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Blue ocean strategy

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Blue ocean strategy

  1. 1. Tanvi 173902013 Kiruthika 173902017 Rohit 173902022 Nishant 173902026 Department of Allied Hospitality Studies MAHE Manipal
  2. 2. • It is “a consistent pattern of strategic thinking behind the creation of new markets and industries where demand is created rather than fought for and the rule of competition is irrelevant” • The Strategy and related concepts are developed by W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne in 2004. • This strategy advocates that competition does not lead to success but rather the Desire to Dare to be different. Explore the Unknown!!!
  3. 3. I] RED OCEAN VS. BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY Red Ocean Strategy Blue Ocean Strategy Compete in existing market space. Create uncontested market space. Beat the competition. Make the competition irrelevant. Exploit existing demand. Create and capture new demand. Make the value-cost trade-off. Break the value-cost trade-off. Align the whole system of a firm’s activities with its strategic choice of differentiation or low cost. Align the whole system of a firm’s activities in pursuit of differentiation and low cost.
  4. 4. Elements of Development Head-to-Head Competition Blue Ocean Creation Industry Focuses on rivals within its industry Looks across alternative industries Strategic Group Focuses on competitive position within strategic group Looks across strategic groups within industry Buyer Group Focuses on better serving the buyer group Redefines the industry buyer group Scope of Product or Service Offering Focuses on maximizing the value of product and service offerings within the bounds of its industry Looks across to complementary product and service offerings Functional-emotional Orientation Focuses on improving the price performance within the functional- emotional orientation of its industry Rethinks the functional- emotional orientation of its industry Time Focuses on adapting to external trends as they occur Participates in shaping external trends over time
  5. 5. • Value Innovation is the simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost, creating a leap in value for both buyers and the company. • It is the cornerstone of market-creating strategy. • Because value to buyers comes from the offering’s utility minus its price, and because value to the company is generated from the offering’s price minus its cost, value innovation is achieved only when the whole system of utility, price, and cost is aligned. Cost savings are made by eliminating and reducing the factors an industry competes on. Buyer value is lifted by raising and creating elements the industry has never offered. II] Value Innovation
  6. 6. The strategy canvas is a central diagnostic tool for getting clear on the current state of play and making your blue ocean move. It graphically captures, in one simple picture, the current strategic landscape and the future prospects for an organization.
  7. 7. STRATEGY CANVAS • The strategy canvas serves two purposes: 1)To capture the current state of play in the known market space, which allows users to clearly see the factors that the industry competes on and where the competition currently invests 2)To propel users to action by reorienting their focus from competitors to alternatives and from customers to noncustomers of the industry • The horizontal axis on the strategy canvas captures the range of factors that an industry competes on and invests in, while the vertical axis captures the offering level that buyers receive across all of these key competing factors. • The value curve or strategic profile is the basic component of the strategy canvas. It is a graphic depiction of a company’s relative performance across its industry’s factors of competition. A strong value curve has focus, divergence as well as a compelling tagline.
  8. 8. It is a simple matrix like tool that drives companies to focus simultaneously on eliminating and reducing, as well as raising and creating while unlocking a new blue ocean. • Eliminate : Which factors that the industry has long competed on should be eliminated ? • Raise : Which factors should be raised well above the industry’s standard? • Reduce : Which factors should be reduced well below the industry’s standard? • Create : Which factors should be created that the industry has never offered?
  9. 9. V] PIONEER-MIGRATOR-SETTLER (PMS) MAP
  10. 10. PIONEER-MIGRATOR-SETTLER (PMS) MAP • A useful exercise for a corporate management team pursuing profitable growth is to plot the company’s current and planned portfolios on the Pioneer-Migrator-Settler Map. • Settlers are defined as me-too businesses, migrators are business offerings better than most in the marketplace, and a company’s pioneers are the businesses that offer unprecedented value. • These are a company’s blue ocean strategic moves, and are the most powerful sources of profitable growth. They are the only ones with a mass following of customers.
  11. 11. • Customers of your industry. • “Soon-to-be” noncustomers who are on the hedge of your market waiting to jump ship • “Refusing” noncustomers who consciously choose against your market. • “Unexplored” noncustomers who are in markets distant from yours. VI] THREE TIERS OF NONCUSTOMERS
  12. 12. • Typically, to grow their share of a market, companies strive to retain and expand their existing customer base. • Although the universe of noncustomers typically offers blue ocean opportunities, few companies have keen insight into who noncustomers are and how to unlock them. To convert this huge latent demand into real demand in the form of new customers, companies need to deepen their understanding of the universe of noncustomers. • The first tier of noncustomers is closest to the current market, sitting just on the edge. They are buyers who minimally purchase an industry’s offering out of necessity but are mentally noncustomers of the industry. • The second tier of noncustomers is people who refuse to use an industry’s offering. These are buyers who have seen the current offering as an option to fulfill their needs but have decided against participating. • The third tier of noncustomers is farthest from the market. They are noncustomers who have never considered the market’s offering as an option. • By focusing on key commonalities across these noncustomers and existing customers, companies can understand how to pull them into their new market.
