Blue Ocean Strategy - Synopsis
Blue Ocean Strategy - Synopsis
Blue Ocean Strategy - Synopsis
With the current technological stage, productivity is at high levels, the supply exceeds the
demand and the prices are falling. The globalization adds a component that facilitates
new entrants and low production cost, and to make it worst, the rich countries (with more
consuming power/demand) have their population decreasing.
So, the creation of new markets with focus on non-customers to create demand using blue
ocean strategy will be an interesting approach, besides other aspects and methodologies.
One key point of Blue Ocean Strategy is how to create value and how to make customer
comfortable and willing to pay for it.
Innovation has a key role on this matter, but not only. It must be aligned with utility,
price and cost.
The cornerstone of blue ocean strategy, which is called by the authors as Value
Innovation, is to focus on making competition irrelevant by creating a leap in value for
consumers and the organization. The consequence is the creation of a new market place.
• They created a new market. One of the first shows was titled “We Reinvent the
Circus”.
• They didn’t compete in the same market from the conventional circus.
Effective blue ocean strategies should be about risk minimization and not risk taking.
About Strategy, to shift the strategy of an industry, you must reorient the focus from
competitors to alternatives and from customers to noncustomers.
To use value and cost approach, it must not be used benchmarking competitors, because,
it will return to differentiation or to cost approach, in the conventional way.
Moving the focus from competitors and customers, it will be possible to develop insights
to create new solutions, better buyer value elements and to create market across industry
boundaries.
The strategy canvas has two purposes. The first one is to analyze the current market place
and understand where competition is investing and which factors are the more saturated.
The second point is to facilitate the focus reorientation from competitors to alternatives
and from customers to noncustomers.
The value curve (blue from the Blue Ocean strategy and red from competition) is the
basic component of the strategy canvas.
Note about the graphic: Usually we see the X and Y axis as and with incremental values. The Y axis on
the graphic is, as usual, an incremental axis from Low to High Offering. On the X axis we have the Factors
of Competition, where each point is a factor, and where industry is competing, so, it is not an incremental
axis.
The objective is to have a value curve that diverges from competition offering a higher
value and using factors where there is no competition or where they have a lower
offering.
The last factors couple with a high level of offering, (above graphic), where we have only
the blue value curve, are a good value curve for blue ocean strategy.
To create a new value curve and break the trade-off between differentiation and low cost,
four questions shell be answered.
3.2.1. Which of the factors that industry takes for granted should
be eliminated?
Objective:
• Eliminate factors that have long competed on.
• Move the focus from benchmarking competitors.
• Find out if it had a change in what buyers value.
Objective:
• Determine if products are overdesigned.
• Find out, if it has occurred increase in cost structure for no gain.
Objective:
• Eliminate the compromise that customers have with the industry.
Objective:
• The discovery of new sources of value for buyers and the creation of a new
demand and to shift the strategic pricing of industry.
The second two questions (raise and create) will help to lift customer value and create
new demand.
It is an analytic tool, which is complementary to the four action framework and gives the
opportunity to:
Eliminate Raise
Which of the factors that industry takes Which factors should be raised well
for granted should be eliminated? above the industry’s standards?
Reduce Create
Which factors should be reduced well Which factors should be created that the
bellow the industry’s standard? industry has never offered?
A good strategy should have focus demonstrated on a clear company’s strategic profile
and value curve. Also, must diverge from competition. And, it should have a compelling
tagline.
3.4.1. Focus
Every strategy must have a focus and the organization profile and/or the value curve must
clearly show it.
3.4.2. Divergence
When the strategy is reactive to keep up with competition, it loses its uniqueness.
Applying the four actions, the organizations differentiate their profiles and the value
curve will stand apart from competitors.
• Alternative industries;
• Strategic groups within industries;
• The chain of buyers;
• Complementary product and services;
• Functional and emotional appeal, and look across time.
This will give some insights to reconstruct market and to open up blue oceans.
A typical strategic planning starts with current industry conditions and competitors
analysis. Then goes to how increase market share, new segments or cut costs, followed
by goals and actions. It goes through SWOT, PEST, BCG, McKinsey, and so on, analysis
coupled with some spreadsheets, and graphics.
