Idea in Brief

The Problem

To succeed in the long term, companies must find ways to create new markets. Competing in existing markets is growing less profitable. But despite much investment and commitment, companies find it extraordinarily difficult to establish new market spaces.

Why It Happens

Managers’ mental models are based on their experiences in existing markets. Though these assumptions and beliefs have worked in the past, they undermine efforts to create new spaces.

The Solution

To avoid being trapped in old markets, managers need to:

  • focus on attracting new customers
  • worry less about segmentation
  • understand that market creation is not synonymous with either technological innovation or creative destruction
  • stop focusing on premium versus low-cost strategies

In America, corporate performance has been deteriorating for decades. According to Deloitte’s landmark study “The Shift Index,” the aggregate return on assets of U.S. public companies has fallen below 1%, to about a quarter of its 1965 level. As market power has moved from companies to consumers, and global competition has intensified, managers in almost all industries have come to face steep performance challenges. To turn things around, they need to be more creative in developing and executing their competitive strategies. But long-term success will not be achieved through competitiveness alone. Increasingly, it will depend on the ability to generate new demand and create and capture new markets.

A version of this article appeared in the March 2015 issue of Harvard Business Review.