It
is safe to say that these core concepts have gained traction. Today,
disruption is everywhere, with startups and incumbents alike working
tirelessly to create innovative products and anticipate shifts that will
upend industries and remake markets.
But
so too are the failures, as many companies keep coming up short in
their efforts to harness the techniques. Instead of evolving into a
widely adopted set of practical management methodologies like Six Sigma,
the execution of strategies that aim to proactively drive disruption
remains something widely discussed and studied — yet difficult to
master.
Many
of these companies established what, in theory, are the building blocks
for success. They developed a vision of the future, structured a
roadmap with milestones, committed resources, even significantly funded
separate divisions such as Meta’s Reality Labs and Google’s X units. So,
why is disruption so hard?
Based
on our research and work with companies, the root cause of failure
often comes down to practical challenges of execution that are linked to
culture, organization, and market development. These obstacles are
often glossed over in more idealistic, retrospective versions of how
disruption happens but, in practice, play a crucial role.
To beat the odds, companies need strategies to overcome four common challenges.
Navigate the fog of disruption.
Disruptive
changes produce complexity and uncertainty, especially during the
nascent stages of a market. Most successful companies are wired for
efficiency, so when they encounter complexity, they attempt to simplify
it. In practice, this can lead them to reduce vast amounts of
information and perspectives into a tidy narrative that reflects a small
set of assumptions and not fully comprehend the messier array of risks
that will influence how the market evolves.
Such
a process can result in overconfidence in ultimately flawed strategies.
For instance, power companies invested billions of dollars in offshore
wind farms, assuming that, with time and greater scale, the cost of
producing this renewable energy would fall, approaching grid parity and
enabling the displacement of fossil fuels. Instead, surging interest
rates, supply chain disruptions, and inflation drove costs higher. As a
result, utilities are retreating from these massive investments, despite
government incentives and a need to decarbonize their portfolios.
Companies
should instead seek to rewire their organizations, developing an
end-to-end process for managing uncertainty. The first step requires
taking an expansive view and assessing all the market influences that
can be identified, followed by the development of a portfolio of
opportunity areas that create options, which is especially important if
uncertainty is high. Equally important is the final step: to manage that
uncertainty over time by monitoring and tracking key forces and
adjusting investments and choices based on how the market evolves.
One
global energy utility recognized that it needed a more comprehensive
strategy to navigate demands to decarbonize its power-generating sources
while still meeting expectations for reliability and affordability. It
identified a portfolio of sustainable opportunities, like investing in
solutions to enable its largest commercial and industrial customers to
switch to electrification from fossil fuels, and others more uncertain,
such as providing renewable electricity generation for desalinization
facilities.
It
chose to focus on customer electrification because it realized it
couldn’t wait for its customers, who were struggling with barriers to
act on their own. So, it made significant investments in building
capabilities to deliver these solutions and engaged with its larger
customers to speed their adoption of more sustainable power sources. It
also created options in its portfolio by beginning to make strategic
investments in companies developing new areas of carbon-free
electricity.
Focus on market development.
Developing
a killer product does not guarantee success. Just because you build it,
doesn’t mean customers will come. Yet companies repeatedly come up
short in developing a market for their disruptive products.
Consider
the plant-based meat industry, which expanded rapidly only to see
demand for its alternative products plateau and begin to shrink. Market
leaders like Beyond Meat, which went public in 2019, developed a niche
with early adopters but then
struggled
as they scaled and tried to compete in more mainstream markets, forcing
them to slash prices and the variety of their offerings while focusing
on improving the quality of their products to better compete with
conventional meats.
There
is a rich playbook for avoiding such a fate. For instance, companies
should establish market footholds where there are lower barriers while
identifying customers willing to accept tradeoffs. Other steps include
sufficient investment in distribution and marketing capabilities to
drive category creation at scale. Companies should also account for
factors like switching costs and customer risk aversion while
identifying and connecting with the right stakeholders, who may be
different from existing buyers.
The
sustainable packaging industry, which is attempting to increase the
recyclability and biodegradability of traditional packaging, is
confronting a similar set of opportunities and challenges as alternative
meats. Despite enthusiasm and significant backing from venture capital
and existing industry players, companies have only begun making inroads
in the $1.2 trillion global plastics industry. These products struggle
to compete with the existing plastic standard, which is significantly
cheaper, more versatile, and better able to withstand pressurization.
One
materials company fashioned a strategy aimed at overcoming these steep
barriers. After developing a particularly strong and versatile polymer
coating for its paper packaging applications, it analyzed the industry’s
ecosystem and made the development of strategic relationships with food
and beverage companies its priority in order to drive adoption of an
alternative. It also began working with fast-moving consumer goods
companies that influence new trends, along with critical players in the
packaging ecosystem such as paper mills.