  13. 13. VII] SEQUENCE OF BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY Buyer Utility Is there exceptional buyer utility in your business idea? Price Is your price easily accessible to the mass of buyers? Cost Can you attain your cost target to profit at your strategic price? Adoption What are the adoption hurdles in actualizing your business idea? Are you addressing them upfront? A Commercially Viable Blue Ocean Idea
  14. 14. • Here Kim and Mauborgne articulate the strategic sequence of creating a commercially viable blue ocean idea. The starting point is buyer utility. Does your offering unlock exceptional utility? Is there a compelling reason for the mass of people to buy it? • Second, is your offering priced to attract the mass of target buyers so that they have a compelling ability to pay for your offering? If it is not, they cannot buy it. Nor will the offering create irresistible market buzz. • These first two steps address the revenue side of a company’s business model. They ensure that you create a leap in net buyer value. To secure the profit side you need to assess the third element: cost. The cost side of a company’s business model ensures that it creates a leap in value for itself in the form of profit—that is, the price of the offering minus the cost of production. The key question here is: Can you produce your offering at the target cost and still earn a healthy profit margin? You should not let costs drive prices. Nor should you scale down utility because high costs block your ability to profit at the strategic price. When the target cost cannot be met, you must either forgo the idea because the blue ocean won’t be profitable, or you must innovate your business model to hit the target cost. • The last step in the sequence is to address adoption hurdles. What are the adoption hurdles in rolling out your idea? Have you addressed these up front? The formulation of blue ocean strategy is complete only when you can address adoption hurdles in the beginning to ensure the successful actualization of your idea
  15. 15. • It helps to get managers thinking from a demand-side perspective. It outlines all the levers companies can pull to deliver exceptional utility to buyers as well as the various experiences buyers can have with a product or service. This mindset helps managers identify the full range of utility spaces that a product or service can potentially fill. It has two dimensions: The Buyer Experience Cycle (BEC) and the Utility levers. • The Buyer Experience Cycle (BEC): A buyer’s experience can usually be broken into a cycle of six stages, running more or less sequentially from purchase to disposal. • Utility levers: Cutting across the stages of the buyer’s experience are what we call utility levers – the ways in which companies unlock utility for their customers. • By locating a new offering on one of the spaces of the buyer utility map, managers can clearly see how, and whether, the new idea creates a different utility proposition from existing offerings but also removes the biggest blocks to utility that stand in the way of converting noncustomers into customers. In our experience, managers all too often focus on delivering more of the same stage of the buyer’s experience. This approach may be reasonable in emerging industries, where there is plenty of room for improving a company’s utility proposition. But in many existing industries, this approach is unlikely to produce a market-shaping blue ocean strategy.
  16. 16. IX] THE PRICE CORRIDOR OF THE MASS Specify a price level within the price corridor Three alternative product or service types Identify the price corridor of the mass. Same/Different Form, Function or Objective Size of circle is proportional to number of buyers that product/service attracts
  17. 17. Cognitive Waking employees up to the need for a strategic shift. Resource the greater the shift in strategy, the greater the resources it requires for execution Motivational : How do you motivate key players to move fast and tenaciously to carry out a break from the status quo? Political As one manager put it, “In our organization you get shot down before you stand up.” Hurdles
  18. 18. Conventional Wisdom XI] Tipping Point Leadership The theory of organizational change rests on transforming the mass and these efforts require steep resources and long timeframes. To achieve a strategic shift at low cost, focus on the extremes – the people, acts, and activities that exert a disproportionate influence on performance
  19. 19. XII] FAIR PROCESS Engagement Explanation Expectation Clarity Engagement means involving individuals in the strategic decisions that affect them by soliciting their input and allowing them to refute the merits of one another’s ideas and assumptions. Engagement communicates management’s respect for individuals and their point of view. The result is better strategic decisions by management and genuine commitment from everyone involved in execution. Explanation means that everyone involved and affected should understand why final strategic decisions are made. An explanation of rationale engenders confidence among employees that managers have considered their opinions and have made decisions impartially in the overall interest of the company, even if their own ideas have been rejected. It also serves as a powerful feedback loop to enhance learning. Expectation clarity requires that after a strategy is set, managers clearly state the new rules of the game. Although the expectations may be demanding, employees know up front the standards by which their work will be judged and the consequences of failure. When people clearly understand expectations, political jockeying and favoritism are minimized, and people can focus on executing the strategy rapidly.
  20. 20. Apple using BOS ipod & iphone
  21. 21. 4 Underpinning Principles of BOS 1. How to create uncontested market space by reconstructing market boundaries. 2. Focusing on the big picture. 3. Reaching beyond the existing demand. 4. Getting the strategic sequence right.

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