Strategic framework for creating uncontested market space that makes the competition irrelevant, based on simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost.
Core Principle
Don't compete in bloody red oceans. Create blue oceans of uncontested market space.
Most companies fight for market share in existing industries (red oceans). Winners create new market space where competition is irrelevant (blue oceans) by delivering a leap in value for both buyers and themselves.
The foundation:
Competition-based strategy is zero-sum. Value innovation creates new demand and breaks the value-cost trade-off.
Scoring
Goal: 10/10.
When evaluating business strategy or value proposition, rate 0-10 based on blue ocean principles. A 10/10 means clear value innovation, elimination of unnecessary factors, and creation of new demand; lower scores indicate competing in red oceans. Always provide current score and improvements to reach 10/10.
Red Ocean vs. Blue Ocean
Red Ocean Strategy
Blue Ocean Strategy
Compete in existing market space
Create uncontested market space
Beat the competition
Make competition irrelevant
Exploit existing demand
Create and capture new demand
Make value-cost trade-off
Break value-cost trade-off
Align whole system with strategic choice of differentiation OR low cost
Align whole system in pursuit of differentiation AND low cost
Examples:
Red Ocean:
Airlines competing on routes, amenities, price
Smartphone makers adding features competitors have
Restaurants in same category fighting for customers
Blue Ocean:
Cirque du Soleil: Not circus vs. circus, but new form of entertainment
Netflix: Not video rental, but streaming entertainment
Nintendo Wii: Not graphics power, but accessible motion gaming
See:
references/blue-ocean-examples.md
for detailed case studies.
Value Innovation
Value innovation = the cornerstone of blue ocean strategy.
Definition:
Simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost, creating a leap in value for both buyers and company.
Value Innovation = Utility × Price × Cost
The value innovation logic:
Traditional View
Value Innovation View
High value = High cost
High value CAN = Low cost
Differentiate OR cut costs
Differentiate AND cut costs
Better performance on established factors
New factors, eliminate old factors
How it works:
Eliminate
factors the industry takes for granted → Reduces costs
Reduce
factors below industry standard → Reduces costs
Raise
factors above industry standard → Increases value
Create
factors industry has never offered → Increases value
Result:
Lower cost structure AND superior value proposition.
Example: Cirque du Soleil
Eliminated:
Animal shows, star performers, multiple show arenas (reduced costs)
Reduced:
Fun and humor, thrill and danger (less important for target audience)
Raised:
Unique venue, artistic music and dance (differentiation)
Created:
Theme, refined watching environment, multiple productions (new value)
Outcome:
Higher prices than circus, lower costs than theater, new market created
See:
references/value-innovation.md
for value innovation frameworks.
Strategy Canvas
The diagnostic tool for understanding current strategic position and discovering blue oceans.
How to create a Strategy Canvas:
Step 1: Identify Competing Factors
List all the factors the industry competes on.
Example: Wine industry
Price
Prestige/awards
Aging quality
Vineyard legacy
Marketing
Complexity (tasting language)
Range (selection)
Above-the-line marketing
Step 2: Map Current State
Plot how you and competitors score on each factor (low to high).
Typical result:
Everyone's curves look similar (red ocean).
Step 3: Analyze
Questions:
Which factors does the industry compete on but buyers don't care about?
Which factors could be eliminated or reduced?
Which factors could be raised or created?
Where are there points of pain in the buyer experience?
Example: Yellow Tail Wine
Factor
Industry Average
Yellow Tail
Price
Medium-High
LOW
Prestige
High
LOW
Aging quality
High
LOW
Vineyard legacy
High
LOW
Complexity
High
LOW
Range
High
LOW
Easy drinking
Low
HIGH
Fun/adventure
Low
HIGH
Accessibility
Low
HIGH
Result:
Different curve = blue ocean.
See:
references/strategy-canvas.md
for templates and examples.
Four Actions Framework (ERRC Grid)
The tool for creating value innovation.
The framework:
ELIMINATE RAISE
- Which factors the - Which factors should be
industry takes for raised well above the
granted should be industry standard?
eliminated?
REDUCE CREATE
- Which factors should - Which factors should be
be reduced well below created that the
the industry standard? industry has never
offered?
How to use:
1. ELIMINATE
Question:
What can we eliminate that the industry competes on but adds no value for customers?
Examples:
Cirque du Soleil:
Animals, star performers
Southwest Airlines:
Meals, seat assignments, hub transfers
IKEA:
Sales staff, assembly service, delivery
Benefits:
Reduces cost structure
Simplifies operations
Often removes friction customers don't want anyway
Warning:
Don't eliminate factors buyers truly value. Test assumptions.
2. REDUCE
Question:
What can we offer well below industry standard?
Examples:
Yellow Tail:
Aging quality, prestige, complexity
Jet Blue:
Route flexibility (focused on key routes)
Salesforce:
Customization (v1.0 was simple)
Benefits:
Lowers costs
Removes over-served aspects
Focuses resources on high-value factors
3. RAISE
Question:
What should we raise well above industry standard?
Examples:
Cirque du Soleil:
Artistic value, unique venues
Dyson:
Suction power, design
Apple:
User experience, design aesthetics
Benefits:
Creates differentiation
Justifies premium pricing (if aligned with customer value)
Hard for competitors to match
4. CREATE
Question:
What new factors should we create that the industry has never offered?
Examples:
Cirque du Soleil:
Theatrical themes, refined environment
Netflix:
Unlimited streaming, no late fees, recommendation algorithm
Cirque du Soleil, Netflix, Yellow Tail, Nintendo Wii case studies
value-innovation.md
Value innovation frameworks and formulas
strategy-canvas.md
Templates, examples, how to create
errc-grid.md
Four Actions Framework exercises and templates
six-paths.md
Detailed exercises for each path
non-customers.md
Three-tier analysis frameworks
sequence.md
Utility, price, cost, adoption templates
implementation.md
Execution, organizational alignment
Further Reading
This skill is based on Blue Ocean Strategy developed by W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne. For complete methodology:
"Blue Ocean Strategy"
by W. Chan Kim & Renée Mauborgne (Expanded Edition)
"Blue Ocean Shift"
by W. Chan Kim & Renée Mauborgne (practical guide to making the shift)
About the Authors
W. Chan Kim
and
Renée Mauborgne
are professors of strategy at INSEAD and co-directors of the INSEAD Blue Ocean Strategy Institute. Their research on value innovation and blue ocean strategy has been published in top academic journals.
Blue Ocean Strategy
has sold over 4 million copies, been translated into 46 languages, and is one of the best-selling business books of all time. They work with companies and governments worldwide on strategic renewal and growth.