Blue Ocean or Fast-Second Innovation? A Four-Breakthrough Model to Explain Successful Market Domination

Bernard Buisson, P. Silberzahn
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Innovation is widely recognized as a major driver of long-term corporate growth. Successful innovators who manage to dominate new markets enjoy Schumpeterian rents for their inventions. How then can a firm dominate a new market? Two streams of literature have proposed opposite answers to this question.The First Mover approach indicates that by setting up a strong differentiation strategy, companies are supposed to create a new area where profits abound. This approach is supported especially by Kim and Mauborgne (2004) who coined the term Blue Ocean to describe it.The Fast Second approach, defended by Markides and Geroski (2005), contends, on the contrary, that companies should not try to become pioneers, but should target the newly created market in second position, and colonize it.But neither Blue Ocean nor Fast Second are able to convincingly explain successful market domination. Our study of 24 innovation cases suggests that innovation which leads to market domination is instead achieved by using four kinds of breakthroughs, separately of simultaneously.
蓝海还是快速创新?解释成功的市场支配的四个突破模型
创新被广泛认为是企业长期发展的主要驱动力。主宰新市场的成功创新者享受着熊彼特式的发明租金。那么,一家公司如何能够主宰一个新的市场呢?两种文学流派对这个问题提出了截然相反的答案。先发策略表明,通过制定强有力的差异化战略,企业应该创造一个利润丰厚的新领域。Kim和Mauborgne(2004)特别支持这种方法,他们创造了“蓝海”一词来描述它。Markides和Geroski(2005)捍卫的快速第二方法认为,相反,公司不应该试图成为先驱者,而应该将新创建的市场定位在第二位置,并对其进行殖民。但无论是蓝海还是快速第二都无法令人信服地解释成功的市场统治。我们对24个创新案例的研究表明,导致市场支配的创新是通过四种突破来实现的,这些突破可以单独使用,也可以同时使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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