skills/asgard-ai-platform/skills/grad-disruptive-innovation

grad-disruptive-innovation

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SKILL.md

Disruptive Innovation (Christensen, 1997)

Overview

Disruptive Innovation theory explains how smaller firms with fewer resources can successfully challenge established incumbents. Disruption occurs when entrants target overlooked segments (low-end or non-consumers) with simpler, cheaper offerings, then move upmarket as performance improves. Incumbents rationally focus on profitable mainstream customers and fail to respond until it is too late.

When to Use

Trigger conditions:

  • User asks why a startup with an inferior product is gaining market share
  • User needs to evaluate whether a new entrant is a disruptive or sustaining threat
  • User wants to design a market entry strategy targeting overserved customers
  • User mentions "disruption", "low-end market", or "good enough product"

When NOT to use:

  • For sustaining innovation management (incremental improvements) -> use stage-gate or innovation funnel
  • For platform-based competition -> use grad-platform-economics
  • For analyzing national-level innovation systems -> use grad-diamond

Assumptions

IRON LAW: Disruption Comes from BELOW

Disruption originates from the LOW END or NEW MARKET — never from a
superior product attacking head-on. Incumbents fail because they
OVER-SERVE mainstream customers, creating a performance overshoot that
opens space for simpler, cheaper alternatives.

If the entrant competes on the SAME performance dimensions as the
incumbent, it is sustaining innovation — NOT disruption.
  • Performance trajectories improve faster than customer needs evolve
  • Incumbents are rational — they chase higher margins upmarket
  • Disrupted markets have identifiable overserved segments

Methodology

Step 1: Map Performance Trajectories

Plot the incumbent's performance improvement trajectory against the range of customer needs (low-end to high-end). Identify where performance overshoots what mainstream customers can absorb.

Step 2: Identify the Foothold

Classify the entrant's strategy:

  • Low-end foothold: Targets overserved customers with a cheaper, simpler, "good enough" product (e.g., discount airlines vs full-service carriers)
  • New-market foothold: Targets non-consumers who previously could not access the product at all (e.g., personal computers vs mainframes)

Step 3: Assess Disruption Potential

Evaluate three conditions:

  1. Performance overshoot exists — mainstream customers do not use all features they pay for
  2. Entrant has an upmarket migration path — the simpler product can improve over time
  3. Incumbent has asymmetric motivation — responding means cannibalizing high-margin business

Step 4: Recommend Response Strategy

For incumbents: autonomous business unit, acquire the disruptor, or create own low-end offering. For entrants: stay below the radar, improve incrementally, move upmarket only when ready.

Output Format

# Disruption Assessment: {Industry/Company}

## Performance Trajectory Analysis
- Incumbent performance vector: {key dimensions}
- Customer need threshold: {what "good enough" looks like}
- Overshoot zone: {where incumbent exceeds needs}

## Entrant Classification
- Type: Low-end foothold / New-market foothold / Sustaining (NOT disruptive)
- Target segment: {who the entrant serves}
- Core advantage: {why target segment prefers entrant}

## Disruption Potential: High / Medium / Low
1. Performance overshoot: {Yes/No — evidence}
2. Upmarket path: {Yes/No — mechanism}
3. Asymmetric motivation: {Yes/No — why incumbent won't respond}

## Strategic Recommendations
- For incumbent: {specific response}
- For entrant: {next moves}

Gotchas

  • Not every innovation is disruptive: Uber was NOT disruptive to taxis by Christensen's definition — it started in the high end. Label precisely.
  • Disruption is a process, not an event: It unfolds over years or decades. A snapshot analysis misses trajectory dynamics.
  • Incumbents CAN respond: Disruption is not inevitable. Autonomous business units (e.g., IBM PC division) can counter disruption.
  • Technology alone is not disruption: The business model matters as much as the technology. A better mousetrap sold at higher prices is sustaining innovation.
  • Beware hindsight bias: Many "disruption" narratives are retrofitted. Apply the framework prospectively with testable predictions.

References

  • For mathematical formalization of performance trajectories, see references/performance-trajectory-model.md
  • For case studies (steel minimills, disk drives), see references/disruption-cases.md
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