Title: Marc Goldchstein
1Marc Goldchstein
- INDUSTRY AND PROJECT DYNAMICS
2why bother...
- I want a conceptual underpinning (denkkader) of
my course - the traditional underpinning of economics is
stuck in newtonian, planetary times - equilibrium
- evolutionary economics is no more than a metaphor
- so my course today is purely phenomenon-driven,
without conceptual underpinning - I am convinced (modern) systems thinking may
provide at least some conceptual underpinning - hoped for end result
- course systems thinking for business
- to which I refer in courses
3what I look for...
- a model (or series of concepts) that formally
explains the different dynamics I describe in the
folllowing slides - that can be used to analyse situations
4 5- industry life cycles
- some dimensions of ILCs
- innovation
- incumbents, entrants and shake-outs
- dominant design and network effects
- customer typology
6industry dynamics
7creative destruction
- Joseph Alois Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism
and Democracy 1942 - capitalism is an evolutionary process capitalism
never can be stationary. - the fundamental impulse comes from the new
consumers' goods, the new methods of production
or transportation, the new markets, the new forms
of industrial organization that capitalist
enterprise creates. - these incessantly revolutionize the economic
structure from within, incessantly destroying the
old one, incessantly creating a new one. - creative destruction is the essential fact about
capitalism. it is what capitalism consists in and
what every capitalist concern has got to live in
8- every act of creation is first an act of
destruction -
- Pablo Picasso
9creative destruction
10the victims of creative destruction
11the life cycle
Maturity
technological performance
market adoption
Disruption
Takeoff
Ferment
Time/effort
MIT Sloan School of Management Technology
Strategy Course 2005 Rebecca Henderson
12the industry life cycle
- a framework to understand the dynamics of growth
of - industries and markets
- digital photography
- commercial sailing ships
- information technology
- gsm
- fitness centers
- companies
- enfocus, sportopolis
- agfa, polaroid
- regions
- wallonia
- silicon valley
13a key framework the industry life cycle
technology strategy for managers and
entrepreneurs, Scott Shane 2009
14què sera, sera
15oops...
16era of ferment
- a possible disruptive innovation has occurred
- often new playing field
- no one is sure how the new product
- can be packaged or sold
- who will value it
- how it can be produced/distributed
- whether there is money in supplying it
- industry is up for grabs
- lots of entrants, venture capital
- there is enormous uncertainty in many dimensions
- doing something of dramatic value, compared to
what is already available to customers is the
sine qua non (moore) - main challenge validation!
17the fluid phase
- abernathy-utterback model , harvard business
school, mit sloan school of management - technology evolves through periods of incremental
innovation, interrupted by periods of radical
innovations - a radical innovation leads to a fluid phase,
where many firms enter and compete on the basis
of different product designs - eventually firms converge to a dominant design
which results in a specific phase. competition
shifts to production efficiency and economies of
scale - before a dominant design emerges learning curves
are weak, and it is easy to enter. after a
dominant design emerges learning curves become
more pronounced - later a new radical innovation may occur
18the fluid phase in gsm
19take-off
- rapid growth of market
- dominant design emerges
- the way we do things around here
- key technical components, architecture
- elements of the business system how shall we
structure the value chain? - hard to define ex ante
- market clears out
- fight for domination
- very difficult to enter market
- execution growing the company become key
challenge - succesful paradigms broadly applied, made more
repliable, replicable
20maturity
- innovation diminishes
- economies of scale, synergies
- mergers and acquisitions
- less investments, large market potentially high
profitability - followed by disruption?
21industry dynamics
22technology s curve
- graphical representation of the development of a
new technology - compares some measure of performance with some
measure of effort
technology strategy for managers and
entrepreneurs, Scott Shane 2009
23maturity in pharma
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
24radical and incremental innovations
Maturity
- incremental innovation, process innovation
Takeoff
- radical innovation, product innovation, based on
different engineering and scientific principles
Ferment
Time
25innovation
- incremental innovation
- introduces relatively minor changes
- happens once dominant design has been established
- typically drives rapid performance improvement
- exploits the potential of the established design
- typically reinforces position of incumbent
- radical innovation
- based on a different set of engineering
principles - may open up whole new markets and potential
applications - often creates great difficulties for incumbent
firms - can be basis for successful entry by insurgent
- (can this be modelized?)
26the limitations of LCD?
- light emitting
- energy consuming
- rigid
27e-ink the material
- ink on (potentially flexible) substrate
- magnetized in black or white
- only energy consumption when changing images
- but
- no color
- long image switching time (no video)
28disruptive for who?
