Skip navigation

INNOBLOG

the insider's guide to innovation

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Why Do We Care about Disruption?

Scott D. Anthony

Why Do We Care about Disruption?

The other week, two of my colleagues were engaged in a fierce debate about whether a particular business was or not in fact "disruptive." When they asked my opinion, I surprised them by answering, "I don't really care."

"But we're all about disruptive innovation aren't we?" one of them asked.

"Well yes," I replied, "but we're all even more about building successful, sustainable, scalable businesses."

It's natural to think that our sole raison d'etre is disruption. Innosight's co-founder Clayton Christensen coined the term "disruptive technology," and we've built a business around putting Christensen's and related academics' work into practice.

But the academic research and our applied field work really isn't about disruptive innovation, business model innovation — or even innovation. Disruption is a means to an end. The goal is to build a sizable business with defensible competitive advantage that earns attractive returns. It just so happens that the disruptive innovation models and tools provide a great means to foster the creation of businesses that transform companies and markets, unlocking substantial value for shareholders, employees, and customers.

Adapting a disruptive mindset allows you to see opportunities that would otherwise be hidden. The suite of business model tools that my colleague Mark Johnson describes in his book, Seizing the White Space, allows you to blueprint and build a sustainable model to seize that opportunity.

These models and approaches don't change the fundamentals of business.

Read the rest at the Havard Business The Conversation blog.


Bookmark and Share

Add a Comment:


Name:

Email:

Your Comment:



Discussion


From: Calvin Bacon
Posted: Wednesday, February 24th, 2010 - 9:29 pm EST

Scott,
The concept of sustainable competitive advantage and how to get one has been debated for a considerable amount of time. Perhaps the most promising resource in which to build a sustainable competitive advantage is knowledge. Yet, even that becomes obsolete. So, what is really the competitive edge is knowledge innovation rather than product or service innovation. Because a business model is a concept, then any innovation in it would be very valuable.
-Calvin


From: Amelia22
Posted: Monday, January 25th, 2010 - 11:09 am EST

A lot students pass the responsibility to expert resume writers because they miss the ability to write a satisfactory resume in that the reason why students
need to resume writer, but such customers like writer don't do that. Thank you very much for the information. A kind of interesting information about this post.


From: Ben
Posted: Tuesday, April 20th, 2010 - 3:50 pm EDT

I would also suggest that there is danger when "disruptive innovation" or any theory becomes more than a tool to build "successful, sustainable, scalable businesses". Being distracted from the goal may leave you vulnerable to missing emergent opportunities and falling victim to the status quo.

Thanks,
Ben