Blue Ocean Strategy by W.C Kim And Renee Mauborgne – Book Summary
Blue Ocean Strategy is a masterpiece defining how strategies drive success today. Companies adopt conventional strategies that seek to blow other competitors out of the water. The result, however, is far from what is imagined. it is like beating a dead horse! The book illustrates numerous ways through which an organization can rise above the pettiness of competition.
Some of the things you
will learn in this book:
- Why
Organizations should pursue value innovation.
- Why there
should be an attempt to create and sustain new demand in the market.
- How
competition is made irrelevant.
- Why it is
important never to lose sight of the bigger picture.
1- Quest
For Uncontested Market Space For Grounding Blue Ocean
Strategy
Most Companies focus on
the consumers they target. And the competitors they fight with. However,
creating new value for customers, or creating new untargeted customers, is the
aim of a “Blue Ocean Strategy”. Value- creation, and innovation, is the need of
the hour. A technology-driven, market-oriented, and futuristic market space
does not allow companies to become inconsistent.
Companies need to
continually work on their strategies. To stay alive and thrive in the market.
They should deliver products and services that can create new value for
consumers. Hence creating an uncontested market. This untapped market loaded
with potential is an ocean enriched with new possibilities.
In contrast, a “Red
Ocean” refers to an existing market. And Companies trying to beat the existing
competition and cater to existing demand would be swimming in the red ocean. As
markets get crowded, opportunities for growth and profits greatly reduce. Firms
compete with one another to sell similar products. And that results in perfect
competition. In such a marketplace, Companies command more or less the same
price, with no one particular major player in the market. The demand for each
firm gets distributed.
2- Value
Innovation By Creating An Uncontested MarketSpace
A Blue Ocean can be for
you to swim in if you can create value innovation. While we are familiar with
innovation, value innovation doesn’t necessarily create something new. Instead,
it improves on existing products or services, while reducing the overall costs
for both: the customer, and the company. Thus, resulting in a tremendous leap
in the value of the offering.
The Blue Ocean Strategy
aims to break the value-cost trade-off by pursuing differentiation and low cost
simultaneously. As compared to conventional strategies that pursue a value-cost
trade-off, wherein it is either this or that scenario. To embark on the path of
value innovation, one must ask four questions in the context of the product or
service:
- Which
features can one do away with?
- What
features can one dial down a little bit?
- Which
features can one improve?
- What
new features can one offer?
This is also known as
the ERRC framework: Eliminate, Reduce, Raise, and Create. This framework can
help achieve a unique value curve. Which creates a blue ocean of uncontested
space!
3- Reimagine
To Reconstruct Is Merely A Fence
Why is it necessary to
reconstruct boundaries? In order to seek and create an uncontested market, a
product or a service should seek to reconstruct the boundaries themselves.
There is a six-path
framework to achieve this as advised in the book:
Six Path Framework
- Look across
alternates: Which industries serve the same purpose as your industry, but
have a different form? For example, restaurants may be competing with
movie halls indirectly. Since both fulfill the same utility for the
customer, i.e, having a good time out.
- Look across
strategic groups: Are there any untapped areas that the industry is not
targeting? Strategic groups are typically ranked in a hierarchy with price
and performance as parameters. What will make the customers trade up the
value chain to pay a higher price? And what will make them trade down?
- Look across
the Buyers: Who is buying? Is there a chain involved? Who are the
influencers, the purchasers, and the end-users? It can be extremely
valuable information.
- Look across
complementary products and services: Assess the context of the usage of
your product or service. What is the user doing or thinking BEFORE using
your product? And what are they doing or thinking WHILE they use your
product? Further, what do they do AFTER they use your product? The
magnitude of the usage can throw light on areas which may be pain points.
And if your product can address those pain areas, you have a blue ocean
for yourself.
- Look across
functional and emotional appeal: Can you transform the functional appeal
of your product or service to an emotional one, or vice versa?
- Look across
time: Ascertain and identify the trends of the future. Can you use these
trends to the best of your advantage? If so, you could be swimming in a
blue ocean. This is in severe contrast to having a reactive strategy.
Where one REACTS to the changing times and trends. Rather than proactively
pinching the business model, product, or service.
4- Focus
On The Big Picture
In the busy schedule of
day-to-day business, managers can easily forget the larger context of their
firm’s objective. Managers get sometimes too busy by micromanaging, by
choosing the right price, target-based costing, or choosing the perfect market
strategy. These are the things that they overlook the utility of the product or
something like customer services.
Types of economic
utility that consumers derive from goods or services are form, time, place, and
possession. Hence, “Utility” refers to the usefulness or value that a purchaser
obtains in return for exchanging his or her money for a company’s goods or
services. Companies seek to maximize customer satisfaction by addressing all of
the four types of utility – or as many as possible.
Example Of Amazon
Amazon, one of the
biggest e-commerce brands, is widely acclaimed for its customer services.
Amazon offers extensive training to its delivery boys. Especially on how to
deal with female customers. And consumer feedback is highly valuable to Amazon.
This focus on its main service, i.e. delivery, has ensured its success in the
market.
In management, the
ability to see the larger picture is a vital leadership skill. In simple words,
a leader should have a depth of vision and insight. A leader’s ability to lead
arises from the depth of his knowledge. Leaders look into the future. And in
doing so they perceive the to-be reality. They report back this reality with
their clear and detailed vision.
5- Generating
New Demand In The Market
Demand creation is an
economic affair. It bridges the gap between what the consumers really want and
what is available. It is the allocation of limited resources among the buyers.