29for comparison philips aptura
- Philips demonstrates lighting technology for LCD
TV picture improvement at SID - Aptura lighting technology that dramatically
improves motion sharpness and contrast on LCD
televisions. The motion sharpness is achieved by
adding additional light and intelligence to the
backlight module, a key component of a LCD TV. - increase the light output of the backlight module
by more than 300 percent - cancels out the Sample and Hold effect
characteristic of LCD technology. Using Deep
Dynamic Dimming (D-3) technology, which reduces
the grey details in dark scenes and poor black
levels, creates the improved darkness contrast. - Dimming to scene brightness and stretching the
video for better detail, creates an astonishing
contrast in night scenes. - improved viewing angle in dark scenes an LCD TV
with Aptura lighting technology can be watched
from almost every corner of the living room.
30not on the radar...
31vectors in time
32steve jobs on vectors in time
- inside steves brain, leander kahney
- founder and present ceo of apple
- you cant really predict exactly what will
happen, but you can feel the direction that were
going - jobs looks for vectors in time
- what technologies are coming on the market and
which ones are ending their run - you decide which horses you want to ride at any
point in time - you cant be too far ahead, but you have to be
far enough ahead, because it takes time to
implement. so you have to intercept a moving train
33innovation trajectory
- At any time, there are typically a range of
competing technologies that are candidates for
each application - Each of these technologies can be characterized
in terms of its key parameters - Each technology typically has a performance
envelope, which defines the trade-offs inherent
in the technology - Over time, technologies follow an innovation
trajectory, a vector or function that describes
how they have evolved and may evolve, either over
time or in response to effort invested in their
development - rate of change
- direction
34innovation trajectories...
- technologies improve
- technologies merge
35breaking the performance envelope
speed, power, memory
as pdas improve they may come to challenge pcs
PCs
PDAs
low weight
36process innovation
- business innovation vs. product innovation
- henri ford and mass production
- dell business model
- direct sales to end-users over the internet
- no channels
- no rebates
- no inventory
- made-to-order
- no inventory
37the importance of imitation!
- imitation is happening infinitely more than
innovation - timing when to imitate
- when not to imitate when to innovate
- build your uniqueness very consciously!
- the ability to imitate build on existing
competencies
38pervasive innovations
- some innovations diffuse into nearly every corner
of the economy (and the world) - the printing press absorbs...
- steel
- steam
- electricity
- information technology
- internet
- and will be all but destroyed by digital paper...
39(No Transcript)
40industry dynamics
- corporate compentencies, incumbents, entrants and
shake-out
41entrants and shake-out
- fermentation phase/ fluid phase
- many entrants
- competition between entrants is initially
secondary - take-off
- shake-out
- buy or be bought
- not always the case that new technology is
introduced by newcomer - competentce-enhancing innovation
42innovation and corporate competencies
- michael tushman, harvard business school
- there are two types of radical innovations from
the perspective of an incubent firm - competence enhancing
- makes use of the firms existing knowledge,
skills, abilities, structure, design, production
processes, plants, equipment... - (makes use of the firms existing business model)
- competence destroying
- when it undermines the usefulness of these things
43competence enhancing/destroying innovation
44disruptive for who?
45an opportunity for who?
46why incumbents often miss the boat
- managers do not see the technology as a threat or
opportunity - they have investments in existing technology
- they can improve the performance of their
technologies - no incentive to introduce new technology
- stupid agents?
- new products will cannibalize existing sales
- they face organizational obstacles to change
their core technology - new business incompatible with their business
model - the innovators dilemma
- market leaders have hard time do redirect
resources from its customers requests
47xerox parc
- palo alto research center a flagship research
division of the xerox corporation, - xerox was one of the leading technology companies
in the world - its founder, carlson received in 1942 a patent
for photo-copier technology. - xerox decided to pioneer the field of personal
computing and build a research center - xerox parc was the incubator of many elements of
modern computing - the mouse (invented at the stanford research
institute) - computer generated color graphics
- the wysiwyg text editor
- postscript
- ethernet
- smalltalk programming language.
- laser printer
48the invention of the mouse
- Douglas c. Engelbart, of the Stanford research
institute, demonstrates his system of keyboard,
keypad, mouse, and windows - he demonstrates use of a word processor, a
hypertext system, and remote collaborative work
with colleagues in 1968 - http//sloan.stanford.edu/mousesite/1968demo.html
49the xerox alto
- conceptualized in 1972
- a real time machine that interacted with a mouse
and windows. - contained ethernet, smalltalk, wysiwyg, a
graphical user interface. - created roughly three years prior to the ibm pc,
xerox could have easily entered the computer
market with the alto, but chose not to. - the first successful commercial gui product was
the apple macintosh
50adobe
- in 1978 chuck genschke hired john warnock at
parc. both - are mathematicians
- had their education paid by the department of
defense, - are happily married to their first wife and have
three sons. - have an interest in publishing and graphic arts.
