Note: This skill is independent analysis and commentary, not a reproduction of the original text. It synthesizes the book's core ideas with modern startup practice, surfaces where frameworks are outdated or incomplete, and integrates perspectives from adjacent disciplines. For the full argument and context, read the original book.
Blue Ocean Strategy
"How to create uncontested market space and make the competition irrelevant." - W. Chan Kim & Renée Mauborgne (2005, expanded 2015)
When to Use
- Stuck in a commoditizing market
- Designing a new category
- Reframing competitive strategy
- Choosing between Porter-style positioning vs category creation
Use Porter when: industry structure is stable, defendable moats matter
Use BOS when: you're trying to escape red-ocean dynamics
They're complementary, not competing.
Honest Scope (Read First)
- Empirical base: ~150 strategic moves, 30+ industries, 100+ years - chosen by the authors. Correlational, post-hoc, sample-selected.
- The "86% red / 14% blue / 39%/61% profit" headline is suggestive of a pattern, not a measured fact. Authors admit no hit-rate data.
- Many iconic cases later collapsed. Treat the framework as a thinking discipline, not a recipe. Inline decline notes appear with each case below.
- The framework is hard to falsify: when BOS-cited companies fail, the response is "they stopped applying it" or "it wasn't really blue ocean." Use it predictively with care.
- Bratton/NYPD case is contested (broken-windows critiques, Compstat manipulation). Use as illustrative, not history.
Full framework details: see frameworks.md.
Case studies with decline caveats: see cases.md.
Worked examples: see examples.md.
Integrations and conflicts: see integration.md.
The Core Insight
| Red Ocean | Blue Ocean |
|---|
| Existing market, defined boundaries | Uncontested space |
| Beat competition | Make competition irrelevant |
| Exploit existing demand | Create and capture new demand |
| Value-cost trade-off | Break value-cost trade-off |
Value Innovation = pursue differentiation AND low cost simultaneously by eliminating/reducing factors the industry takes for granted while raising/creating factors buyers truly value.
The Five Frameworks
| Framework | Purpose |
|---|
| Strategy Canvas | Diagnostic - plot competing factors vs offering levels |
| ERRC Grid | Generate value innovation (Eliminate / Reduce / Raise / Create) |
| Six Paths | Find blue ocean opportunities |
| Three Tiers of Noncustomers | Expand demand beyond current customers |
| Strategic Sequence | Test commercial viability before launch |
Three characteristics of a strong strategy curve: Focus, Divergence, Compelling Tagline.
ERRC mechanics in detail: see frameworks.md.
The Six Paths to Blue Oceans
| # | Path | Question |
|---|
| 1 | Alternative industries | What did customers reject when they chose us? |
| 2 | Strategic groups | What makes customers trade up/down between groups? |
| 3 | Chain of buyers | Are we targeting purchasers, users, or influencers? Switch focus. |
| 4 | Complementary products/services | What pain happens before/during/after our product? |
| 5 | Functional vs emotional appeal | Switch the appeal type |
| 6 | Trends | What's decisive, irreversible, with clear trajectory? |
Cases for each path (with decline notes): see cases.md.
Strategic Sequence (Test Before Launch)
1. UTILITY → Buyer Utility Map: where are the empty cells? [No → rethink]
2. PRICE → Price Corridor of the Mass: accessible to mass? [No → rethink]
3. COST → Price-minus costing hits target? [No → cost-innovate or partner]
4. ADOPTION → Employee/partner/public hurdles addressed? [No → address before launch]
↓
Commercially viable
Buyer Utility Map = 6 stages × 6 utility levers = 36 cells. Find empty cells where current offerings fail.
Three stakeholder hurdles: employees (job security), partners (disrupted relationships), public (ethical/safety). Skip any one and execution dies.
Full Buyer Utility Map and Price Corridor: see frameworks.md.
Three Tiers of Noncustomers
Existing customers
1st tier: soon-to-be (will leave when alternative appears)
2nd tier: refusing (considered industry, rejected)
3rd tier: unexplored (never considered)
The mantras: Noncustomers before customers. Commonalities before differences. Desegmentation before finer segmentation.
Caveat: "Three tiers" sounds rigorous but lacks an operational test for whether you have the competence to seize a given tier. Don't switch focus to noncustomers if you can't actually serve them.
Three Strategic Propositions (All Must Align)
| Proposition | For Whom | Question |
|---|
| Value | Buyers | Exceptional buyer value? |
| Profit | Company | Generates profit? |
| People | Employees, partners, public | Motivates everyone whose support you need? |
Tata Nano had value + profit but failed the people proposition (Singur protests + "cheap car" perception). The Singur relocation (2008, plant moved to Sanand) and the post-launch safety/identity perception are separate problems - the framework collapses them, but real-world causation was multi-stranded.
The Four Execution Hurdles (Tipping Point Leadership)
| Hurdle | Tactic |
|---|
| Cognitive ("why change?") | Make people experience reality directly |
| Resource ("not enough") | Hot Spots / Cold Spots / Horse Trading |
| Motivational ("don't want to") | Kingpins, Fishbowl Management, Atomization |
| Political ("they'll block us") | Consigliere, Angels, Silencing Devils |
Fair Process (3 E Principles)
| Principle | Meaning |
|---|
| Engagement | Involve people in decisions |
| Explanation | Why decisions were made |
| Expectation Clarity | What's expected after |
Without fair process, even the best strategy fails. People sabotage execution.
