Value Proposition canvas- Customer needs and pains
Collaborative Analytics & Insights: Uniting Strategy with Organizational Intelligence to Anticipate Industry Change
1. Collaborative Analytics & Insights: Uniting Strategy
with Organizational Intelligence to Anticipate Industry
Change
Gateway Analytics Network: Predictive Analytics & Business Insights
Chicago USA
Friday 23 August 2013
Arik Johnson
Founder & Chairman, Aurora WDC
Managing Director, Center for Organizational Reconnaissance
4. The Impact of the
Highly Improbable
The human mind suffers from three ailments as it comes into
contact with history, called the triplet of opacity:
1.the illusion of understanding, or how everyone thinks they
know what is going on in a world that is more complicated (or
random) than they realize;
2.the retrospective distortion, or how we can assess matters
only after the fact, as if they were in a rearview mirror
(history seems clearer and more organized in history books
than in empirical reality); and,
3.the overvaluation of factual information and the handicap
of authoritative or learned people, particularly when they
create categories – or "Platonify."
THE BLACK SWAN
5. U.S. Intelligence Community
Failed to Evolve
Unexpected new threats
from non-traditional enemies
like al Qaeda emerged on the
geopolitical stage in the
vacuum of America's return
to international economic,
political and cultural
hegemony after the end of
the Cold War.
6. The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless
Organizations
Although spiders and starfish may look alike, starfish have a
miraculous quality to them. Cut off the leg of a spider, and you have
a seven-legged creature on your hands; cut off its head and you
have a dead spider. But cut off the arm of a starfish and it will grow
a new one, and the severed arm can grow an entirely new body.
Starfish can achieve this feat because, unlike spiders, they are
decentralized; every major organ is replicated across each arm.
But starfish don’t just exist in the animal kingdom. Starfish
organizations are changing the rules of strategy and competition
and are organized on very different principles than we are used to
seeing in traditional organizations.
Spider organizations are centralized and built around org charts; on
the other hand, Starfish organizations tend to organize around a
shared worldview or ideology.
And the Internet has helped them flourish.
THE STARFISH & THE SPIDER
7. Unsound Strategy, Policy and Decisions are the Product of an Intelligence
Agenda Dictated from Above
8. Marshall McLuhan
“I don’t know who discovered water, but it wasn’t a fish.”
Strategy is concerned with what the corporation wants to
do in the world.
Intelligence is focused on what the world wants next.
10. Three Key Business Trends Driving Intelligence Evolution
Human Capital & Enterprise Collaboration
Everyone in the Firm becomes a Virtual Member of the
Intelligence Apparatus, Better Engagement by Rank &
File, Shared Visibility of Issues & Actions
Corporate Governance & Risk Oversight
Board-level Priority Ensuring Reliability of Management’s
Earnings Forecast & Assessing Risks to Status Quo
Business Model Disruption & Value Innovation
Predicting the Outcome of Competitive Battles by
Anticipating Changes in Product/Strategy Dynamics
11. Intelligence 2.0
The Era of Asymmetric Interpretation
• Intelligence 1.0 was about acquiring short-lived information advantages
(Competitive Advantage through Asymmetries of Information), though
fleeting and risky to the firm's reputation and ethics.
• The transition is now complete to an open source world of "info-glut"
where assymetric information gaps are increasingly difficult to obtain and
maintain and interpretation becomes far more important as everyone
looks at the same corpus of data but sees something different.
• Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0 pinpoint a shift in organizational culture – the
“Facebooking” of the workforce means everyone in the enterprise can
become a casually-engaged virtual member of the intelligence apparatus
and should be instructed how to help most productively.
• Intelligence will extend into aspects of organizational culture and
workforce engagement – which I differentiate from full-time intelligence
staff as “reconnaissance” – but centralized, specialist intelligence staff will
persist and embed themselves into the domains of organizational
problem-solving.
12. Intelligence 2.0
Asymmetric Interpretation Depends on Both Decisive & Incisive Sensing
Incisive
Scanning for Trends, there may be
no Decision made
Historical Patterns & Anomalies
Implications for the Reader
Bottom-Up Exposition
Driven by Trends
Product is Observation
Emergent & Skeptical
Open Source
Decisive
Frame of Reference is the
Decision
Compares Options & Outcomes
Recommendations & Trust
Top-Down Imposition
Driven by Issues
Product is Decision/Action
Factual & Hypothetical
Confidential & Proprietary
17. Key Intelligence Topics (KITs)
Process of Interactive Dialog with Decision-Makers
through KIT Interviews
Consists of 3 Protocols w/Subtle Differences:
Strategic Decisions/Issues
Key Marketplace Players
Early-Warning Topics
18. KITs – Strategic Issues
Strategic Investment Decisions: Identify and assess changes in the
competitive environment, possible future investments, including
alliances, acquisitions, etc.