- wanted to change the world.
- we were prototypical scientist in that we wanted
to have an impact - genschke set warnock to investigate device
independent graphic systems. - contained both raster graphics and bitmapped
fonts, - while parc was ecstatic, xerox headquarters was
much less so. - technology is like fish, if you dont cook it,
it spoils.
51industry dynamics
- dominant designs
- network effects and standards
52dominant design
- Dominant Design is a Technology Management
concept identifying key technological designs
that become a de-facto standard in their market
place. - When a new technology emerges (e.g. computer GUI
operating systems) - often firms will introduce a
number of alternative designs (e.g. Microsoft -
Windows, Apple Inc. - Mac OS and IBM - OS2) . - Updated designs will be released incorporating
incremental improvements - at some point an
architecture that becomes accepted as the
industry standard may emerge (e.g. Microsoft
Windows). - Dominant designs may not be better than other
designs in the market place, however they will
incorporate a minimum required set of key
features . - The oft cited example of the QWERTY keyboard,
specifically designed to overcome limitations on
the mechanical typewriter but now almost
universally preferred over more logical keyboard
designs.
53jobs on xerox
- jobs got demo of xerox alto in 1979
- in exchange of shares in Apple Computer
- i thought it was the best thing ive ever seen
in my life - within 10 minutes it was obvious to me that all
computers would work like this some day - can systems thinking explain the self-evidence of
the graphical user interface? - despite dozens of demonstrations xerox executives
didnt see the potential - basically they were copier heads and they had no
clue about a computer or what it could do - so they just grabbed defeat from the greatest
victory in the computer industry. they could have
owned the entire computer industry
54dominant design microsoft
- pc industry in units sold per year
55network effects
value to consumer
Actual (or anticipated) size of the installed base
56network effects
- Metcalfe's Law
- the value of a network goes up as the square of
the number of users - 10 users gt 100 100 users gt 10.000
57network effects
- types of network effects
- direct (or demand) network effects
- generated through a direct physical effect of the
number of purchasers on the utility of the good - phones, fax machines, SMS, e-mail, ...
- indirect (or supply) network effects
- one user's adoption has no direct effect on the
utility of other users, but has lagged effects,
generally on supply of complementary products - 'hardware/software' systems more Macs sold gt
more software gt utility of hardware ?
58lock-in, switching costs
- switch from
- Ford to GM relatively painless
- Windows to Linux very costly change software,
learning - costs
- the total cost of installing an Enterprise
Resource Planning (ERP) system such as SAP was
eleven times greater than the purchase price of
the software due to the cost of infrastructure
upgrades, consultants, retraining programs, and
the like - These switching costs are endemic in high
technology industries and can be so large that
switching suppliers is virtually unthinkable, a
situation known as lock-in
59why standards are relevant
- often driving force in industry life cycle
- GSM
- PDF
- position yourself in ecosystem
- be aware of choices
60some standards battles
- electric power
- roads
- color television
- air travel
- video cassettes
- cellphones(1)
- personal computers
- 56k modems
- cellphones(2)
- documents
- dc (edison) vs ac (westinghouse)
- width, side of the road, signage
- mechanical (cbs) vs electronic (rca)
- door on front left, jetways/airbridges, taxi ways
- betamax(sony) vs vhs (matsushita)
- several co-existing standards
- windows vs mac os
- k56flex (rockwell/lucent) vs x2 (us
robotics/3com) vs v.90 - tdma (ericsson/att) vs cdma (qualcomm) vs GSM
(eu) vs phs - pdf (adobe) vs reader/ (microsoft)
61key assets in standards battles
- prior adoption
- installed based from previous era
- technological innovation
- deliver superior performance
- timing, being first-to-market
- get there early, establish momentum, learn
- intellectual property rights
- strength in complements
- influence overall system level performance
- reputation
- credibility, players expectations are that you
will winso you are more likely to
62industry dynamics
63customer profiles
64customer s curve
- innovators
- need every new product
- besta testers
- need for customisation, mission critical
- not price sensitive
- early adopters
- appreciate value of novelty
- base buying decision on intuition and technical
elements - early majority
- practicality references,
- need for service, training, support...
