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The theory of disruptive innovation

23 domingo Abr 2017

Posted by José Félix Rodríguez Antón in INDUSTRIA FARMACEUTICA, Marketing farmacéutico

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Etiquetas

Clayton Christensen, disruptive innovation, disruptive technology, Innosight, innovator´s dilemma, Rose Park Advisors, sustaining innovation

the theory disruptive

It was invented by Clayton Christensen, of Harvard Business School, in his book “The Innovator´s Dilemma”. Christensen used the term to describe innovations that create new markets by discovering new categories of customers.

He contrasted disruptive innovation with sustaining innovation, which improves existing products.

Empirical teste show that using disruptive theory makes us measurably and significantly more accurate in our predictions of which businesses will succeed.

The “innovator´s dilema” is the difficult choice an established company faces when it has to choose between holding an existing market by doing the same thing a bit better, or capturing new markets by embracing new technologies and adopting new business models.

Disruptive innovations usually find their first customers at the bottom of the market: as unproved, often unpolished, products, they cannot command a high Price. Incumbents are often complacent, slow to recognise the threat that their inferior competitors pose.

Clayton Magleby Christensen is an American business consultant, Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard University, is expert on innovation and growth. From 1979 to 1984 worked as a consultant and Project manager with the Boston Consulting Group (BCG),where worked strategy consulting. In 2000, Christensen founded Innosight a consulting firm that uses his theories of innovation to help companies create new growth businesses. In 2007, he founded Rose Park Advisors, a firm identifies and invests in disruptive companies.

The theory of disruptive innovation, has proved to be a powerful way of thinking about innovation-driven growth. Many leaders of small, entrepreneurial companies praise it as their guiding star; so do may executives at large, well-established organizations. This theory has been enormously influential in business circles and a powerful tool for predicting which industry entrants will succeed.

disruptive_innovation_21

“Disruption” describes a process in which a smaller company with fewer resources i sable to successfully challenge established incumbent businesses. Specifically, as incumbents focus on improving their products and services for their most demanding customers, they exceed the needs of some segments and ignore the needs of orders.

Disruptive innovations origínate in low-end or new-market footholds. In a new-market footholds, disrupters create a market where none existed. Put simply, they find a way to turn nonconsumers into consumers. Disruptive innovations don´t catch on with mainstream customers until quality catches up to their standards. Are initially considered inferior by most of an incumbent´s customers. The customers wait until its quality rises enough to satisfy them. Once that´s happened, they adopt the new product and happily accept its lower Price.

Disrupters often build business models that are very different from those of incumbents.

Some disruptive innovations succeed; some don´t. Companies that rise to the top in very different ways will be seen as sources of insight into a common strategy for succeeding. Managers may mix and match behaviours that are very likely inconsistent with one another and thus unlikely to yield the hoped-for result. When an entrant tackles incumbent competitors head-on, offering better products or services, the incumbents will accelerate their innovations to defend their business.

Incumbents rarely responded effectively to disruptive innovations, not why entrants eventually moved upmarket to challenge incumbents, over and over again. The same forces leading incumbents to ingore early-stage disruptions also compel disrupters ultimately to disrupt. Researchers realized that a company´s propersity for strategic change is profoundly affected by the interests of customers who provide the resources the firm needs to survive. Incumbents listen to their existing customers. Incumbents´s focus on their existing customers becomes institutionalized in internal processes that make it difficult for even managers to shift investiment to disruptive innovations.

New-market disruptions take hold in a completely new value network and appeal to customers who have previously gone without the product.

The theory with the time has become more powerful and practicable.

Bibliography:

  • Clayton M. Christensen, “The Innovator´s Dilemma”, Harvard Business School Press, 1997
  • Clayton M. Christensen, Michael E. Raynor, Rory McDonald, “ What is Disruptive Innovation?, Harvard Business Review, December, 2015
  • Clayton M. Christensen, “Strategy & Innovation”,
  • A. W., “What disruptive innovation mean”, The Economist, Jan, 2015
  • Daniel Goleman, “Leadership & Managing People”, 2017
  • Wikipedia

Links relationated:

  • Clayton M. Christensen

http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/profile.aspx?facId=6437

  • Innosight

http://www.claytonchristensen.com/ideas-in-action/innosight-consulting/

  • Disruptive innovation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpkoCZ4vBSI

 

 

 

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Innovation: lifecycle

01 sábado Abr 2017

Posted by José Félix Rodríguez Antón in INDUSTRIA FARMACEUTICA, Marketing farmacéutico

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Etiquetas

diffusion of innovations, disruptive innovation, early adopter, lifecycle, Rogers, sustaining innovation

cyclelifes

 

Engaging with open innovation is a difficult process which requires time and an understanding of an orgnanisation´s own processes.

Challenges associated with engaging with open innovation across the lifecycle of a process and a product.

Everett M. Rogers was an American communication theorist and sociologist, who originated the diffussion of innovations theory and introduced the term early adopter. He was distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of Communication and Journalism at the University of New Mexico. “Diffusion of Innovations” was published in 1962, it became the second most-cited book in the social sciences.

innovations

Rogers proposes that adoprters of any new innovation or idea can be categorized as:

  • Innovators 2,5%
  • Early adopters 13,5%
  • Early mayority 34%
  • Late maority 34%
  • Laggards 16%

Based on the mathematically Bell curve.

Each adopter´s willingness and ability to adopt an innovation depends on their:

  • Awareness
  • Interest
  • Evaluation
  • Trial
  • Adoption

People can fall into different categories for different innovations. The graph shows acumulative percentage of adopters over time-slow at the start, more rapid as adoption increases, then leveling off until only a small percentage of laggards have not adopted.

Are two types of innovative strategies for a large company:

Sustaining innovation: evolutionary changes in their markets, products, etc. valued by their existing customers, fairly well.

Disruptive innovation: radical shifts in technology, customers, regulatory changes, etc, that create new markets. It is innovation that go after new markets, new customers, new technologies, etc. are best built outside a large company´s existing organization. In a large company is attempting to solve two simultaneous unknowns: the customer/market is unknown, and the product feature set is unknown.

Mastering disruptive innovation in a large company requires:

  • Different people
  • Different processes

 

Bibliography:

  • Everett Roggers, “ Diffusion of Innovations”, 5th Edition, Ed. Simon and Schuster, 2003
  • Wikipedia

 

Links relationed:

  • Innovation Management

http://www.innovationmanagement.se/tag/innovation-life-cycle-processes/

  • Oracle

    tp://www.oracle.com/us/products/applications/consumer/innovation- management/overview/index.html

 

 

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