The
company unveiled its innovative food- and beverage-packaging products
in Europe, where corporate and consumer support for recycling and
sustainability efforts is much stronger than in the United States. It
also began collaborating with consumer brands, giving it an opportunity
to strategically participate in market development, while establishing
new corporate roles, such as value chain managers, to put people in
charge of thinking strategically about the development of this
ecosystem.
Master stakeholder buy-in.
Disruption
can be unsettling and scary to stakeholders. Investors may be impatient
and skeptical; employees may perceive such strategies as threats to the
core business and their jobs; and longtime customers may have questions
about the company’s focus.
Organizations
can more effectively manage disruption by developing a clear
communication strategy that aims to ensure that different audiences,
with various concerns and questions, get complete information about the
strategy. Without their buy-in, these powerful stakeholders can
undermine efforts by taking their money or focus elsewhere. Disruption
can also be polarizing, with different groups taking extreme positions
about change — for example, the best path to sustainability — that can
stymie more practical solutions.
Company
leaders can navigate this by learning to talk about today and tomorrow
at the same time, framing problems and solutions in a way that shows a
path forward.
Ford
offers a compelling example of this in how it managed its transition to
producing electric vehicles. While it and other automakers now face
challenges as demand for EVs slows, the company has cultivated crucial
stakeholder buy-in, specifically by highlighting the importance of EV
and internal combustion engine (ICE) technologies and communicating the
value of focusing on both. For example, with a portfolio of EVs and ICE
vehicles, Ford is able to meet the demands of different consumers and
circumstances, which is critical as many customer segments face
practical barriers to EV adoption, which Ford’s stakeholders understand.
The automaker announced its strategy in 2022 when it unveiled the
Ford+ Plan,
detailing how the newly created Model e division would lead in EVs,
while the Ford Blue division focused on ICE products. It assuaged
investor and employee concerns by showing how the growth and development
of each business is of equal importance, with Model e accelerating
innovation by developing technologies for all Ford products, while Blue
drove growth and profitability through its incumbent business.
Ford
detailed how synergies between the two divisions would benefit all
stakeholders and that the core capabilities in manufacturing and
hardware engineering would be relevant for developing both EVs and
vehicles with internal combustion engines. It also showed how new
capabilities incubated in the Model e division, such as software and
vehicle connectivity, flow back to Ford Blue. By having a synergistic
strategy that balances both areas of the business, the company
positioned itself to be able to adjust as market conditions change.
Create a disruption-ready culture.
Most
successful companies are designed for efficiency, not to drive
disruptive change. As a result, they will often appoint a new leader to
spearhead the disruptive effort and separate the new business from the
core business to protect and ensure it gets the right resources. These
are important steps, but they don’t scale on their own. That requires
directly addressing cultural challenges.
To
succeed, disruption must be embedded across operations. While culture
is unique to each enterprise, all organizations can proactively define
and develop one friendly to disruption.
Changing
culture is challenging. Companies that are successful embrace a few
principles in practice. Rather than attempting to change culture
broadly, they focus on changing behaviors that support specific business
outcomes, drawing a clear connection between the two. They also
methodically identify underlying obstacles to these behaviors and use
multiple interventions to encourage them — from formal organizational
changes like incentive schemes to more informal “nudges” that encourage
behavior in direct ways.
SpaceX,
which was established by Elon Musk in 2002, provides a good example.
The company has revolutionized the aerospace industry, opening the door
to a new generation of exploration by providing cheaper and more
frequent access to space. At its core, SpaceX is driven by a unique
culture, oriented around an ambitious but increasingly attainable
long-term vision to make humanity a multi-planetary species by
colonizing Mars.
All
employees know how their work fits into this mission, which is
predicated on making space travel more accessible and affordable. The
organization actively encourages creating friction, which elevates the
standard of work, and keeps its organizational structure flat by
deemphasizing titles. It seeks to group together its most highly skilled
employees while promoting applying to hardware a software mindset of
continually improving the product.
By embedding these and other behaviors into the organization, it creates a high-achieving culture. In fact,
a recent survey of over 1,200 SpaceX employees shows the most frequently discussed cultural values are agility and execution.
While
detractors have criticized the company’s culture for encouraging
burnout, what it has achieved with the same talent available to other
aerospace companies is notable. It was the first privately funded
company to send a commercial spacecraft to the International Space
Station, and its engineering feats include developing reusable rockets,
which significantly changed the economics of satellite launches.
The
promise of disruption is immense. But a great strategy isn’t enough. By
being clear-eyed about the challenges of executing disruption,
companies can avoid the pitfalls and improve their chances of success.
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