- crossing the chasm
- late majority
- not confortable with new products
- laggards
- avoid new products
65mission-critical users
- for whom the technology is of major strategic
importance - colruyt and radio frequency identification
(rf-id) - vtb/touring wegenhulp and wireless data
communications - willing to invest
- high roi
- strategic importance (de laagste prijs)
- capabilities to absorb new technology
66crossing the chasm
- different customers
- visionairies
- think and spend big
- pragmatists
- prudent
- my definition of take-off
- when not wanting to be the first is replaced by
not wanting to be the last - customers have different needs
- see part on entrepreneurial marketing
- the chasm arises when the early market is
saturated and the mainstream market is not ready
to adopt. there is no-one to sell to
- crossing the chasm, marketing and selling
technology products to mainstream customers - geoffrey moore 1991
67complexity for the customer
- (behavioral) change for customer
- novelty of offering for customer
- dis-benefits to customer
- cost price, return on investment, total cost of
ownership
68factors that infuence diffusion
- development of complementary assets and
complimentary products - network effects
- Word of mouth
- Process improvements
- Supply constraints
- Development of new uses for the same product
- General shift in the needs of the population
(lifestyle effects) - Progressive development of skills
- Pricing strategies
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
69five product-based factors that govern the rate
of diffusion
- Everett Rogers
- Relative advantage
- the degree to which a product is better than the
product that it replaces - Compatibility
- the degree to which a product is consistent with
the users context, in particular their values
and experiences - Complexity
- the degree to which a product is difficult to
understand and use - Trialability
- the degree to which a product may be experimented
with on a limited basis - Observability
- the degree to which product usage and impact are
visible to others
70customer switching costs
- Users needs are diverse, and they change over
time, and in response to technological innovation - But its not easy to get them to adopt novel
products that embody innovative technologies - Most customers most of the time are loath to
change their behavior - requires investment of time and effort
- involves uncertainty and can induce anxiety
- And are (necessarily) unfamiliar with novel
products - Novel products almost always involve trade-offs
- They evaluate products based on perceived value,
relative to products they already use to do a
job, and are overly sensitive to dis-benefits
-loss aversion - At the same time, businesses (full of
technologists) tend to underestimate the
switching costs, and overestimate the potential
benefits
71eager sellers and stony buyers
72 high payoff
gsm
google
internet
personal computer
fitness centers
document management in 1987...
low payoff
impact on customer processes vs. payoff for
customer general examples
low behavioural change
high behavioural change
73a summary by MIT
74business challenges
Maturity
- execution
- ability to manage growth
- excellence in marketing, finance, alliances...
Takeoff
- validation
- of customer needs and benefits
- of business model
- of team
Ferment
75part 2
76no company is an island
- some concepts
- value chains
- business ecosystems
- uniqueness and complementary assets
- modularity
- clusters
77no company is an island...
78EPD the material
79EPD the component
80EPD the device
81value chains...
82value chain
- many elements are needed, many steps are taken
before an end user need is fulfilled - your invention is only small part of the whole
picture - do you see the total picture?
83(No Transcript)
84the value chain choices of e-ink
85are we done?
86marketing power
87content
88sony
89(No Transcript)
90the value network
91iTunes-Model Value Network
- Intermediary plays central role
- Integrates two markets 1) readers, 2) content
providers - BUT ALSO device suppliance and service provision
- Content on single platform and on only one type
of device - Disaggregation of content
92no company is an island...
- uniqueness and complementary assetssustainability
93unique and complementary assets
- uniqueness
- what makes your company/project unique
- technology/ patent
- business processes
- colruyt and low costs
- nokia product design manufacturing, marketing,
- silicon valley and business startups
- how sustainable is your uniqueness? how long will
the advantage last? - how much room for innovation is there?
- will others be able to catch up easily?
- complementary assets
- what other assets are needed in order to have a
complete offer to the market? - do you possess them? are they readily available?
- are there competitors that do own them? how
easily can they counter your uniqueness? - (assets expertise, production capacity,
manpower, funding...) - uniqueness, complementary assets are
company/project dependant
94emi and the cat scanner
95the emi case
- uniqueness
- relevant
- nobel prize-level knowledge of cat scanners
- patents
- first mover advantage
- irrelevant
- brand name
- knowledge of movie and recording industry
- complementary assets
- experience in manufacturing medical products
- legal aspects
- sales and marketing channels
- GE 300 persons
- service and support system
- GE 1200 persons
- in depth understanding of hospital market
- investment decision making, key players,...
- -gt threat of entry
- general electric, siemens, philips... incubents
in medical equipment market - posess complementary assets
- virtually unlimited resources
96things that play
- technology
- patents, IP, knowhow...
- nanobodies
- nokia 3 key chips
- organization, business processes
- low cost operations, product design,
manufacturing, marketing, innovation, hiring... - marketing
- brand name
- installed base
- channels, sales force
- vertical market expertise
- standards
- funding
- cash flow, capital...
97Uniqueness Complementary Assets vary over the
Life Cycle
98who will profit?
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
99 100Adobe
- in 1978 Chuck Genschke hired John Warnock at
parc. both - are mathematicians
- had their education paid by the department of
defense, - are happily married to their first wife and have
three sons. - have an interest in publishing and graphic arts.
- wanted to change the world.
