Blue Ocean Strategy
Overview
Blue Ocean Strategy shifts focus from competing within existing market boundaries (red ocean) to creating uncontested market space (blue ocean) through value innovation — simultaneously pursuing differentiation AND low cost. The core tools are the Strategy Canvas (visualizing competitive factors) and the Four Actions Framework (Eliminate-Reduce-Raise-Create).
When to Use
Trigger conditions:
- User stuck in price competition and wants to differentiate
- User looking for new market space or untapped customer segments
- User wants to redesign a product/service value proposition
- User mentions "value innovation", "new market space", or "escape competition"
When NOT to use:
- For assessing current industry attractiveness → use Porter's Five Forces
- For internal/external factor assessment → use SWOT
- For evaluating macro trends → use PESTEL
- When the user needs incremental improvement, not fundamental repositioning
Framework
IRON LAW: Value Innovation = Differentiation + Low Cost Simultaneously
Blue Ocean is NOT about choosing between differentiation and low cost.
It requires BOTH — achieve differentiation by Raising and Creating factors,
AND achieve low cost by Eliminating and Reducing factors.
If a strategy only adds features (cost goes up), it's differentiation, not Blue Ocean.
If a strategy only cuts features (value drops), it's cost leadership, not Blue Ocean.
IRON LAW: Customer Utility First, Technology Second
Blue Ocean strategies are defined by the buyer's VALUE, not by technological
innovation. A new technology that doesn't shift the buyer's value curve is
not a Blue Ocean move. Always start from what the customer values.
Step 1: Draw the Current Strategy Canvas
Map the industry's competitive factors on a canvas:
- X-axis: List the factors the industry competes on (e.g., price, quality, speed, features, brand prestige, convenience)
- Y-axis: Score each factor High/Medium/Low
- Plot: Your company's curve AND key competitors' curves
The insight comes from seeing where all players' curves converge — these are the "red ocean" factors where everyone competes the same way.
Step 2: Apply the Four Actions Framework
For each competitive factor, ask:
| Action | Question | Effect |
|---|
| Eliminate | Which factors that the industry takes for granted should be eliminated? | Removes cost, simplifies |
| Reduce | Which factors should be reduced well below the industry standard? | Reduces cost |
| Raise | Which factors should be raised well above the industry standard? | Increases differentiation |
| Create | Which factors should be created that the industry has never offered? | Creates new value |
The key: Eliminate and Reduce to fund Raise and Create. The cost savings from the first two actions pay for the second two.
Step 3: Draw the New Value Curve
Plot the proposed new strategy on the same canvas:
- The new curve should look fundamentally different from competitors — not a parallel shift
- It should diverge on the factors that matter most to the target buyer
- If the new curve still looks like competitors' curves, the strategy isn't Blue Ocean
Step 4: Test with the Three Characteristics
A valid Blue Ocean strategy has:
- Focus: The curve emphasizes a few key factors, not all of them
- Divergence: The curve's shape is distinctly different from competitors
- Compelling tagline: The strategy can be summarized in one sentence that resonates
If any characteristic is missing, iterate on the Four Actions.
Output Format
markdown
# Blue Ocean Strategy: {Product/Service}
## Current Strategy Canvas
|-------------------|-------------|-------------|-------------|------------|
| {factor 1} | H/M/L | H/M/L | H/M/L | H/M/L |
| {factor 2} | ... | ... | ... | ... |
## Four Actions Framework
### Eliminate (remove entirely)
- {Factor}: {why it can be removed without losing core value}
### Reduce (well below standard)
- {Factor}: {why this can be scaled back}
### Raise (well above standard)
- {Factor}: {why this matters more than the industry realizes}
### Create (never offered before)
- {Factor}: {what new value this brings to buyers}
## New Value Curve
|-------------------|-------------|---------------|
| {factor} | H/M/L | Eliminated/Low/Med/High/New |
## Strategy Validation
- **Focus**: {which factors we emphasize}
- **Divergence**: {how our curve differs from competitors}
- **Tagline**: "{one-sentence strategy summary}"
## Implementation Priorities
1. ...
2. ...
Examples
Correct Application
Scenario: Blue Ocean for a traditional gym chain losing members to budget gyms
Four Actions:
- Eliminate: Personal trainer consultations (most members never use them), juice bar, locker room amenities
- Reduce: Equipment variety (focus on most-used 20 machines), staffing (automated entry), operating hours (peak hours only)
- Raise: Cleanliness to hospital-grade (a top member complaint industry-wide), location convenience (small-format in residential areas)
- Create: 24/7 unmanned access via app (no industry player offered this at the time), community challenges with social accountability
Tagline: "The cleanest gym within 5 minutes of your home, open when you want it."
This is valid Blue Ocean because cost goes down (eliminate trainer/juice bar/staff) while differentiation goes up (cleanliness, convenience, 24/7 access).
Incorrect Application
Scenario: Same gym chain
What went wrong:
- "Add premium personal training AND reduce prices" → Cost goes up (more trainers) while revenue goes down (lower prices). This is not value innovation — it's a margin squeeze. Violates Iron Law: must achieve BOTH differentiation and low cost.
- "Invest in cutting-edge VR workout equipment" → Technology-first thinking. What buyer utility does this serve? Violates Iron Law: customer utility first, technology second.
Gotchas
- "Create" doesn't mean "add features": Creating means delivering a type of value the industry never offered. Adding another feature that competitors also have is not Create — it's competing within the red ocean.
- Elimination feels risky: Teams resist eliminating established features. The test: "Would our target customer segment leave if we removed this?" Often the answer is no — the feature serves a different segment.
- Blue Ocean is not niche marketing: Finding an underserved segment is targeting, not Blue Ocean. True Blue Ocean creates demand that didn't exist before.
- The Six Paths framework: If the team is stuck finding Blue Ocean ideas, use the Six Paths (look across alternative industries, strategic groups, buyer groups, complementary offerings, functional-emotional appeal, and time) — see references for details.
- Sustainability: Blue Oceans eventually turn red as imitators enter. Plan for this — build barriers through scale, network effects, or continuous value innovation.
References
- For the Six Paths framework and detailed examples, see
- For comparison with other strategy frameworks, see
references/framework-comparison.md