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Strategy

Blue Ocean Strategy

A strategic approach that creates new, uncontested market spaces rather than competing in existing ones.

What is Blue Ocean Strategy?\n\nThe **Blue Ocean Strategy** is a strategic concept by W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne that encourages companies to create new, uncontested market spaces (Blue Oceans) rather than competing in existing, fiercely contested markets (Red Oceans).\n\n## Red Ocean vs. Blue Ocean\n\n- **Red Ocean:** Existing markets with known boundaries. Companies compete for existing demand. Competition leads to shrinking margins.\n- **Blue Ocean:** New market spaces that didn't previously exist. No direct competition. Growth through innovation rather than displacement.\n\n## Blue Ocean Strategy Tools\n\n- **Strategy canvas:** Visualization of competitive factors and own position\n- **Four actions framework:** Which factors to eliminate, reduce, raise, or create?\n- **ERRC grid:** Structured tool for the four actions\n- **Three tiers of non-customers:** Who isn't buying today and why?\n\n## Why is Blue Ocean Strategy Relevant?\n\nIn saturated markets, it offers a way out of competitive pressure:\n\n- **Innovation over imitation** as a growth driver\n- **Tapping new demand** rather than redistributing existing\n- **Higher margins** through lack of direct comparability\n- **Sustainable competitive advantage** through hard-to-copy business models\n\n## In Practice\n\nBlue Ocean Strategy is not an alternative to solid strategic craftsmanship – it complements it. Not every company can or must create a Blue Ocean. But the mindset – being different rather than better than the competition – is valuable for every strategist. Well-known examples: Cirque du Soleil (redefining circus), Nintendo Wii (gaming for non-gamers).

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