![]() |
Six traps that will lose you market shareIn physics, the Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed - it can just change from one form to another. However, we are not constrained by this law in commerce when it comes to demand - new demand can be created. With market power moving from the producer to the consumer, and global competition intensifying, we can't afford to chase market share in the same old way. We need to create, what the authors W Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne refer to as Blue Oceans, and stay away from Red Oceans. A Blue Ocean is uncontested market space where demand is created, as opposed to a Red Ocean, which is a zero sum game - one company's gain is another company's loss. So the whole idea is to go for Blue Oceans, where industry structure and market boundaries exist only in your mind - you don't have to chase customers by just delivering more for less - you can actually create demand. Here are six traps that will keep you in Red Oceans (adapted from W Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne. Red Ocean Traps. HBR, March 2015). Trap 1: Seeing it from the customer's perspective Trap 2: Going for a niche market The British food chain Pret a Manger approached it a little differently. They looked at three sets of consumers: restaurant-going professionals, fast-food customers and those who brought their own lunch (the brown bag set). There were lots of differences between these groups, so at first glance they appear to be three separate niches. However, they also had three things in common: they want fresh and healthful lunch, want it quickly and at a reasonable price. So what Pret a Manger did was to offer restaurant-quality sandwiches made fresh every day with quality ingredients, prepared even faster than fast food. All delivered at a reasonable price. They created a new market space by unlocking this aggregate untapped demand, as opposed to just going for one segment. Trap 3: Confusing innovation with creating new markets Granted Uber's technology works, but it is not the sole reason for its success. It has succeeded because it is simple to use, fun and productive - people fall in love with the value offering, not with the technology. Trap 4: Equating creative destruction with market creation Creating new markets does not always have to lead to destruction. Viagra, for example, introduced a whole new class of drug, not displacing any before it. It unlocked new demand by offering a solution to a real problem that men experienced in their personal relationships. Market-creating moves are non-destructive when they offer solutions where none existed previously. Trap 5: Relying on differentiation Trap 6: Providing more for less These Red Ocean traps are not necessarily bad strategies - sometimes breakthrough ideas do come from customers. However, they leave you in contested market space where one person's gain is another's loss. So sometimes to experience market growth it pays to actually grow the market itself. About Sid PeimerA seasoned and insightful executive with multisector experience in roles as diverse as senior leadership, creative copy and education. I am a qualified pharmacist with an MBA from UCT. I am currently in my second year of PhD studies with CPUT, and a tenured lecturer at Red & Yellow Creative School of Business on the BCom programme. View my profile and articles... |