make competitors
irrelevant
• Create new strategy
• Transformational
innovation
• High risk-high return
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Red Oceans
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Existing market space
Beat competitors
Improve market share
Improve existing
strategy
• Incremental
innovation
• Lower risk
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Barriers to Long-Term Success of
Improving Existing Businesses
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2005 John Wiley & Sons
• Competitors response – fast and vigorous
• Hard to hide incremental innovations
• Market dynamics – easy to get behind/less
relevant
• Overcapacity
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The Innovator’s Advantage
• Competitors inhibited from responding
– Fear cannibalization
– Fear taking eye off existing business
• Competitors unable to respond
© 2007
2005 John Wiley & Sons
– Lack assets, competencies, culture etc.
• Innovator can create customer loyalty &
authenticity
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Early Market Leaders Strategy
Envision the Mass Market
Managerial Persistence
Financial Commitment
Relentless Innovation
Asset Leverage
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Managing Category Perceptions
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2005 John Wiley & Sons
• Focus at outset on attributes and functional
benefits
• Labels help define the category—use them.
Make your brand the exemplar (the best
example of the new category)
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Creating New Business Arenas
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Creating a dramatically lower price point
Analyze alternative industries
From components to systems
Customer insights
Market trends
Collaborative process
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From Ideas to Market
• Fatal Biases Inhibiting New Business Creation
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The short-term financial pressure curse
The curse of success
The incumbent curse
The commitment curse
The size curse
• Making New Business Viable in Established
Organizations
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Key Learnings
• In general, above-average earnings come from new business arenas,
and those attempting to excel in existing business arenas on average do
less well financially.
© 2007
2005 John Wiley & Sons
• A business can vary in its “newness” depending on how much it departs
from existing businesses in terms of value proposition, target market,
assets and competencies employed, and how it defines what a customer
is buying.
• An innovator has an advantage because it can build up a core loyal
customer segment and because competitors, committed to their own
business, may lack the motivation and capability to respond.
• Successful market leaders envision a mass market, are persistent, make
a commitment, continue to innovate, leverage firm assets, and manage
category perception.
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Key Learnings
© 2007
2005 John Wiley & Sons
• Transformational new business arenas can be based on offering a
dramatically lower price point, analyzing alternative industries to find
white space, offering systems rather than components building on
customer insights or market trends, and by collaborating with other
people and firms.
• Established firms tend to be focused on their own business and regard
new ventures as a distraction that is unlikely to help their financials and
may make them worse. To overcome these biases they need to create a
space for entrepreneurial initiatives and a mechanism that ensures new
ventures will get the resources they need.
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Ancillary Slides
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“The most effective way to cope with
change is to help create it.”
- I.W. Lynett
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2005 John Wiley & Sons
“Only the paranoid survive.”
- Andrew Grove,
Former CEO Intel
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“The unexpected is the best source of
inspiration.”
© 2007
2005 John Wiley & Sons
- Peter Drucker
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