Changeover In Business Style Over The Years
Twenty years ago,
producers would adopt a production-oriented strategy wherein buyers would be
expected to purchase whatever is available to them. However, with changing
times and increasing competition, producers have had to adopt Holistic
marketing strategies. They need to take into account the needs and desires of
their target audience. It is natural, however, that here too a red ocean would
be created! Every firm would be competing for the attention of the consumers.
A firm
needs to find its blue ocean in this very approach. Because a buyer-oriented
market mandates the focus to be on existing customers, but non-customers could
also be a source of untapped potential!
Advanced Marketing Strategies Are Based On Emotions
It is a common
observation that brands use feelings to appeal to customers. Emotional Branding
is a term in marketing communications. It implies a well-crafted technique to
appeal to the basic emotions of the consumers. Scientific studies have proved
that shared emotional connection between brands and the consumers, influences
their attention to the product. And this generates new demand.
Few Case Studies
Here we go with three
case studies to clear above idea:
i) An Alcoholic Beverage Company In Australia
An alcoholic beverage
company in Australia, specializing in wine-making was in a plateau with its
market penetration. The number of beer drinkers in their country was much
larger than the wine drinkers. And the latter was perceived to be high society
fat cats. The company concentrated on its research and development to come up
with a beverage. The beverage tasted somewhat like beer but was fermented
with grapes. The drink they eventually came up with became an overnight bestseller
having its takers among the beer drinkers too.
ii) The Pug In The Hutch Ads In India
The Pug in the Hutch Ads
in India five years ago brought widespread appreciation. Both for the
telecommunications company and the breed’s popularity in India! Emotional
branding should be used tactfully in order to influence the collective
perception of people.
iii) A Reputed Circus Company In
Europe
A reputed circus company
in Europe was in the process of packing up. It was finding it difficult to
compete in this era of television, the internet, and social media. Because the
use of animals in circuses was increasingly being looked at with disdain.
Hence, keeping in mind the mentality of its consumers, the management of the
circus company pulled out the animal acts. Instead, they replaced them abstract
and spiritual musical dances- an offshoot of theatrics.
Ultimately, this move ensured the survival of the Company and gradually started
bringing in huge revenues. Now, which Company do you ask the one and only,
Cirque Du Soleil!
6- Formulate
A Decisive Blue Ocean Business strategy
A decisive strategy
involves business and marketing strategies that are different and
cost-effective. A clear and competitive business strategy has a long-lasting impact
on organizational profit and revenue. Every organization formulates a strategy
by which it tries to achieve its goals. These could be along the lines of
growth, expansion, or even retrenchment! Out of the box, thinking is encouraged
in management as they lead to rare and uncommon business strategies. Dell, a
major player in the computer technology business, established itself in a short
period of time on the grounds of its unique business model. At a time when
firms were catering to generalized customer demand in the market, Dell
concentrated on individual demand, thereby offering a customized product. Their
inventory was stocked with goods to assemble rather than the final product
itself. This allowed them the liberty to design each product as per individual
demand and in the process ensured no obsolescence.
A strategic move on the
part of the business creates a new value curve to capitalize on. A value curve
is a graphical representation of the primary products or services that bring
value to the firm, i.e., profit. Some techniques to elucidate the creation
of a new value curve involve working on branding and promotions of a product or
service. Mass media and social media marketing should be used wisely for this
purpose. The marketing mix used should be in tune with the target audience’s
reach.
Research proves that
Brand promotion is of vital importance to any company. Branding is not just an
exercise to foster trust amongst customers, but also to help firms maintain
their share price and increase profits. In the Indian context, Nestlé’s
branding and repositioning of Maggi is an outstanding illustration of this
phenomenon. Maggi had for decades penetrated deep in the consumer psyche and
established itself as ready to eat the product. In 2015, a legal case was filed
against Maggi alleging that the product was extremely unhealthy- it had illegal
amounts of lead and MSG content. Soon sales started dwindling, and inventory
was taken off the shelves in the market. Nestle fought the case, and eventually
successfully rebranded and relaunched the brand as a healthy ready to eat product. Maggi was marketed as “Tasty and Healthy” with Vitamins and Iron. The
company added value to its product through strategic rebranding. They had a
clear-cut and compelling tagline.
7- Execute
the Blue Ocean Strategy Perfectly
Simply put, without
perfect execution, the product of the Company is unlikely to succeed. Now, this
does seem to be obvious, but it is easily overlooked. The Company pursuing the
Blue Ocean needs to be clear and transparent with all its
stakeholders. Often, employees and other important stakeholders are resistant
to change. This is because they are not sensitized to the need for change. Such
a scenario can result in disengagement and the subsequent impact on the
organization’s ability to pursue the blue ocean.
The Company along with
its business managers should be able to identify problem areas in execution and
anticipate people who may oppose the plan. This information can be thus used
for managing the execution in a better manner. Since the pursuit of a blue
ocean requires constant value innovation, the process of execution is also a
constant feature, and thus blue ocean businesses should aim at developing an
organization that is friendly to change, in order to smoothen the challenges
with execution.
Conclusion
of Blue Ocean Strategy
An organization cannot
simply function in the marketplace today, it has to sustain itself. Competition
is fierce, and stakes are at an all-time high. In an attempt to rise above the
rest, organizations adopt a tunneled approach to outshine competitors. Firms
try to create both value and cost by adopting the conventional way of thinking
in business, i.e., focus on its competition, however, a new way of thinking
which has proved to be more productive is digging deeper into insights of the
buyers. This approach has led to the formation of numerous new products and
services. The best strategies focus on individual action and not collective
action. Along with designing effective strategies, firms also need to execute
them brilliantly. This requires managers to be more inclusive and democratic
with their employees.
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