Should we expand our current production capacity or build new
capacity with a more cost-effective manufacturing process?
What plans and actions must we take to maintain (our) technological
competitiveness as compared with competitive alternatives?
New Product Development and New Market Launch: Assessment of
leading competitors and the status of competing technologies. How
and when will the competitors respond and how could they affect our
plans?
Sales & Marketing Strategy as Positioning in the industry.
Protection of IP and proprietary information and technology:
Competitors efforts to acquire or undermine it, and are there others
interested in it?
Provide advice for developing the company’s ongoing strategic plan
by assessing the role of risks and opportunities in achieving our
business goals.
Globalization & Outsourcing in the Industry: How/with whom should
we proceed?
International Market Development: Assess the current competitive
situation and describe the most likely future situational scenarios.
19. KITs – Key Players
Context-specific Company & Market Profile Assessments of our competitors,
including strategic plans, competitive strategies, financial & market performance,
organization & key personnel, R&D, operations, sales & marketing, etc.
Identify Emerging Competitors, particularly those coming from different industries.
Describe & Assess Current & Future Competitive Environment, including:
customers and competitors; markets and suppliers; production and product
technologies; political and environmental; and the industry’s structure, including
changes and trends.
New Customers, their changing needs and future interests: What are they and
how are our competitors trying to satisfy them?
Identify and assess new industry/market players, including: suppliers, distributors,
customers and/or competitors, that are considering entry into our business.
New Technology Development: Who are they and what are their plans and
strategies for competing in our industry?
Marketshare and Historical Growth Data, including that of our competitors for
comparison.
Management support for regulatory and environmental activities for decision
making.
Industry, financial & customer community views, attitudes and perceptions
regarding the Positioning or Value of our brand, products and services.
Perceptions by Financial & Investment Community of our Business & Industry
20. KITs – Early Warning
Potential Areas for Disruptive Technological Breakthrough that could
dramatically affect our current and future competitiveness, positively or
negatively.
Technological Process Developments affecting either production
capabilities, costs or product development, and their uses by
competitors and others.
Performance of Key Suppliers - financial health, cost & quality issues,
potential acquisition or alliances.
Potential for Disruption in Supply Chain and Change in Industry
Procurement Practices.
Change in Customer & Competitors Perceptions of our company,
products and services.
Companies and/or Combinations of Companies, considering possible
entry into our business or markets.
Changes in international political, social, economic, environmental or
regulatory situations that could effect our competitiveness.
Regulatory Issues: near-term changes and deviations in long-term
trends; legislative changes that could impact current regulatory status
quo.
Intelligence on Alliances, Acquisitions, and Divestitures among our
Competitors, Customers and Suppliers: Understanding the forces
causing them and purposes of each deal.
21. Success Breeds Complacency
“It is a classic conundrum for business titans: How much
money and attention should be focused on a new, but
growing, operation that is far less profitable than the core
business?”
- Prof. Clayton Christensen, The Innovator's Dilemma
22. Disruptive Innovation Theory
Sustaining Innovations
Better Products Brought to
Established Markets
Low-End Disruptions
Target Overshot Customers with a
Lower Cost Business Model
New-Market Disruption
Compete Against Nonconsumption
Difference
Performance
Measure
Time
Nonconsumers or Nonconsuming Contexts
Performance
23. Customer Demand & Signals of Change
1. Non-Market Contexts: External Forces (Government, Economics,
etc.) Increasing or Decreasing Barriers to Innovation
2. Undershot Consumers: Opportunities for Up-Market Sustaining
Innovations
3. Overshot Consumers: Opportunities for Low-End Disruption, Shifting
Profits by Specialist Displacements (Modularity) and the Emergence
of Rules
4. Non-Consumers: Opportunities for New Market Disruptive Growth
Established Companies almost always
Lose to Disruptive Innovators
24. Intelligence 2.0 Engages the Workforce in Collaborative Sensing to
Anticipate and Act on Industry Change
Signals
of
Change
Strategic Choices
Influencing
Success
Likely Outcome of
Competitive
Battles
25. Managers caught in this kind of competition almost
universally say they dislike it and wish they could find
a better alternative. They often know instinctively
that innovation is the only way they can break free
from the pack. But they simply don’t know where to
begin.
Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne
Competing head-to-head can be cutthroat
especially when markets are flat or growing
slowly.
