blue-ocean-strategy

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name: blue-ocean-strategy
description: 'Create uncontested market space using value innovation instead of competing head-to-head. Use when the user mentions "blue ocean", "red ocean", "strategy canvas", "ERRC framework", "value innovation", "non-customers", "buyer utility map", "eliminate-reduce-raise-create", or "uncontested market". Also trigger when comparing pricing strategies, exploring new market categories, finding underserved customer segments, or asking how to stop competing on price. Covers the Four Actions Framework, buyer utility map, and value-cost trade-offs. For tech adoption strategy, see crossing-the-chasm. For product positioning, see obviously-awesome.'
license: MIT
metadata:
author: wondelai
version: "1.2.0"

Blue Ocean Strategy Framework

Strategic framework for creating uncontested market space that makes the competition irrelevant, based on the simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost.

Core Principle

Don't compete in bloody red oceans. Create blue oceans of uncontested market space. Most companies fight for share in existing industries; winners create new market space where competition is irrelevant by delivering a leap in value for both buyers and themselves. Competition-based strategy is zero-sum — value innovation creates new demand and breaks the value-cost trade-off.

Scoring

Goal: 10/10. Rate any business strategy or value proposition 0-10 against blue ocean principles: clear value innovation, elimination of unnecessary factors, and creation of new demand. Report the current score and the specific moves needed to reach 10/10; low scores mean competing in a red ocean.

Framework

1. Red Ocean vs. Blue Ocean

Core concept: Red oceans are existing market spaces where rivals fight over shrinking profits; blue oceans are new market spaces where the competition is irrelevant.

Red Ocean Strategy Blue Ocean Strategy
Compete in existing market space Create uncontested market space
Beat the competition Make competition irrelevant
Exploit existing demand Create and capture new demand
Make the value-cost trade-off Break the value-cost trade-off
Align with differentiation OR low cost Pursue differentiation AND low cost

Examples: Airlines competing on routes, amenities, and price are red ocean; Cirque du Soleil inventing a new entertainment form, Netflix replacing rental with streaming, and Nintendo Wii trading graphics power for accessible motion gaming are blue.

See: references/blue-ocean-examples.md for detailed case studies.

2. Value Innovation

Core concept: The cornerstone of blue ocean strategy — pursue differentiation and low cost simultaneously, creating a leap in value for buyers and the company (Value Innovation = Utility × Price × Cost).

Why it works: Eliminating and reducing over-served factors cuts costs at the same time that raising and creating factors lifts buyer value — value rises more than cost, breaking the trade-off competitors assume is fixed.

Traditional View Value Innovation View
High value = high cost High value CAN = low cost
Differentiate OR cut costs Differentiate AND cut costs
Better performance on established factors New factors; eliminate old factors

Example — Cirque du Soleil: eliminated animal shows, star performers, multiple arenas (cost down); reduced thrill and humor; raised venue quality, artistic music and dance; created theme, refined environment, multiple productions. Outcome: priced above circus, costs below theater, a new market.

See: references/value-innovation.md for value innovation frameworks.

3. Strategy Canvas

Core concept: The diagnostic tool — plot the factors an industry competes on against the offering level for you and competitors. Red oceans show everyone's curve looking the same; a divergent curve signals a blue ocean.

How to use:

  1. List the industry's competing factors (wine: price, prestige, aging quality, vineyard legacy, complexity, range, marketing)
  2. Plot your curve and competitors' — expect near-identical curves in a red ocean
  3. Ask: which factors do buyers not actually care about? What could be eliminated, reduced, raised, or created? Where does the buyer experience hurt?

Example — Yellow Tail wine:

Factor Industry Average Yellow Tail
Price, prestige, aging quality Medium-High LOW
Vineyard legacy, complexity, range High LOW
Easy drinking Low HIGH
Fun/adventure, accessibility Low HIGH

Result: A different curve = blue ocean.

See: references/strategy-canvas.md for templates and examples.

4. Four Actions Framework (ERRC Grid)

Core concept: Four questions that reconstruct buyer value — Eliminate and Reduce cut costs; Raise and Create lift value.

Action Question Examples Effect
Eliminate Which taken-for-granted factors add no buyer value? Cirque: animals, stars; Southwest: meals, seat assignments; IKEA: sales staff, assembly Cost down; friction removed
Reduce What can go well below industry standard? Yellow Tail: prestige, complexity; Salesforce v1: customization Cost down; over-serving stops
Raise What should go well above industry standard? Cirque: artistic value; Dyson: suction, design; Apple: UX Value up; hard to match
Create What has the industry never offered? Netflix: unlimited streaming, no late fees; Uber: live tracking, cashless payment New demand; attracts non-customers

Net result: value increases more than cost — value innovation.

