57
in commercializing such technologies is to enter the value network in which they create value. As
Richard Tedlow noted in his history of retailing in America (in which supermarkets and discount
retailing play the role of disruptive technologies), “the most formidable barrier the established firms
faced is that they did not want to do this.”
25
5. In these instances, although this “attacker’s advantage” is
associated with a disruptive technology
change, the essence of the attacker’s advantage is in the ease with which entrants, relative to
incumbents, can identify and make strategic commitments to attack and develop emerging market
applications, or value networks. At its core, therefore, the issue may be the relative flexibility of
successful established firms versus entrant firms to change
strategies and cost structures, not
technologies.
These propositions provide new dimensions for analyzing technological innovation. In addition to the
required capabilities inherent in new technologies and in the innovating organization, firms faced with
disruptive technologies must examine the implications of innovation for their relevant value networks.
The key considerations are whether the performance attributes implicit in the innovation will be valued
within the networks already served by the innovator; whether other networks must be addressed or new
ones created in order to realize value for the innovation; and whether market and technological
trajectories may eventually intersect, carrying technologies that do not address customers’ needs today
to squarely address their needs in the future.
These considerations apply not simply to firms grappling with the most modern technologies, such as
the fast-paced, complex advanced electronic, mechanical, and magnetics technologies covered in this
chapter. Chapter 3 examines them in the context of a very different industry: earthmoving equipment.
NOTES
1.
See Rebecca M. Henderson and Kim B. Clark, “Architectural Innovation: The Reconfiguration of
Existing Systems and the Failure of Established Firms”
Administrative Science Quarterly (35), 1990,
9–30.
2.
Tracy Kidder,
The Soul of a New Machine (New York: Avon Books, Inc., 1981).
3.
A few scholars have sought to measure the proportion of technological progress attributable to
radical versus incremental advances. In an empirical study of a series of novel processes in petroleum
refining, for example, John Enos found that half the economic benefits of new technology came from
process improvements introduced after a new technology was commercially established. See J. L.
Enos, “Invention and Innovation in the Petroleum Refining Industry,” in
The Rate and Direction of
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