27. 27
Decision / Selection Map is used to identify:
•Customer needs/wants
•Which competitor represents the most serious threats now and potentially in
the future
•Which strengths should be emphasized
•Which of our weaknesses will competitors exploit
•What new needs/wants should we try to create
Probability / Impact Grid is used to:
•Ensure goals are aligned to those of key stakeholders
•Highlight those competitor moves that the company should take action to
counter and monitor
•Create group consensus on the potential contribution that this planning effort
would have, and the likelihood that we could make it happen
Why Wargames?
28. Wargame Example - Strategic
Ch23.
28
Improve ROI of our R&D
Determined our risk profile was
substantially more
conservative than our
competitors, and that this was
unexploitable.
Consolidated R&D under the
corporate umbrella, ending
internal conflict for resources
and reducing inefficiencies.
Group consensus on using
consistent measures to track
market opportunities and
Deliverables
Purpose
Industry Consumer Products
Company size Fortune 500
Planning level Strategic
Wargame Purpose Company was looking to increase throughput from their R&D unit, which was not keeping pace with competitors
on launching products.
Wargame Outcome The wargame showed that it wasn’t just one problem that was slowing things down. As expected, the company’s
risk profile played a part. What also became apparent was that R&D had no clear reporting format and ended up
working on many projects that were either not likely to go to market, or were pet projects with little or no market
opportunities. Understanding who their true stakeholders were, the BUs, was a key learning that lead to change.
29. Wargame Example - Tactical
Ch23.
29
Industry Pharma/Biotech
Company size Fortune 500
Planning level Tactical
Wargame Purpose Company was launching a product with new MOA into a crowded market. They were looking for ways to counter
messaging from existing competitors before they launched. They also wanted projections on how long it would
take to capture significant share.
Wargame Outcome What the game showed was that it was unlikely that their new product was going to displace any of the existing
products, given the safety profile and demonstrated efficacy. They were unwilling to play with price too much, and
decided to delay launch. The competitor that “won” the game had production issues in the real world, and this lead
to the company purchasing the “winning” product at a bargain.
Prepare for launch
Determined customer was
more price sensitive than
previously thought.
Wargame “opened eyes” about
home team being significantly
behind competitors in terms of
safety and efficacy.
EWI tracking set up because of
the game allowed them to
respond quickly when chief
Purpose
Deliverables
30. The Market Team took
assessment of their more
significant needs, by
Customer group, and decided
which were Drivers (more is
better), and which were
Satisifers.
The critical point here is that
when you over-deliver on a
particular need or want, you
face diminishing returns and
you don’t have the resources
to address those issues that
the customer has validated as
Drivers.
They then ranked each of the
Competitors on how well they
meet these needs today, from
the Customer’s perspective.
The Competitor’s job was to
move the needle on these
performance metrics.
The Market Team took
assessment of their more
significant needs, by
Customer group, and decided
which were Drivers (more is
better), and which were
Satisifers.
The critical point here is that
when you over-deliver on a
particular need or want, you
face diminishing returns and
you don’t have the resources
to address those issues that
the customer has validated as
Drivers.
They then ranked each of the
Competitors on how well they
meet these needs today, from
the Customer’s perspective.
The Competitor’s job was to
move the needle on these
performance metrics.
Unsatisf’d Satisfied Happy
Need or Want
Customer
Groups Comp 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Home
Cost Institutional R1
Corporate R2
Post-secondary R3
Home
Portfolio Profile Finance heads R1
Actuaries R2
R3
Benefit Admins Home
Ease of Client Uptake /
Application Processors R1
Regulators R2
Service Agents R3
Home
Convenience Plan Members R1
Service Agents R2
R3
Home
Marketing Plan members R1
Retire admins R2
R3
Home
Services / Support Beneficiaries R1
Service agents R2
R3
After Action Sample: Using a
Decision / Selection Map
30
This critical tool helps the competitor teams clarify the most
important needs and wants of their various customers groups.
This critical tool helps the competitor teams clarify the most
important needs and wants of their various customers groups.
30
31. After Action Sample:
Key Issues and Outcomes
Key Issue Competitor Will… Our Response
Defend lack of
customer
service data
Competitors message this issue to
mitigate launch
• We will set up feedback loop for representatives and customer
account team to gauge impact of lack of time-series data at
launch; share best practices on how to handle
• Develop rep response indicating that several other recent product
launches did not have time-series data at launch
Messaging • Tout their longevity in the product
class.
