Comment by macintux

2 days ago

If you aren’t already familiar, Clayton Christensen’s theories on this, on innovation and disruption, are widely praised.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clayton_Christensen

Yeah, this is classic disruption. The amazing part is, I can almost guarantee that execs at Kodak read The Innovator's Dilemma, but it didn't help. Same goes for Nokia. Knowledge of the problem is apparently insufficient.

  • Sometimes there is no clear path from A to B. There is some weird fallacy where people tend to think every single company can make every single product if they simply hired the right engineers and throw money at it.

    I think it comes from underestimating the role of process, structure, and competency, which are the DNA and codebase of a company.

    • Sometimes the market says the most efficient outcome is for your company to die and a replacement rise from the ground elsewhere.

      Old, tired companies with lots of sunk costs and old employees are at a disadvantage.

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    • I'm definitely not saying any company can make any product, but it is striking when a company which is making a product refuses to believe the product category is going to evolve—even when they themselves are doing the original R&D to evolve it.

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