The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age
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Customer Trajectory
The first variable to consider in any case of business model disruption is the customer trajectory. Which customers will provide the initial basis for the challenger’s market entry, and are they already customers of the incumbent? Business model disrupters can enter the market through one of two trajectories: r Outside-in: The disrupter starts by selling to buyers that are not cur- rently served by the incumbent (that are “outside” the incumbent’s market), and over time, the disrupter works its way in until it starts to steal customers directly from the incumbent’s own market. r Inside-out: From the beginning, the disrupter starts by selling to some subsegment of the incumbent’s current customers. This initial subsegment may be small (sometimes the most affluent or the most eager to try new things), but over time, it grows as the successful dis- rupter expands outward to claim more and more of the incumbent’s customers. Christensen’s new market theory of disruption is based solely on cases that follow the outside-in customer trajectory. Indeed, one of the fundamental keys to his theory is that by starting outside the incumbent’s customer base, the disrupter makes it very hard for the incumbent to respond. However, many cases of business disruption today take the opposite customer trajectory: inside-out. All three of the cases we just saw were inside-out cases. The iPhone did not start by selling to buyers who were not previously in the market for a mobile phone. Rather, it began with a small subsegment of the type of customers who would certainly have owned a Nokia previously. At first, Nokia could reason that Apple was stealing a profitable but small part of the market and that Nokia could aim to hold on to the much larger majority of customers who were so far unwilling to pay the higher monthly fees for a smartphone. But over time, the iPhone’s customer base expanded outward to attract more and more of these cus- tomers. Similarly, Netflix did not start by appealing to customers who had never used video rental services like Blockbuster. Instead, its appeal was specifically to those who had—pointing to their frustration with late fees and promising a better customer experience. And Warby Parker obviously had no option but to go after customers served by the incumbents like M A S T E R I N G D I S R U P T I V E B U S I N E S S M O D E L S 215 Luxottica. If you didn’t already own or need prescription glasses, you were unlikely to sign up for Warby Parker. The company’s rise may have started with some of the more price-sensitive customers from the current customer base (those who would give online ordering a try primarily for the $95 price tag), but it then expanded outward as it proved itself capable of delivering a true high-fashion brand as well as a superior customer experience. Disruptive Scope The second important variable in cases of business model disruption is the likely scope of the disruption. There is sometimes an assumption that whenever disruption occurs, the incumbent’s business, product, or service will be replaced 100 percent by the disruptive challenger. Out with the old, in with the new. In some cases, this does happen. When Henry Ford’s mass-produced automobile arrived, it was only a matter of years before the horse and buggy had basically vanished as a means of transportation. (Kevin Kelly has argued persuasively that no technology ever disappears from use entirely 19 —and, indeed, you can still enjoy a carriage ride around New York’s Central Park as an expensive tourist treat.) But in many cases of business disruption, the scope is not 100 percent. Even after being disrupted, the incumbent’s product or business model hangs on, confined to a diminished portion of the market but still a notable player in the industry. A recent example of this can be seen in bookselling, with the arrival of e-books. Thanks to Amazon’s development of the Kindle e-book for- mat and electronic readers, consumers discovered they had a new choice for reading. The e-book and its online bookstore offered many compel- ling advantages: a lower price per book, a vast selection of choices, nearly instant purchase and download, and the ability to carry hundreds of books in your purse or bag at the weight of a paperback. The threat to booksellers was clear: there is no need for a customer to walk into their local bookstore to download an e-book. In the first few years after the launch of the Kindle, e-books enjoyed steady growth in market share. Many in the publishing industry looked at that growth curve, projected it outward, and nervously predicted that in a few short years, e-books would comprise the majority of book sales and publishers would no longer be able to afford to produce print editions. 20 But then something unexpected happened. After a spurt of rapid growth, 216 M A S T E R I N G D I S R U P T I V E B U S I N E S S M O D E L S e-book sales leveled off. Various reports, confirmed to me by insiders in the industry, say that the plateau was about 30 percent of book sales by revenue. 21 This was still enough to spark major disruption and shifts in the balance of power in the industry. (Borders, one of the largest retail book- sellers in the United States, filed for bankruptcy in 2011.) Yet printed books, while diminished, certainly did not disappear into obsolescence. Although this surprised many observers, it was no fluke. In fact, I believe that by looking at the behavior of book buyers, it would have been quite easy to predict the scope of this particular disruption. One important lens for predicting disruptive scope is the product’s dif- ferent use cases (as discussed in chapter 6). Customers buy books on a variety of occasions, and they read books in a variety of settings. In some use cases for reading, it is quite clear that the e-book provides a far superior value proposition—for example, when you are going on a trip and would like to have a variety of reading options but don’t want to be weighed down by a bag of books. In other reading use cases, however, a printed book may be better—for example, if you want to take notes in the margin or read on the beach in direct sunlight (cases where e-book software and screens have continued to lag the paper medium). We can also look at use cases for book purchase. When the customer is seeking to try a new book while lying in bed, there is no match for the benefit of being able to download a sample chapter in seconds to their e-reader (and purchase the rest if they quickly decide they like it). But what about gift giving? No one I have ever asked has thought that an e-book was an acceptable substitute for a printed book when giving a gift. This is not a small point: a large portion of book sales takes place around holidays and other gift-giving occasions. If only a few use cases favor the old value proposition, we might expect consumers to sacrifice those benefits to shift entirely to a new value proposition. But in cases like books, where the customer can easily alternate purchases of the old product and the new one, it is predictable that we will wind up with a split market—with some sales shifting to the disrupter’s offer and others remaining with the incumbent. In addition to use cases, the scope of disruption of a new business model can be influenced by customer segments. Sometimes the disrupter’s value proposition is highly preferable for some types of customers but not for others with different needs. In the Warby Parker case, we may see that certain eyeglasses wearers are likely to shift to its sales model, whereas oth- ers (those that buy luxury brands and specialty lenses or those that have better access to retail options) will stay with an incumbent like Luxottica. M A S T E R I N G D I S R U P T I V E B U S I N E S S M O D E L S 217 Lastly, network effects can play an important role in determining the scope of disruption. (This is particularly true for platform businesses, as we saw in chapter 3.) If a disrupter’s product or service increases in value as more customers use it (think of a platform like Airbnb, which relies on ample hosts and renters), this will initially be a hurdle to the new business. But it also means that if the disrupter manages to achieve a certain critical mass of adopters, its continued growth is nearly assured, and it will more likely end up with a very large share of the market. Download 1.53 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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