Return to search

Business model reinvention for enabling disruptive innovation

Over the last two decades, extensive research has been undertaken to understand incumbent
firms’ adaptation behavior to disruptive innovation, considering technological change as the
most important focus of analysis. Recently, there is an emerging literature that views disruptive
innovation as a business model problem in which a technological innovation is deployed. In this
literature, disruptive innovation is understood to be primarily a function of conflict between an
incumbent’s traditional and an entrant’s new business model. This raises two major questions.
First, although the original theory of disruptive innovation evolved from technological studies,
this theory persists to explain all types of disruptive innovation over time (Markides, 2006: 19).
Furthermore, disruptive innovation has always been studied from an incumbent firm perspective.
With the need to shift the research focus from a technology to a business model, we also need a
new framework to understand disruptive innovation taking the business model as the unit of
analysis taking both the entrant’s and incumbent’s perspectives. Building on business model
innovation studies (Govindarajan and Gupta, 2001; Normann, 2001; Hamel, 2000) and the
established technology based disruptive innovation theory (Christensen and Raynor, 2003;
Christensen, 1997), this study offers a systematic business model framework to comprehend
disruptive phenomenon from both an incumbent’s and an entrant’s perspectives.
Second, disruptive innovation studies predominantly focus on high-tech industries. Increasingly
many low-tech industries are being affected by disruptive non-technological market-driven
business model innovations. Considering that disruptive innovation theory is principally
iii
technology based, a review of the literature suggests that we know little about the differences
between high-tech and low-tech market-driven disruptive innovations in terms of their
evolutions, competitive and disruptive effects.
From the strategic management literature point of view, the contribution of this study becomes
even more relevant when the two questions are examined across economic regions. Although
there is ample evidence that shows disruptive innovations are not always restricted to developed
economies, little is known about how incumbents in developing economies adapt their
organizations to disruptive business model innovations. This study takes South Africa as a
development economy case-study. The empirical setting of the current study includes four South
African industries: the mobile and IT industry (high-tech), banking, insurance and airlines (lowtech)
industries.
In addressing the two key question of the study, the dissertation presents the empirical analysis at
the first-order (firm-level study) and second-order (high-tech vs. low-etch study) levels. The
first-order study argues that an innovation creates and grows a niche market through radical
product design, different core competencies and/or a different revenue model long before it
becomes disruptive innovation. It proposes a framework that attempts to model the evolution of
this trajectory from an entrant’s perspective. From the entrant’s perspective, a potentially
disruptive business model innovation is a process that evolves over time in successive
adaptations to endogenous and exogenous innovation drivers that shape the evolution and path of
the new business model. An innovation becomes disruptive only when the new business model
fully or partially affects an incumbent’s established business model and market.
iv
Taking the viewpoint of an incumbent firm, the first-order study further offers a framework that
seeks to provide a causality model to comprehend the root cause of disruptive innovation and its
impact on the incumbent’s traditional business model. One of the major causes of disruptive
innovation is the incumbent’s entrepreneurial dilemma. This means that an incumbent’s success
or failure is partly contingent on the senior corporate management’s entrepreneurship readiness
that is manifested in terms of taking risk initiative, willingness and ability to take appropriate
strategic approaches to enable disruptive innovation. By articulating the causes of disruptive
innovation, it suggests four key strategic approaches an incumbent should follow to enable
disruptive innovation. While the study finds common patterns for the causes and approaches
among incumbents across the four industries at a firm-level, some of the hypotheses of this study
could not be proven at an aggregated system level. Disruptive innovation is a relative
phenomenon: Some innovations that are disruptive to some firms or industries may not be
disruptive to other firms or industries. Therefore, the study further re-examines the aggregated
firm-level outcomes by disaggregating the data into dichotomous technology versus marketdriven
disruptive innovations. By conducting a second-order analysis at the innovation category
level, this study adds considerably to extant innovation literature by establishing that a lowtechnology
market-driven disruptive business model innovation entails different business model
evolutionary processes, different disruptive effects and different managerial implications
compared to high-tech disruptive innovation.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/10888
Date12 December 2011
CreatorsHabtay, Solomon Russom
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

Page generated in 0.0025 seconds