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Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant

Harvard Business School Press (Feb 3, 2005)
Hardcover – 256 pages
ISBN-10: 1591396190
ISBN-13: 9781591396192

Book Description

Winning by not competing: a fresh approach to strategy Since the dawn of the industrial age, companies have engaged in head-to-head competition in search of sustained, profitable growth. They have fought for competitive advantage, battled over market share, and struggled for differentiation. Yet these hallmarks of competitive strategy are not the way to create profitable growth in the future. In a book that challenges everything you thought you knew about the requirements for strategic success, W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne argue that cutthroat competition results in nothing but a bloody red ocean of rivals fighting over a shrinking profit pool. Based on a study of 150 strategic moves spanning more than a hundred years and thirty industries, the authors argue that lasting success comes not from battling competitors, but from creating “blue oceans”: untapped new market spaces ripe for growth. Such strategic moves—which the authors call “value innovation”—create powerful leaps in value that often render rivals obsolete for more than a decade. Blue Ocean Strategy presents a systematic approach to making the competition irrelevant and outlines principles and tools any company can use to create and capture blue oceans. A landmark work that upends traditional thinking about strategy, this book charts a bold new path to winning the future.

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byzantin3
byzantin3 wrote and rated
  • 4.0 of 5 stars
on Oct 13, 2008 at 3:12 am

A core message that Blue Ocean Strategy brings out would be to always move away from competition, create your own unique market space and make competition irrelevant to your product. I chanced upon this book years ago during my Business and IT Innovation class back in college and the message stayed within me until now. There is absolutely no point in trying to engage in a price war, creating a 'bloody ocean', when you can find ways to innovate your product, re-postion, re-design or make it even more relevant to your target audience. A simple logic that many failed to embrace.

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