Ethical boundary: Don't eliminate factors buyers truly value (especially safety or accessibility) — test assumptions before cutting.

See: references/errc-grid.md for ERRC templates and exercises.

5. Six Paths Framework

Core concept: Six systematic ways to look beyond existing industry boundaries and spot blue ocean opportunities.

Path Look across Example How to apply
1. Alternative industries Different forms solving the same need NetJets: alternative to both airlines and jet ownership Map alternatives → find unmet needs across them
2. Strategic groups Clusters pursuing similar strategies Lexus: luxury at accessible price Find over/under-served needs → position between groups
3. Chain of buyers Purchasers vs. users vs. influencers Novo Nordisk insulin pens: shifted focus from doctors to patients; Bloomberg: traders, not IT purchasers Identify every buyer in the chain → serve the overlooked one
4. Complementary offerings What happens before, during, after use Babysitting complements movies → "date night" packages Map the total experience → bundle away pain points
5. Functional ↔ emotional appeal Flip the industry's basis of appeal Swatch: watches as fashion; The Body Shop: cosmetics as ethics Identify current appeal → build the hybrid
6. Time Irreversible trends iPod/iTunes anticipating digital music; Tesla on EVs Project the trend's endpoint → build for it today

See: references/six-paths.md for detailed path exercises.

6. Three Tiers of Non-Customers

Core concept: Blue oceans are created by converting non-customers, not by stealing competitors' customers — non-customers reveal the demand the industry is leaving on the table.

Tier Who they are Opportunity Example
1. Soon-to-be Edge of your market, minimally using, ready to jump ship Small shifts win them over Pret A Manger: professionals who wanted fast AND healthy
2. Refusing Considered the industry and consciously rejected it Remove the barrier behind the refusal JCDecaux: cities refused outdoor ads until bus shelters came free
3. Unexplored Distant markets that never considered you an option Reframe the offering for their needs Callaway Big Bertha: beginners and occasional golfers

Process: map all three tiers → find commonalities across tiers → identify what would unlock massive demand → build the offering to convert them.

See: references/non-customers.md for non-customer analysis frameworks.

7. Strategic Sequence: Utility → Price → Cost → Adoption

Core concept: Validate a blue ocean idea in strict order — exceptional buyer utility first, then accessible price, then profitable cost, then adoption hurdles. Failing any gate means rework before proceeding.

Step Question How
1. Buyer utility Is there exceptional utility? Check six levers (productivity, simplicity, convenience, risk reduction, fun/image, environmental friendliness) across the buyer experience cycle (purchase → delivery → use → supplements → maintenance → disposal); solve the biggest blocks
2. Strategic price Is it accessible to the mass of buyers? Price against alternatives in other forms, not your costs or direct competitors — Cirque priced above circus, below theater
3. Target cost Can we profit at that price? Strategic price − target margin = target cost; hit it via ERRC and partnering — never by sacrificing utility, never "later"
4. Adoption Who will resist — employees, partners, public, regulators? Surface hurdles upfront: educate stakeholders, run pilots, engage partners early

Ethical boundary: Win adoption by genuinely addressing stakeholder concerns, not by steamrolling the employees and partners who bear the costs of the shift.

See: references/sequence.md for sequence templates; references/implementation.md for execution and organizational alignment.

Common Mistakes

Mistake Why It Fails Fix
Competing on the same factors Stuck in the red ocean Use ERRC to eliminate and create factors
Differentiation without cost focus Not value innovation Eliminate/reduce while raising/creating
Incrementalism No leap in value Aim for 10x improvement on key factors
Imitating competitors Red ocean thinking Look across the six paths for alternatives
Ignoring adoption Great idea, no execution Plan for adoption hurdles upfront

Quick Diagnostic

Question If No Action
Does the Strategy Canvas show a different curve? Still in the red ocean Apply the ERRC framework
Are we eliminating AND creating? Not value innovation Use all four actions
Are we breaking the value-cost trade-off? Traditional competition Identify over-served factors to cut
Are we converting non-customers? Fighting for existing share Map the three tiers of non-customers
Is there a leap in buyer utility? Incremental improvement Aim for 10x on key utility levers

Reference Files

Further Reading

Based on Blue Ocean Strategy by W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne:

About the Authors

W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne are professors of strategy at INSEAD and co-directors of the INSEAD Blue Ocean Strategy Institute. Blue Ocean Strategy has sold over 4 million copies in 46 languages, making it one of the best-selling business books of all time.