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Inspirational Business Plan: Successful Innovation
Competition:
"Out
there in some garage is an entrepreneur who's forging a bullet with your
company's name on it. You've got one option now – to shoot first. You've got to
out-innovate the innovators."
–
Gary Hamel...
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Staying Beneath the External Radar
If you fish to get to market fast and/or first,
you must be able to act in secrecy. All
fast-to-market companies demonstrate the ability to create and prefect
new products in secrecy to stay beneath the radar of their competitors and
to gain a competitive advantage over them.
In their book It's Not the Big That Eat the
Small... It's the Fast That Eat the Slow,1
Jason Jennings and Laurence Haughton argue that only the swiftest of
corporations will thrive in the 21st century. They then outline a program,
based on best practices developed by contemporary speedsters like
Charles
Schwab and AOL that readers can work into their own businesses by similarly
focusing on "commerce, resource deployment, and people."
Its four parts
examine ways to create environments that anticipate the future, reassess
operations and personnel and make appropriate adjustments whenever
necessary, launch a "crusade"
while "staying beneath the radar," and
maintain velocity through institutionalization and
close customer
relationships. "This book will show you how to think and
move faster than
your competition," they write, adding that "being faster doesn't mean being
out of breath. It means being smarter."
Case in
Point Hotmail
Hotmail, the first web-based free e-mail
server, was built around a simple idea. Sabeer Bhatia and Jack Smith, the
founders of Hotmail, realized that before long the same idea would occur to
many other people.
They had to
raise venture capital
without revealing the real idea of their business.
"I turned over every
stone looking for money. Anyone who would listen, I'd talk to. I pitched
friends, colleagues, classmates, partners, anyone, anywhere, anytime. I
pitched a Texas multimillionaire, an oil magnate, a real estate person, and
even a venture capitalist who funded gas stations," says Sabeer Bhatia. But
he would only reveal the big idea after he was certain he wasn't being
rejected for some irrelevant reason: "All potential investors got the same
pitch – for Java Soft, another program we'd played with. If the person I
started to sell started spouting reasons that I believed were silly ones for
rejecting us, they never got to hear about the real idea. Eventually only 4
people knew about our real plan."

Sun Tzu's "The Art of War" :
Planning
Warfare is one thing. It is a philosophy of
deception.
When you are ready, you try to appear incapacitated.
When active, you pretend inactivity.
When you are close to the enemy, you appear distant ...
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Staying Beneath the Internal Radar
In
the world of business, most innovations have to pass through some kind of
deliberate gatekeeping process that identifies the likely winners and kills
off the variations that serve no useful purpose. Successful gatekeepers can
gather enough resources to provide “air cover,” allowing the innovation to
reside under the radar screen by protecting it from too much scrutiny during
its critical early phases.2

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