Building the Disruptor’s Organization for Market Leadership
The recently launched Disruption Selling Maturity Model?helps companies successfully push their disruptive products and services through the innovation adoption lifecycle. It consists of 5 maturity levels, where a number of pieces have to come together in harmony to deliver the desired result: customers, the offering, and the innovator’s organization. If the three are out of sync, adoption will stall.
This post covers the organizational?capabilities?required for customer facing roles for each of the 5 maturity levels.?
Organizational Capabilities and Roles per Maturity Level
To meet the next level’s requirements, over time new roles and capabilities are added?on top of the already existing ones and scaling out requires the simultaneous upgrade of both Offering and Organization. Keep in mind that as you progress through the maturity levels the responsibilities of a specific role in one maturity level can evolve into different seniority levels and/or more taylorism in the next maturity level.
Level 1:?Technology Management. Customers evaluate offerings based on technical requirements, such as features and capabilities, to achieve business goals and integrate the Disruptive Innovation. To achieve this, the Disruptor needs a technical relationship with customers
领英推荐
Level 2: Account Management. For two parties to do business, they need to agree on binding deliverables. A commercial relationship involves Account Managers handling tasks like establishing strong connections with customers, understanding their needs, tailoring products or services accordingly, and ensuring effective communication. They also focus on maintaining customer satisfaction
Level 3: Partner Management. To achieve Ecosystem Fit, the Disruptor needs to build a partner ecosystem around their Disruptive Innovation. This involves Partner Managers handling tasks such as developing collaborative connections with partners
Level 4: Delivery Management. After closing the contract, the Disruptor ships the product or provides the service. To do this, they need to: coordinate logistics, plan transportation, storage, and distribution; process orders, managing the entire order lifecycle
Level 5: Program Management. To prepare for Strategic Alliances, the Disruptor must manage a cluster of connected projects. For this, they need to: ensure alignment with overall goals; oversee project scope, boundaries, and objectives; allocate resources for successful execution; identify and mitigate risks; engage stakeholders; establish effective communication; define a timeline and schedule; implement quality assurance; plan and manage changes; monitor and report program performance; and validate outcomes for alignment with strategic objectives. All of these responsibilities fall under the term "program management," overseen by Program Managers.
What’s ahead: Now that we have shared a summary of specific requirements for each additional role per maturity level, we will publish a series of posts over the coming weeks, highlighting nuances and how to avoid or overcome real life challenges relevant for your journey.
Enabling organizations to combine Automation and AI to drive efficiencies and innovation. UiPath Automation: the arms & legs for your AI | Not automated, is poorly digitized.
1 年Especially building the (industry focused) partner ecosystem helps to complement product offerings, which are not covered by the enterprise today and which are needed by customers as the buy solutions.