The perspective must change, must think outside the box and develop a clear picture of
how to break from competition.
To see the Big Picture, it needs a visual awakening, a visual exploration, a visual strategy
fair and a visual communication.
• Visual awakening: compare your business with your competitors and see where
your strategy needs to change.
• Visual exploration: go to the field to explore the six paths to creating blue
oceans; observe the distinctive advantages of alternative products; see which
factors should be eliminated, created or changed.
• Visual strategy fair: draw your strategy based on field observations; get
feedback on alternatives from customers, competitors’ customers and
noncustomers; use feedback to design the best future strategy.
• Visual communication: distribute your “best future strategies” on one page for
ease comparison; choose only those that allow the company to close the gaps to
actualize the new strategy.
According to the authors of the Blue Ocean Strategy book, all companies in their studies,
that created blue oceans, have been pioneers in their industries.
Pioneers are businesses that offer unprecedented values, they are blue ocean strategists.
Their value curve diverges from competition.
Settlers are the other extreme, they are the me-too business. Their value curve is similar
to the basic one of the industry.
Migrators lie between both and they extend the industry’s curve by giving more for less,
but they have the same basic curve shape. They improve value but not an innovative
value.
Pioneers
Migrators
Settlers
Today Tomorrow
Third Tier
Second Tier
First Tier
Your
Market
These soon-to-be customers almost don’t use your market offerings because they search
better offers. If they find a better alternative they will go after it and leave this market. A
market stops growing when there are many soon-to-be customers. The insight is to figure
out what they are searching.
The refusing noncustomers are people that can’t afford or don’t use the market offerings.
Their necessities are attended by other means or are ignored. It is a vast ocean to pursue.
The unexplored noncustomers have not been explored or thought by industry players.
They are seen as participants of other markets. It is an unexplored ocean, where results
could be outstanding.
As the authors mentioned, there is no magic formula to suggest which tier should be
focused. The blue ocean opportunities, in a specific tier, may be different, across time and
industries. The ideal would be to unlock the potential across tiers, discover the
commonalities across all three tiers.
A fundamental aspect to maximize the scale of Blue Ocean, is to reach beyond existing
demand to noncustomers and desegmentation opportunities, as you develop futures
strategies.
• Does it have exceptional buyer utility, your business idea? If yes, continue. If
not, rethink.
• Is your price affordable to the mass of buyers? If yes, continue. If not, rethink.
• Can you limit your cost to profit at your strategic price? If yes, continue. If not,
rethink.
• What are the adoption barriers in actualizing your business idea? Are you
addressing them up front? If yes, continue. If not, rethink.
After accomplish this sequence you will have a commercially viable blue ocean idea.
The Buyer Utility Map helps to identify the levers to deliver exceptional utility to
buyers.
Each stage of buyers’ experience cycle has its specific experiences and for each stage a
set of questions should be answered to gauge the quality of buyers’ experiences.
In each stage the analysis of levers helps to develop the perspective and find the right
questions.
For example: stage of purchase with the customer productivity lever, could have the
question: Is it easy and fast to find the product?
To get the exceptional utility in each stage, each lever must be analyzed and identified the
hurdles, and removed, to achieve the expected results. It is common that the greatest
hurdles represent pressing opportunities to unlock exceptional value.
Using the same example described above. The greatest block, in the purchase process,
could be the manner of how to buy it, if removed, the exceptional experience aimed, at
the lever of customer productivity, may be achieved.
To have strong revenue flowing, the strategic price must be set. This procedure will
ensure that consumers will want to buy and will have the compelling ability to achieve it.
It is fundamental, from the start, to know the price that will bring masses of target
consumers.
The strategic price defined must not only attract customers but also retain them. The
reputation must be earned since day one and rapidly spread by networked society. That is
important to avoid imitations and avoid turning the blue ocean in red ocean.
The price corridor of the mass is a tool to facilitate the discovery of the right price to
attract mass of buyers.
It has two steps. Step one identifies the price corridor of the mass and the second step
specifies the price level within the corridor.