- we were prototypical scientist in that we wanted
to have an impact - Genschke set Warnock to investigate device
independent graphic systems. - contained all page components images, texts,
layout elements...
- while PARC was ecstatic, Xerox headquarters was
much less so. - technology is like fish, if you dont cook it,
it spoils.
101postscript
- communication between pc and printers was vastly
simplified and standardized. - the language could describe both text and
graphics on one page. - it could be hooked up to the new laser printers.
it was device independent - the same file could be printed on different
devices with different resolution.
102Start-up
- In 1982 they left PARC and founded Adobe Systems.
- They got in touch with venture capitalist William
Hambrecht. - Initial plans open a series of print shops
- Evolved to developing complete systems of high
powered workstations and printers for large
corporations, for in-house printing. - A prototype of Postscript for a Laser printer was
running in 1983. - Digital Equipment Corporation wanted to license
Postscript, but Adobe declined, wanting to build
complete systems themselves.
103Apple
- Warnock and Genschke invited Jobs over for a
visit. - Apple was working with printer-engine
manufacturer Canon on a low-cost laser printer. - High-quality printing was the Trojan horse
through which Apple could enter the office
market. - But what Jobs didnt have was a way to tie the
laser printer and the Macintosh together. - I was simply blown away by what I saw.
104the perfect business model
- Jobs proposed that Adobe license its technology
to Apple for the 300-dpi laser printer. - I dont need the computer. I dont need the
printer. I need the software. - If someone keeps saying, You have a business
here, and its not the business youre doing,
then its time to change your business, - I convinced them to drop plans to be a hardware
company and be a software company instead. - Business
- Jobs offered an advance of 1.5 million against
PostScript royalties. - Jobs offered 5 million for the untested company.
- He invested 2.5 million for a 20 percent stake.
When Apple cashed out six years later its stake
was worth more than 87 milllion - Adobe received 5 of the list price or 350usd per
sold printer
105business models compared
106complementary assets
hardware
architectural expertise
core technology postscript
organisation
marketing brand name
complementary assets
107elements of entrepreneurial strategic thinking
108IBM PC?
109appropriating value
- it is not enough to create value through an
innovation one must capture the value! - two major questions
- how well do you control the ideas behind the
innovation? - do incumbents control assets that you need to
create value from you innovation?
110controlling the invention
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
111some elements on controlling assets
- apple and secrecy
- adobe and standards
112who will profit?
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
113how to succeed
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
114MIT commercialisation strategy survey
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
115- the attackers advantage
- no control over invention, no complementary
assets - If there is weak IP protection, and there are
relatively few or widespread CAs, then this is
basically a level playing field for competition.
- the entrepreneur has is to be fast there are
few other ways of protecting your innovation. - Entrepreneurs can often win this by stealth,
i.e. starting in small markets where the
incumbent is not paying attention and then moving
into the larger markets, once performance is
developed.
- the Idea Factory
- control over invention incumbents control
complementary assets (CA) - entrepreneurs do not need to build CAs, instead,
with IP they have the bargaining power to engage
in partnerships for CAs. - The determinants of the return on innovation will
be bargaining power - need high quality technology that you can signal
its quality with results - if there are more incumbents with the assets, you
can create a bidding war and so you can raise the
price. - if you have the cash you can build the CAs and
then gain more of the pie, but this is difficult
to raise the cash to do you might want to try
and do this gradually
managing innovation and entrepreneurship, Fiona
Murray, MIT Sloan School of Management spring 2008
116some other lists
- controlling key resources
- patent, organisation...
- reputation, brand name...
- architectural control
- economies of scale
- moving up the learning curve
- first mover advantage
technology strategy for managers and
entrepreneurs, Scott Shane 2009
117 no company is an island... technology
strategy coursemassachusetts institute of
technologymichael a m davies 2 may 2007
- modularity vs. the whole widget
118two different sorts of knowledge component or
modular architectural or integrative
- component knowledge
- knowledge about each of the core design concepts
- how they are implemented in a particular
component within a product - specialized and focused, can be mastered by an
individual or a small team - constant focus once dominant design established
- architectural knowledge
- knowledge about ways in which components link
together into coherent whole and are
interdependent - tends to become embedded as tacit knowledge
- communication channels, information filters and
problem-solving strategies
119modularity -gt decoupling
- modularity in the design of complex engineering
systems, carlissy. baldwin and kim b. clark, hbs
working paper, january 2004 - when a product or process is modularized, the
elements of its design are split up and assigned
to modules according to a formal architecture or
plan. - from an engineering perspective, a
modularization generally has three purposes - to make complexity manageable
- to enable parallel work
- to accommodate future uncertainty
120product architecture
121(No Transcript)
122not modular...
