Strategic Frameworks

Blue Ocean Strategy

Quick Definition

Blue Ocean Strategy is a business theory developed by INSEAD professors W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne that encourages companies to create new, uncontested market spaces rather than competing head-to-head in existing industries. The framework contrasts 'blue oceans' of untapped opportunity with 'red oceans' of bloody competitive rivalry.

The Core Concept

Blue Ocean Strategy was formally introduced by W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne, professors at INSEAD, in their 2005 book of the same name. The research behind the framework spanned more than a decade and analyzed 150 strategic moves across 30 industries over 100 years. Kim and Mauborgne argued that the traditional focus of strategy on beating competitors within existing industry boundaries, what they termed 'red ocean' thinking, leads to a race to the bottom on price and features. Instead, they proposed that the most successful strategic moves create entirely new market spaces where competition is irrelevant, generating what they called 'value innovation' by simultaneously pursuing differentiation and low cost.

The framework's central analytical tool is the Strategy Canvas, which plots the key factors an industry competes on and shows how different competitors invest across those factors. By identifying which factors can be eliminated, reduced, raised, or created, companies can reconstruct industry boundaries and open blue oceans. This four-actions framework pushes strategists beyond the conventional trade-off between differentiation and cost leadership that Michael Porter's framework emphasized, arguing that the most profitable strategies break this trade-off entirely.

Circque du Soleil is the most frequently cited example of Blue Ocean Strategy in action. Founded in 1984 by street performers Guy Laliberte and Gilles Ste-Croix in Montreal, Cirque du Soleil reimagined the circus industry by eliminating costly elements like animal acts and star performers while adding elements borrowed from theater and dance, including original music, artistic themes, and sophisticated staging. The result was an entirely new entertainment category that attracted a more affluent adult audience willing to pay premium prices. By 2019, Cirque du Soleil had generated over $1 billion in annual revenue and had been seen by more than 200 million spectators worldwide, dwarfing the revenues of traditional circuses that continued competing in the shrinking red ocean.

Nintendo's Wii console, launched in 2006, provides another compelling illustration. While Sony and Microsoft competed fiercely on processing power and graphics quality for hardcore gamers, a classic red ocean, Nintendo created a blue ocean by targeting non-gamers with intuitive motion controls and family-friendly games like Wii Sports. The Wii used less expensive hardware than its competitors, keeping costs low while creating an entirely new value proposition. Nintendo sold over 101 million Wii units, outselling both the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, and attracted millions of customers who had never purchased a gaming console before.

Critics of Blue Ocean Strategy have raised several important points. Some argue that truly uncontested markets are rare and that many cited examples involve companies that simply innovated within existing categories rather than creating genuinely new markets. Others note that blue oceans do not stay blue forever; successful new market spaces attract imitators, eventually becoming red oceans themselves. The framework also offers limited guidance on execution, as the challenge is often not identifying a blue ocean opportunity but building the organizational capabilities to pursue it. Despite these criticisms, Blue Ocean Strategy has been enormously influential, with over 4 million copies of the book sold in 46 languages, making it one of the best-selling strategy books in history.

Key Distinctions

Blue Ocean Strategy

Porter's Competitive Strategy

Porter's framework assumes industry structure is given and focuses on positioning within existing markets through cost leadership, differentiation, or focus strategies. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges this assumption, arguing that industry boundaries can be reconstructed to create new market spaces. Porter emphasizes winning within the existing competitive game; Kim and Mauborgne advocate changing the game entirely.

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Classic Example Cirque du Soleil

Cirque du Soleil reinvented the circus by eliminating animal acts, star performers, and multiple show rings while adding theatrical storylines, original music, and artistic staging. This created a new entertainment category positioned between traditional circus and Broadway theater, targeting an adult audience willing to pay premium prices.

Outcome: Cirque du Soleil grew from a small troupe of street performers to a global entertainment company generating over $1 billion in annual revenue, with more than 200 million spectators having attended its shows across hundreds of cities worldwide.

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Modern Application Peloton

Peloton created a blue ocean by combining the home fitness equipment market with live and on-demand group fitness classes delivered via streaming. This eliminated the need to commute to a gym while adding the social motivation and instructor-led experience that home workouts traditionally lacked.

Outcome: Peloton grew to over 6.7 million members and $4 billion in annual revenue by 2022, creating a new connected fitness category that attracted both gym-goers and people who had never maintained a regular exercise routine.

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Did You Know?

Kim and Mauborgne's research found that among the 150 strategic moves they studied, the 14% that were blue ocean moves generated 38% of total revenues and 61% of total profits. Red ocean moves, while more numerous, produced significantly lower returns, suggesting that market creation dramatically outperforms market competition in value generation.

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Strategic Insight

Blue Ocean Strategy is most powerful when applied not to creating entirely new industries but to redefining existing ones. The majority of successful blue ocean moves reconstruct existing industry boundaries rather than inventing something from scratch, making the framework accessible to established companies and not just radical innovators.

Strategic Implications

Do

  • Use the Strategy Canvas to visually map your industry's competitive factors before seeking blue ocean opportunities
  • Focus on non-customers, the people who currently do not buy from your industry, as the primary source of new demand
  • Pursue value innovation by simultaneously driving differentiation up and costs down rather than choosing between them
  • Test blue ocean ideas with rapid prototyping and market experiments before committing to full-scale execution

Don't

  • Assume that blue oceans require radical technological invention, as most successful examples recombine existing elements in new ways
  • Ignore execution challenges, as identifying a blue ocean opportunity is only the beginning of a successful strategy
  • Expect a blue ocean to remain uncontested indefinitely, and plan for how to maintain advantage as imitators inevitably arrive
  • Apply the framework dogmatically, as some industries and competitive situations genuinely require red ocean strategies focused on outperforming rivals

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources & Further Reading

  • W. Chan Kim, Renee Mauborgne (2005). Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant. Harvard Business Review Press.
  • W. Chan Kim, Renee Mauborgne (2004). Blue Ocean Strategy. Harvard Business Review.

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