Elco Plant lesson: Same company, same strategy, two plants:
- Chester (model non-union workforce): management assumed cooperation, skipped fair process → workers rebelled, strategy failed
- High Park (strong union, expected to resist): management applied fair process → workers cooperated, strategy succeeded
- The "easy" plant failed; the "hard" plant won. Difference was people management, not strategy.
Decision Trees
Are we in a red ocean?
Competitors doing roughly the same thing?
├─ YES → Red Ocean
└─ NO → Margins shrinking despite improvement?
├─ YES → Red Ocean trending to commodity
└─ NO → Run Strategy Canvas. Curve diverges + has focus + has tagline?
├─ All 3 YES → Blue Ocean
└─ Any NO → Red Ocean or weak strategy
Will our blue ocean idea work?
Step 1: Buyer Utility - find empty cells in 6×6 map
├─ NO → Stop. Rethink.
└─ YES → Step 2: Price - accessible to mass?
├─ NO → Re-engineer offer.
└─ YES → Step 3: Cost - hit target via cost innovation/partnering?
├─ NO → Find cost innovations or partner.
└─ YES → Step 4: Adoption hurdles - address all three
→ Then launch.
The 10 Red Ocean Traps (Critical Practitioner Errors)
- Customer-orientation (focus on noncustomers first)
- Going beyond existing industries (most blue oceans are adjacent)
- Tech innovation = blue ocean (no - VALUE innovation does)
- First-mover advantage (Tellis & Golder: 90% of pioneers fail; first to get value-cost right wins)
- Differentiation = premium (BOS = both/and)
- Low cost = low pricing (strategic pricing vs alternatives)
- Innovation broadly (must be specifically value innovation)
- Niche thinking (niches are small red oceans)
- Win the competition (irrelevance > winning)
- Disruption (BOS embraces nondestructive creation)
When NOT to Use This Skill
Operational/execution problem? → BOS is for strategy reframing, skip
Founding-stage validation? → Use Mom Test first
Mature stable market with healthy competition? → Probably don't need BOS
Network-effect / two-sided platform? → BOS handles these poorly
AI-native fast-cycle category? → Cycle too fast for BOS planning timelines
Iconic Cases - Decline Notes Inline
These cases are taught as canonical wins. Many later collapsed. Cite carefully:
- Cirque du Soleil - Created circus + theater hybrid. (Note: filed for bankruptcy 2020.)
- Curves - Big Fish/Small Pond gym for women. (Note: filed for bankruptcy 2014.)
- The Body Shop - Functional positioning of cosmetics. (Note: entered administration 2024.)
- NABI Buses - Path 4 complementary services move with fiberglass buses. (Note: distressed sale 2013.)
- Yellow Tail wines - Path 2 across strategic groups. (Note: heavily eroded by imitators.)
- NTT DoCoMo i-mode - Path 1 alternatives. (Note: crushed by iPhone post-2007.)
- Southwest Airlines - Tagline iconic. (Note: ongoing operational/competitive struggles.)
Of ~12 major cases, only ~3 (Novo Nordisk, Bloomberg, Salesforce) remain solidly successful. Detailed cases with full decline analysis: see cases.md.
Key Critical Caveats
- Strategy Canvas X-axis selection is subjective. The factors you choose to plot determine the analysis. Presented as rigorous; isn't.
- 86%/14% headline is post-hoc and sample-selected. Don't quote as a measured fact.
- First-mover claims need Tellis & Golder's 90% pioneer-fail counterpoint.
- Three Tiers needs a competence-to-seize test beyond "can you reach them."
- Bratton/NYPD case is hagiographic - subsequent research disputes it.
- Tata Nano causal chain is compressed. Singur ≠ "cheap car" perception ≠ launch failure - they were related but separable.
Quick Reference
Diagnose red ocean:
- Competitors converging on offerings
- Margins shrinking despite operational gains
- Industry growth flat/negative
Run Strategy Canvas:
- 5-12 competing factors on X-axis
- Plot self, competitors, industry average
- Test for focus + divergence + tagline
Apply ERRC:
- ELIMINATE what industry takes for granted
- REDUCE below industry standard
- RAISE above industry standard
- CREATE what's never been offered
Pre-launch sequence:
- Utility passes 6×6 map?
- Price accessible to mass?
- Cost achievable at strategic price?
- Adoption hurdles addressed?
The Big Idea
"Don't try to outperform the competition. Make the competition irrelevant by creating new market space."
The framework's lasting contribution isn't the metaphor or the specific tools. It's the question: What if we stopped trying to win and started designing a different game?
Worth asking every few years - even when the answer is "no, this game is worth playing."
Supporting Files
- frameworks.md - Strategy Canvas in depth, ERRC mechanics, Buyer Utility Map (6×6), Price Corridor of the Mass, Pioneer-Migrator-Settler map, BOI Index, Imitation barriers, 4-step Visualizing Strategy
- cases.md - All cases by Path, with inline decline caveats, plus Bratton/NYPD historical contestation, Elco Plant detail
- examples.md - Worked ERRC tables (Cirque, Yellow Tail), tagline examples, value curve drawings, Strategic Sequence walkthroughs
- integration.md - Conflicts/integrations with Mom Test, Crossing the Chasm, Monetizing Innovation, $100M Offers, $100M Leads, SPIN Selling, Obviously Awesome, Influence