(SHORT
NOTES FROM STRATEGY TOOLS:
Strategic
Options at http://www.mindtools.com)
Many organizations work hard at customer
research to find out what their target market wants. Many companies that achieve industry
leadership use an approach that's now called "Blue Ocean Strategy".
Blue Ocean Strategy was developed by W
Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne.
No one has a foolproof vision of the
future. Scenario Analysis helps bring
these fears into the open and gives a rational and professional framework for
exploring them. The act of creating scenarios
forces enable to challenge assumptions about the future. By shaping the plans and decisions based on
the most likely scenarios, organizations can ensure that the decisions are
sound even if circumstances change.
Game theory is an attempt
to predict behavior. It applies in
situations where an individual's success in making choices depends on the
choices of others. John von Neumann and
Oskar Morgenstern defined the foundations of game theory in 1944 with their
classic book, "Theory of Games and Economic Behavior."
Value means different things to different
customers. It’s possible to provide
value in many different ways. Therefore choose
the best way to deliver value. The
Value Disciplines Model describes three "value disciplines" that
you can develop to give great value to your customers in different ways. It was introduced in the early 1990s by
Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema.
Everyone wants to operate profitably and
efficiently, with cost-effective teams, projects, and organizations. Value-Based Management (VBM) is use to build and maximize organization’s ability to be
profitable in the long term.
There are many different elements to
consider, and it can be easy to overlook factors that may have a positive or
negative effect on your success. Business
Motivation Model offers a practical way of sense-checking and optimizing your
plan. The Business Motivation Model was
originally developed by the Business Rules Group, a non-commercial consulting firm,
in the late 1990s to help people prepare business plans in an ordered,
efficient, properly-organized way.
Disruptive technologies are technical
innovations that have the potential to change and restructure whole industries. They replace existing ways of doing things,
and, in the process, create both threats and opportunities for existing
organizations. Many business leaders
have blind spots when it comes to recognizing the impact of new technologies. They may have spotted these technologies, but
have judged them to be too niche or too risky to be worth bothering with. Harvard Business School professor Clayton
Christensen originally coined the term "disruptive technologies." Later, with his colleague Professor Joseph
Bower, he developed a five-step process for assessing and cultivating
potentially disruptive technologies.
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