123apple and standards
- apple strategy maintain tight control over
hardware, software and the services they access - first mac only opened with special screwdriver,
no expansion slots - was unsuccessful strategy for last 30 years
- modularity and scale intel / windows / pc
manufacturers / ecosystem of add-ons - stability and ease of use vs. economies of scale
- this integral control has become a major asset in
recnt times ipod, iphone - not only architectural control
- also design, manufacturing expertise
124the whole widget
- it is the right approach for present day the
digital entertainment age - jobs wants to make complex devices like computers
and smartphones into truly mass-product products - for that he needs to control all aspects of the
customer experience - example ipod
- designing and manufacturing devices operating
systems, application software, internet
application marketing, brand name... - apple is the only company that controls the
whole widget hardware, software, developer
relations, marketing. it turns out that this is
apple greatest strategic advantage - the return of vertical integration
- the whole product
- end-to-end solution
- the whole widget
125no company is an island...
126business ecosystem thinking
- the traditional way to think about competition is
in terms of offers and markets - the problem is that this ignores the context the
environment- within which the business lies - and it ignores the need for co-evolution
- you need to understand the economic systems
evolving around you and find ways to contribute - i.e. start with the understanding of the big
picture
127the mobile telephony ecosystem
128heidel berg
closed systems
digital print
kodak
agfa
scitex
computer to plate computer to film
barco graphics
creo
PDF
tiff-it
postscript
workflow systems, components ripping, trapping,
imposition
native file formats
post script
artwork systems
markzware
quality control
enfocus pitstop
en focus OEM
en focus OEM
enfocus tailor
prepress editing
datacom
vio
format conversion
adobe acrobat
adobe postscript
post script clones
page layout
quark xpress
adobe pagemaker
image creation and editing
adobe photoshop, adobe illustrator
commercial printing magazines, newpspapers,
leaflets, digital printing
packaging
the prepress software ecosystem in 1999
129digital print
closed systems
growth of pdf is showstarter
computer to plate computer to film
workflow systems, components ripping, trapping,
imposition
PDF
tiff-it
postscript
native file formats
post script
will markzware go pdf? will it use its patent?
markzware
quality control
enfocus pitstop
en focus OEM
en focus OEM
will there be important pdf clones?
enfocus tailor
prepress editing
datacom
vio
will online preflighting take off? which business
model should enfocus use?
format conversion
adobe acrobat
adobe postscript
adobe friend and/or foe?
page layout
adobe pagemaker
should enfocus drop postscript products?
enlarge OEM business
image creation and editing
adobe photoshop, adobe illustrator
commercial printing magazines, newpspapers,
leaflets, digital printing
packaging
the prepress software ecosystem in 1999
130heidel berg
digital print
PDF
closed systems and native files
Open Document
computer to plate computer to film
agfa
esko artwork
barco graphics
gradual
workflow systems, components ripping, trapping,
imposition
tiff-it
native file formats
artwork systems
online systems
adobe acrobat
mark zware
quality control
quark xpress
callas OEM in adobe acrobat
enfocus
callas
enfocus pitstop
prepress editing
enfocus certified pdf workflow
datacom
format conversion
adobe creative suite
page layout
image creation and editing
commercial printing magazines, newpspapers,
leaflets, digital printing
packaging
the prepress software ecosystem in 2005
the prepress software ecosystem in 2008
131no company is an island...
132the mother of all high tech clusters silicon
valley
133industry life cylces
134(No Transcript)
135venture capital
- venture capital investment is estimated at 7.1
billion in 2004. - Silicon Valleys share of national venture
capital investment has continued to grow every
year since 1995 rising from 14 that year to 35
by 2004. - sectors
- software companies accounted for the largest
share 27. - the share of funding to semiconductor firms is
15. - biotechnology and medical device firms accounted
for 18.
136per capita income
- according to the united states census bureau, of
the 280 defined metropolitan areas, the San
Francisco Bay Area has the highest median
household income in the nation with 62,024 (40
above national average).
137Antwerp petrochemical cluster
- the port of Antwerp is the largest and most
diversified petrochemical centre in Europe. - seven of the ten largest chemical companies in
the world have one or more production sites
within the Antwerp petrochemical cluster. - Nowhere in the world are more chemical substances
produced than in the Antwerp port area. - Belgium represents only 2.7 of the total EU
population and 3.2 of the European GDP. However,
the Belgian chemical industry in 2006 covers more
than 8 of the total European turnover in this
sector and accounts for nearly 17 of European
exports of chemical products.
