Title: Strategy and Innovation
1Strategy and Innovation
- Jonny Holmström
- E-Mail jonny.holmstrom_at_informatik.umu.se
- Twitter _at_jonnyholmstrom
2Todays Main Issues
- Key trends in todays society
- Disruptive innovations in the network economy
- Some possible strategic responses to disruptive
innovations from product and services to
solutions and experiences
3The big trends in the 21st Century?
4The big trends in the 21st Century?
5The big trends in the 21st Century?
6Result Disruption
7Disruptive innovation
- A disruptive innovation is an innovation that
helps create a new market and value network, and
eventually disrupts an existing market and value
network (over a few years or decades), displacing
an earlier technology. (Wikipedia)
8 According to Clayton Christensen, professor at
HBS, high-performing firms can do everything
right and still loose their market leaderhip
9The fast track of innovation
Because of increased competition in a globalized
world innovation is speeding up. But while new
products are launched in an increasing pace,
consumers are having a hard time catching up
10The comfort zone of society
Society does not change as fast as technological
innovations are. People much rather stay within
their comfort zone and keep living their lives
they way they are used to living them.
11The real meaning is in the use
Technological possibilities and the pace of
innovation is way ahead of peoples needs. We
must remind ourselves that the real meaning of
innovation is in the use.
12Disruptive Innovations
- Clayton Christensen Innovators Dilemma and
Innovators Solution - Sustaining Innovation make better products that
can be sold for more money to attractive
customers incumbents prevail - Disruptive Innovations commercialize a simpler,
more convenient product that sells for less money
and appeals to a new or unattractive customers
new entrants beat incumbents
13Sustaining vs Disruptive Innovations
- Sustaining innovation targets demanding customers
with better performance than what was
previously available - Disruptive innovations do not attempt to bring
better products to established customers in
existing markets rather they introduce
products/services that are (maybe) not as good as
those currently available but they are simpler
and less expensive and appeal to customers - Disruption occurs as the rate of technological
improvements are higher than customers can
utilize - The disruptive products and services may
eventually become acceptable to high-end
customers
14The customer is not always right Why high
performing companies fail
- The highest performing companies ... have well
developed systems for killing ideas that their
customers dont want. As a result, these
companies find it very difficult to invest
adequate resources in disruptive technologies
lower margin opportunities their customers dont
want until those same customers decided that
they want them. And by then it is too late. - - This is the Innovators Dilemma
15Two Types of Disruptions
- New Market Disruptions compete with
non-consumption as they are so cheap and simple
they attract new customers previously dont use
the products and services - Low End Disruptions simple low cost business
models to pick off the least attractive of the
established firms markets and progress upwards
16Disruptive vs. Sustaining Technologies
17How to initiate an innovation
18Examples
- Low cost airlines British Airways and KLM under
attack from Ryanair - full service, hub-and-spoke
strategy versus low cost, point to point,
no-frills strategies - Barnes Noble vs Amazon.com
- The attackers utilize strategies that are both
different from and in conflict with the
strategies of the incumbent firms Disruptive
strategic innovations - Incumbent firms struggle in competing because of
conflict with mainstream strategy and established
way of working
19Possible responses to disruptive innovations
- Focus on and invest in the traditional business
the disruptive innovation will not grow
indefinitely (10-20) and wont capture 100 of
the market - Ignore the innovation it is not your business
different customers, value propositions and
require different skills and competences - Attack back disrupt the disruptive innovation
create an even newer game - Playing both games simultaneously via a
separate unit
Charitou, C C Markides (2003) Responses to
Disruptive Strategic Innovations. Sloan
Management Review Winter 2003 55-63
20Strategic Re-Orientations From Products and
Services to Solutions and Experiences
- Two strategic re-orientations in recent years
- In a world of standardized products, companies
are turning to service offering for growth -
often in the name of business solutions - What the customer buys and considers value is
never a product. It is always utility that is,
what a product does for him Peter Drucker
21Example GM
- General Motors
- Automotive services - sales, repairs, financing,
parts and accessories roadside assistance
insurance - OnStar travel, emergencies, satellite radio
services vehicle monitoring services car phone
and data services, personal concierge services - Home services (GMAC) home sales, mortgage,
relocation, monitoring, insurance, satellite TV
etc - Underpinned by strong brand, an ICTs platform and
a community of users and suppliers
22Example MacGregor Cranes
- MacGregor Cranes
- Manufacturer of shipboard cranes
- Core Manufacturing of cranes based on
engineering skills - Threat from low-wage countries
- From product to services from cranes to the
service of lifting stuff - Give the crane for free, charge the customer for
using it - Role of sensor technologies
23Summing up
- Disruptive innovation is a key force in todays
society - Innovation strategies must be in place both for
incumbent firms and start-ups - The customer is always right is not correct
anymore