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the companies that had led in the old technology. The success rate of the established firms in
developing and adopting sustaining technologies was 100 percent.
The other five of these 116 technologies were disruptive innovations—in each case, smaller disk drives
that were slower and had lower capacity than those used in the mainstream market. There was no new
technology involved in these disruptive products. Yet
none of the industry’s leading companies
remained atop the industry after these disruptive innovations entered the market—their batting average
was
zero.
Why such markedly different batting averages when playing the sustaining versus disruptive games?
The answer lies in the RPV framework of organizational capabilities. The industry leaders developed
and introduced sustaining technologies over and over again. Month after month, year after year, as they
introduced new and improved products in order to gain an edge over the competition, the leading
companies developed processes for evaluating the technological potential and assessing their
customers’ needs for alternative sustaining technologies. In the parlance of this chapter, the
organizations developed a
capability for doing these things, which resided in their processes.
Sustaining technology investments also fit the values of the leading companies, in that they promised
higher margins from better products sold to their leading-edge customers.
On the other hand, the disruptive innovations occurred so intermittently that no company had a
routinized process for handling them. Furthermore, because the disruptive products promised lower
profit margins per unit sold and could not be used by their best customers, these innovations were
inconsistent with the leading companies’ values. The leading disk drive companies had the
resources—
the people, money, and technology—required to succeed at both sustaining and disruptive
technologies. But their processes and values constituted disabilities in their efforts to succeed at
disruptive technologies.
Large companies often surrender emerging growth markets because smaller, disruptive companies are
actually more
capable of pursuing them. Though start-ups lack resources, it doesn’t matter. Their
values can embrace small markets, and their cost structures can accommodate lower margins. Their
market research and resource allocation processes allow managers to proceed intuitively rather than
having to be backed up by careful research and analysis, presented in PowerPoint. All of these
advantages add up to enormous opportunity or looming disaster—depending upon your perspective.
Managers who face the need to change or innovate, therefore, need to do more than assign the right
resources to the problem. They need to be sure that the organization in which those resources will be
working is itself capable of succeeding—and in making that assessment, managers must scrutinize
whether the organization’s processes and values fit the problem.
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