Usually companies look first at products that are most similar in term of form and also
look inside their industries.
To define the strategic price, the great challenge, is to understand the price sensibility of
those people (buyers) when comparing completely different products/services offered
outside the group of traditional competitors.
The second step helps companies to define the highest price that they can afford to set
within corridor without inviting competition from imitation. The assessment depends on
the degree of legal protection of products/services and the degree of assets and core
capabilities that the company owns.
Now moving from strategic pricing to target costing. It addresses the profit side of the
business model.
Following the blue ocean strategy, first was defined the strategic price and then deducted
the desired profit margin to arrive at the target cost.
To be successful with target costing, the strategy profile must be divergent, but must also
have focus.
7.4. Adoption
A so large change threatens the status quo, and for that reason it may provoke insecurity
and resistance among company’s stakeholders.
Despite following the sequence: utility, price, cost and adoption, the vision of the whole
must not be lost.
The blue ocean idea index helps to keep that systemic vision.
Is there exceptional utility? Are there compelling reasons to buy the offering?
One is the cognitive factor, which is the resistance to changes. People like to keep the
status quo, it is an environment that they know and control. Any changes that move them
from the comfort zone will generate a natural resistance. They need to be aware of the
importance and necessity of the strategic change.
The second point is the limited resources. Usually, the greater is the change, the greater
are the resources needed. But it is not the reality. Actually, it is exactly the contrary.
Last point is politics. Paraphrasing the authors of the Blue Ocean Strategy book, making
a reference to a sentence from a manager that they heard, they quote: “In our organization
you get shot down before you stand up.” It says everything about this point.
A key aspect, to achieve success, is that processes need to be fair and transparent.
• About attitudes: need to have trust and commitment, like “I feel that my opinion
counts.”
• About behavior: the cooperation is voluntary, like “I will go beyond the call of
duty.”
• Expectation clarity: leaders must state clearly the new rules of the game. It must
be clear the targets and milestones, the responsibilities, the key process indicators,
the standards and also the penalties for failure.
An interesting comparative about the execution of a fair process and an unfair process:
A last comment about commitment, trust and voluntary cooperation, they are difficult to
measure and monitor, they are intangible capital.
• A value innovation move does not make sense based on conventional strategic
logic.
• Brand image conflict prevents competitors from imitating.
• Natural monopoly blocks imitation, when size of market cannot support another
competitor.
• Patents or legal permits block imitation.
• High volume generated by innovation leads to cost advantages and places
competitors in costs disadvantages.
• Network externalities also block companies from easily and credibly imitating
blue ocean strategy.
• Imitation requires substantial changes and investment which may take years.
• The offer of a leap in values rapidly earns brand buzz and loyal following.
At the end of the Blue Ocean Strategy book, it can be found various study cases of three
American industries - automobiles, computers and movie theaters.
Look across:
• Alternative industries;
• Strategic groups within industries;
• The chain of buyers;
• Complementary product and services;
• Functional and emotional appeal, and look across time.
• Visual awakening: compare your business with your competitors and see where
your strategy needs to change.
• Visual exploration: go to the field to explore the six paths to creating blue
oceans; observe the distinctive advantages of alternative products; see which
factors should be eliminated, created or changed.
• Visual strategy fair: draw your strategy based on field observations; get
feedback on alternatives from customers, competitors’ customers and
noncustomers; use feedback to design the best future strategy.
• Visual communication: distribute your “best future strategies” on one page for
ease comparison; choose only those that allow the company to close the gaps to
actualize the new strategy.
Migrators
Settlers
Today Tomorrow
Third Tier
Second Tier
First Tier
Your
Market
Buyer Utility
Cost
Adoption
Concerns of employees, business partners and general public must be addressed to avoid
resistance and fears, when changing the current status quo. Awareness should be
developed to communicate the advantages that everyone will have with the success of the
actions.
• Is there exceptional utility? Are there compelling reasons to buy the offering?
• Is the price easily accessible to the mass of buyers?
• Does the cost structure meet the target cost?
• Were addressed adoption hurdles up front?