138some other examples
- hollywood
- a narrow belt in the u.s. northeast and the
eastern part of the midwest dominated u.s.
manufacturing up until the mid fifties - 64 percent share of manufacturing employment
- sialkot's stainless steel cluster in pakistan,
together with tuttlingen in germany dominate the
world surgical instrument market. - diamond trade clusters in antwerp
- porter (1998) lists some 30 clusters in the us
- the auto cluster in detroit, insurance in
hartford, and aircraft equipment and design in
seattle, hollywood,... - 30 export oriented clusters in portugal
- ranging from ornamental stones in evora to
horticulture in faro
139determinants of clustering
- world class scientific knowledge
- strong industrial base
- access to capital
- entrepreneurial spirit/role models
- infrastructure
- facilitating organisations
- government support
- roots
140characteristics
- the existence of a large pool of individuals with
specialized skills - reduced search and hiring costs
- requisite quality skill set is easily available
- individuals with skills are attracted to the
cluster - existence of firms providing specialized inputs
- high levels of technological spillovers and
innovation - due to proximity since information flows are
easier locally than over distances. - factors that lead to innovation in clusters.
- existence of sophisticated buyers
- access to specialized suppliers gives high levels
of flexibility and are able to implement
innovations more rapidly - high levels of competition and peer pressure
within the cluster act as an important stimulus
for innovation.
141characteristics
- trust and the related concept of social capital
- deals in valuable diamonds are sealed by a
handshake on the diamond exchange - when trust breaks down, unwritten rules must be
codified and third parties brought in to resolve
differences. - under certain conditions clusters slow
technological innovation - resource diseconomies
- insular competitive practices
- lock-in in ageing technology
142end part 1
143- ELEMENTS OF ENTREPRENEURIAL
- STRATEGIC THINKING
144what you should do...
- seeing the big picture...
- assessing the technology
- assessing the industry
- canvassing the business ecosystem
- assessing the business project
- uniqueness and complementary assets,
sustainability - appropriating value
- business models
- project complexity
- assessing the business portfolio
145elements of entrepreneurial strategic thinking
- assessing technological innovations performance
envelopes
146performance envelopes
- objectives
- canvas key performance criteria of a given
technology/product/market - what criteria are determining in the purchase
decision of your customers? - if applicable define per market segment
- how does your product rate?
- how does your competition rate?
- the key challenges
- identifying the relevant criteria, segments
- assessing correctly how you and your competitors
score - its forces you to consider things from the
perspective of your customer!
147the palm example
- palm gridpad
- too big and heavy
- too expensive
- for use inside specialized markets
- no pc connectivity
- apple newton
- heavy and cumbersome
- mediocre handwriting recognition
148palm pilot
- market segment
- clearly defined target group mobile
professionals - criteria
- simplicity
- small size
- reasonable price
- attractive design
- connectivity
- reliable input through easily learned character
set
149- palm pilot improvements
- simplicity
- size
- connectivity
- handwriting input
handeld device performance envelope 1996
150the palm business case lessons
- redefining the performance envelope
- often it is in the definition of the criteria
that a strike of genius makes the difference! - example of palm computer
- simplicity replacing pocket calendar
- replacing criterion character recognition by
input through handwriting - three criticial success factors
- understanding the customer pain
- understanding deeply an area of technology and
what it can and cannot deliver today, and
tomorrow - find ways to harness the technology to resolve
these problems
151canvassing the performance envelope
- define who is your customer
- list known or suspected market segments customer
groups with specific needs - list criteria known or suspected to weigh in the
customer decision - sources
- expertise , informal information
- hunches, convictions
- market surveys, customer surveys
- a strike of genius in the definition of the
criteria can make the difference! - calibrate each criterion
- what is the show stopper level?
- optionally define the relative importance of
each criterion
152performance envelope e-ink
153elements of entrepreneurial strategic thinking
- assessing industries
- is it an interesting industry?
154Porters 5 industry forces
155(No Transcript)
156elements of entrepreneurial strategic thinking
157business model simplified
- what do you need to do in order to run your
business? - series of processes
- financially
- how much money do you need start it up
- how much money is tied up in the process
- how much money do you generate
158keys to economic viability
- revenue is adequate in relation to capital
investments required and margins - customer acquisition and retention costs and time
need to attract customers are viable - margins are adequate to cover fixed costs
- operating cash cycle characteristics are
favorable - how much cash must be tied up in working capital
(inventory...) and fow how long - how quick customers will pay
- how slowly suppliers and employees must be paid
159webvan
- Webvan was an online "credit and delivery"
grocery business that went bankrupt in 2001. It
delivered products to customers' homes within a
30-minute window of their choosing. - At its peak, it offered service in ten U.S.
markets San Francisco Bay Area, Dallas, San
Diego, Los Angeles, Chicago, Seattle, Portland,
Atlanta, Sacramento, and Orange County. The
company had originally hoped to expand to 26
cities - none of Webvan's senior executives (or major
investors) had any management experience in the
supermarket industry, including its CEO George
Shaheen who had resigned as head of Andersen
Consulting (now Accenture), a management
consulting firm, to join the venture.