• Claim our product is “too radical,”
untested, barely passing
regulatory review
• 5 successful beta clients
• Rivals products have had negative returns for 5 years cumulative
• Educate on what is required and how to manage
• Can utilize heavier social media communication, particularly via
our large FaceBook and Twitter presence
Competitor
Increase in Ad
Spend
We expect that the incumbents will
increase their spend in an effort to
lock up key institutional clients
• Leverage consumer demand for new retirement options
• Maximize the impact of the news event around the availability of a
new class of product
Feet on the
Ground and
Selling
We expect at approval that there
may be some financial options
data that we won’t be permissible
in promotion.
• Right-size the new prods team to a competitive size
• Via the Blue Guide can we share product data that is still under
review
• Ability to communicate regularly with speakers via intel network
wiki on relevant product data
The issues highlighted below were derived from our Contribution / Feasibility Grid exercise.The issues highlighted below were derived from our Contribution / Feasibility Grid exercise.
31
32. Contribution / Feasibility Grid Example
• The following 2 slides show an example of how we begin
the Planning Round, the most important component of a
wargame.
• Everyone is brought back to the main room, where as a
plenary group, we discuss the various competitor moves,
and more importantly, the actions that you should take to
proactively disrupt them.
• Once the group has reached consensus on what these
scenarios are, the Sponsors meet to select those that
they feel are most impactful and the teams head back out
to the break-out rooms to develop Action or Contingency
Plans to deal with them.
33. Scenario # Scenario Title Feasibility Contribution
1 Disruptive low cost systems for WHO become a catalyst 75 2
2 Chief competitor drops price significantly ahead of schedule 25 3
3 Development of non-invasive solution 50 2
4 ABC seeks additional indication 25 4
5 FDA certification lost for plant in Ireland 75 1
6 Black box warning issued for competitor’s product in this therapy 50 2
7
The Street expects us to gain additional indication within 3 yrs and we
deliver 25 6
8 We convince customers that we are a front-line therapy 10 3
9 ABCs looses litigation to XYZ 50 3
10
Healthcare reform makes price more important than function
impacting our products 80 5
11 ABC acquires XYZ 10 3
12 ABC partners with DEF for worldwide distribution 20 2
13 Competitor locks in large healthcare network essentially freezing us out 50 ?
14 DEF acquires local India company 70 1
Contribution / Feasibility Grid
The above table has been truncated and sanitized to
provide an example of what the exercise might look
like. Those that are highlighted were selected for
planning activities.
36. RECON
RISK
EFFICIENCY
CUSTOMERS
OUTLOOK
NOVELTY
Intelligence Should Concentrate on
Five Domains of Business Problem Solving
37. RISK
Ensuring against risk to the core business is critical to making
sure there is time for investments in new growth to start
paying off. Maintaining a positive status quo by protecting the
core is the chief role for managers in every business, with one
caveat: good businesses can often be the foremost enemy of
great businesses.
Cannibalization of a company’s current market share should
not exclude innovative ideas that might be foreign to the
corporate immune system.
38. EFFICIENCY
The ruthless cutting away of unnecessary costs in the value
chain is essential for a new market innovation strategy to work.
Create or build up that which is not yet good enough and
diminish or destroy that which is unnecessary.
Most of the unnecessary elements in the incumbent value
chain have long-since outlived their usefulness or were never
very important to customers in the first place.
39. CUSTOMERS
Companies become too dependent on their best customers’
input for signals about how they should innovate, but new
forms of competition usually present themselves at the current
consumption market.
The day your customers begin complaining about how
complicated or expensive or difficult your product is, you
should ask, “why was it good enough for them yesterday” and
who has offered an alternative?
40. OUTLOOK
Traditional market segmentation based on demographic,
geographic or sociographic data are fleeting at best and illusory
at worst and many decisions have been based on flawed
definitions of the fastest growing markets.
Defining the market by the “jobs” customers wish to
accomplish is more helpful in defining fast growing target
markets. Focus groups are often the worst mechanism of
market testing.
41. NOVELTY
Differentiation is mandatory for all organizations to master and
new market or “novel” solutions to customer problems are often
ecosystems of providers working together to produce sought-
after value.
Companies must build a business model designed to test
breakthroughs in the market more regularly but kill off those
that do not work early on, so support and development
resources can be allocated to those that do.
42. Feel free to ask for help:
Email: Arik.Johnson@AuroraWDC.com
Phone: +1 (608) 630-4242
Twitter: @ArikJohnson
LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/ArikJohnson
Skype: ArikJohnson
Web: http://IntelCollab.com & http://AuroraWDC.com
What’s Next?
Leadership to Act is
Based on Confidence
Intelligence Combats the Paralysis that
Accompanies Uncertainty