Blue Ocean Strategy is comprised of two primary pieces. I've focused the last few posts on the managerial components, because most people don't pay attention to those. But this is a blog for product and business developers, and most are focused on the concept of value innovation.
To reiterate, value innovation involves finding the key factors of an offering then eliminating and reducing factors that consumers can live without. Some of the cost savings used to eliminate and reduce are used to raise and create key factors that make an offer truly compelling and unleash a business that makes competitors irrelevant. Think the Nintendo Wii, Google's search engine, the Toyota Scion, and the entire open-source movement.
I've found the biggest challenge to the implementation of Blue Ocean Strategy is the accurate identification of the key factors and then having the guts to eliminate and reduce those key factors. If you do not eliminate and reduce substantive key factors, you are not practicing Blue Ocean Strategy. The whole point is to be able to create a Wii then sell it profitably for $250 at retail, while your red ocean competitors make machines that people want less and that sell for considerably more while taking a large loss.
I've seen too many value curves where people simply identify a plethora of key factors and raise them. This is a predicable recipe for what is, at best, a mediocre offering and at worst a disaster. The focus groups and internal marketers will probably be happy: "hooray -- this 'new' thing is like the old one's but there's more of it." But the market will, at best, shrug. Think Microsoft Vista, Yahoo search, or Dell's relentless pursuit to gut their respective companies. [In all fairness, I just purchased a pre-configured Ubuntu laptop from Dell. The fact the sell such a thing suggests they're once again trying, but it took me an hour to complete my purchase once I made my buying decision, thanks to an ineffective, frustrating, and ultimately useless phone-tour of India].
Ensure the "value" in value innovation: use the Four Actions Framework to eliminate and reduce key factors that consumers don't care about. Is Blu-Ray movie playing cool? You betcha. Do the movies look great? Sure they do. The physics and high-definition graphics are slick: they're so real an early PS3 critic said the absence of real-life made basketball players look like zombies. Still -- even with, or maybe despite all the neat gadgetry -- my kid still doesn't seem to have much interest in a PS3 or XBox360, despite that he loved his PS2. His attention is entirely on the Wii.
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Thursday, April 10, 2008
Blue Ocean Strategy: Adding Value to Value Innovation
Posted by
Michael Olenick
at
9:37 AM
Labels: blue ocean strategy, business development, dell, google, linux, microsoft, nintendo, product development, toyota, value innovation
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