160- Webvan tried to embrace a total customer
satisfaction model involving a 30 minute window
delivery without considering that many working
customers would like their groceries delivered at
home at night. - Webvan placed a 1 billion (USD) order with
engineering company Bechtel to build its
warehouses, bought a fleet of delivery trucks,
purchased 30 Sun Microsystems Enterprise 4500
servers, dozens of Compaq ProLiant computers and
several Cisco Systems 7513 and 7507 routers, as
well as more than 80 21-inch ViewSonic color
monitors and at least 115 Herman Miller Aeron
chairs (at over 800 each). - orders were smaller than the minimal order size
to be profitable, so money was lost per order - its business model was profit proof
161ebay vs webvan
- webvan
- huge up-front investments
- minimal threshold to run business distribution
centers, logistics... - huge operational costs
- requires major change in daily habits of
customers requires at least time, probably
marketing efforts to win them over - cost model of webvan is on at least one points
worse than traditonal distribution order picking
by customer - distribution is very low margin business
- other distributors have huge buying power,
receive lower prices - business model requires minimal sales value per
transaction - very high risk
- up-front investment
- ebay
- very low investments
- very low operational costs
- little marketing expenses
- high margins
- low risks
162elements of entrepreneurial strategic thinking
163complexity for the customer
- (behavioral) change for customer
- novelty of offering for customer
- dis-benefits to customer
- cost price, return on investment, total cost of
ownership
164complexity for the company
- marketing/sales capability challenge
- new skills?
- new markets, new channels, different type of
customers? - technology reach
- radical?
- impact on processes within company
- entirely new process?
- needed complementary assets
- significant, new?
- business model
- entirely new?
- team members experience in domains
- been there, done that?
165canvassing project complexity
- identify key elements of strategy
- products, marketing, operations, ...
- assess complexity
- for organisation
- for market
- for each complex project
- argue why it is of importance for the
organisation to invest in project - compare to alternative scenarios
- describe resources allocated to tackle project
166e-ink project complexity
- licensing
- core technology
- legal aspects
- materials
- manufacturing
- support
- screens
- micro-electronics
- devices
- manufacturing
- marketing
- content
- display market
- electricity
- radio communications
167Xerox PARC
- Palo Alto research center, a flagship research
division of the Xerox corporation, - Xerox was one of the leading technology companies
in the world - its founder, Carlson received in 1942 a patent
for photo-copier technology. - Xerox decided to pioneer the field of personal
computing and build a research center - Xerox PARC was the incubator of many elements of
modern computing - the mouse (invented at the Stanford research
institute) - computer generated color graphics
- the WYSIWYG text editor
- postscript
- ethernet
- smalltalk programming language.
- laser printer
168the Xerox alto
- conceptualized in 1972
- a real time machine that interacted with a mouse
and windows. - contained ethernet, smalltalk, wysiwyg, a
graphical user interface. - created roughly three years prior to the IBM PC,
Xerox could have easily entered the computer
market with the alto, but chose not to.
169(on a sidenote pixar)
- Initially, Pixar was a high-end computer hardware
company that sold to government agencies, the
medical community and Disney Studios. - The Image Computer never sold well. In a bid to
drive sales of the system, Pixar who had long
been creating short demonstration animations
premiered his creations at SIGGRAPH, the computer
graphics industry's largest convention, to great
fanfare. - As poor sales of Pixar's computers threatened to
put the company out of business, Lasseter's
animation department began producing
computer-animated commercials for outside
companies. - In 1991, after substantial layoffs in the
company's computer department, Pixar made a 26
million deal with Disney to produce three
computer-animated feature films, the first of
which was Toy Story. - wikipedia
170Seybold
- Jonathan Seybold realized there was need for an
authority, a platform for impartial information
about electronic publishing. - He set up the Seybold organization, which
organized the Seybold Conferences and published
the Seybold magazine. - In summer 1984 Jonathan Seybold was invited to
Apple - Jobs When that first page came out of the
LaserWriter, I was blown away. No one had seen
anything like this before. I held this page up
in my hand and said, Who will not want that? I
knew then that this was going to have a profound
impact. - Seybold said to Jobs, Youve just turned
publishing on its head. This is the watershed
event. - When I turned to John Warnock, he had this look
on his face. He was just so happy. It was a magic
moment.
171Postscript, the dominant design
- Adobe allowed to license technology to other
manufacturers. - Adobe made Postscript public
- Opposite of the existing file formats, whose
intellectual property was jealously protected. - any vendor could develop a Postscript
interpreter. - at least 40 companies tried to clone Postscript.
- Adobe licensed its technology to a wide range of
printer vendors. - IBM, HP (57 meetings in seven years) and major