2020-03-01 MIT Sloan Management Review

(Martin Jones) #1

32 MIT SLOAN MANAGEMENT REVIEW SPRING 2020 SLOANREVIEW.MIT.EDU


DISRUPTION 2020: COMPETING ON QUALITY


with Goldman Sachs to issue an Apple-branded
credit card. You might also think of e-retailer
Alibaba’s threat to banks with its payment systems,
Amazon’s move into groceries and brick-and-
mortar shops, or Uber’s effort to dominate third-
party food delivery.
Christensen’s theory also holds for the fact that
creating new customers by lowering prices enough
to compete with nonconsumption is still a viable
opportunity for crafty newcomers. Just as tradi-
tional disruptive competitors pulled new buyers
into new markets by lowering prices, digitally dis-
ruptive companies make it radically cheaper,
easier, and faster to become customers. Consider,
for instance, what has happened in the market for
hearing aids. A traditional fitting for a hearing aid
required a labor-intensive and extremely expen-
sive visit to an audiologist and a cumbersome
process of fitting and adjusting the devices. Eargo,
a venture-backed startup, dispenses with all that.
Its “invisible” hearing aids (inspired by a fishing
fly) fit in your ear. You can fit them yourself. They
recharge in a special case — no more hunting
down and changing batteries. And the Eargo
comes at a lower price point than traditional
hearing aids, potentially opening a vast market of
people who need hearing assistance but can’t
afford the traditional model (especially when
hearing aids are not covered by most medical
plans).
Finally, Christensen’s perspective on what he
called the capitalist’s dilemma is still with us.^6 In
many large organizations, incentives are not
aligned with the market-creating innovation. One
prominent example: Massive share buybacks,
which handsomely reward executives while drain-
ing companies of cash that could be invested in
innovation designed to win new customers by
transforming exclusive products and services into
simpler, inexpensive ones.^7

The Theory of Disruption:
What Has Changed
Christensen described disruption as a process that
takes some time, as new entrants slowly progress
from the fringe to the mainstream of an incum-
bent’s business.^8 The most significant change since
he first laid out his theory is that digital competitors

can now move with unprecedented speed.
The conditions for entry into any sector that
makes any margin at all have never been better.
There’s ample available financing (as of this writ-
ing, anyway), talent aplenty in the gig economy,
consumers who are comfortable buying just about
anything sight unseen, and digital technologies to
facilitate every operation that might previously
have been an obstacle. As Warby Parker, Casper,
and the like have shown, disrupters with a competi-
tive value proposition can drive scale at previously
unimagined speed.
A second departure from the theory of disrup-
tion has to do with the relationship between the
traditional, core business and innovative new ones.
In the original formulation, the core part of the busi-
ness had fairly predictable (if slowly declining)
revenue numbers, customers whose needs could be
identified, and rewards for replicating the existing
model at scale. Innovative new businesses, on the
other hand, have operated with a high ratio of as-
sumptions relative to knowledge, leading to practices
such as discovery-driven planning, test-and-learn,
and rapid experimentation.
Today’s digital disruption is so fierce that core
businesses are less reliable than ever, and their de-
clines can sometimes be precipitous to the point of
endangering the entire enterprise. Consider the
fate of General Electric, once the darling of admir-
ing business school cases and now described as
being “on life support.”^9 GE’s management real-
ized relatively early on that digital was likely to
bring massive change to its businesses. In 2013, it
embarked upon a digital transformation with the
launch of a platform called Predix, which was sup-
posed to harness the internet of things and bring
disruptive change to the storied conglomerate. But
GE failed to balance well its investments for the
future with the need to meet quarterly numbers.
When Predix failed, its demise adversely affected
the health of GE’s other, core divisions, leaving the
company in dire straits.
There’s one more important change that’s hap-
pened since Christensen’s early work was published.
Incumbents have learned a thing or two about
disruption. Leaders at German metals distributor
Kloeckner, for instance, determined that if they
didn’t create a digital platform for doing business,
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