57 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
57 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
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# Chapter 3: Exploring the Map
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## Core Focus
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Applying climatic patterns - universal business dynamics - to Wardley Maps to anticipate change and improve strategic decisions.
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## Climatic Patterns
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### 1. Everything Evolves
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Components move left-to-right due to supply-demand competition. All activities, practices, and mental models progress from novel to commonplace.
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### 2. Characteristics Change
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As components evolve, properties shift predictably:
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- **Uncharted**: rare, poorly understood, unpredictable, high uncertainty, potential competitive advantage
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- **Industrialised**: commonplace, well-defined, standardised, predictable, cost of doing business
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### 3. No One Size Fits All
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Different evolutionary stages require different management:
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- **Genesis/Uncharted**: Agile (exploration, experimentation)
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- **Transitional/Product**: Lean (efficiency, measurement, MVP)
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- **Industrialised**: Six Sigma / ITIL (deviation reduction, standardization)
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Single-methodology organizations fail because components occupy different stages simultaneously.
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### 4. Efficiency Enables Innovation
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Industrialised components become building blocks for higher-order systems. "Genesis begets evolution begets genesis."
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### 5. Higher-Order Systems Create New Worth
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Commodification (social-to-economic value) differs from commoditisation (differentiated-to-undifferentiated). Transitional domains generate highest profitability. But industrialised components enable unpredictable future opportunities.
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### 6. No Choice on Evolution (Red Queen Hypothesis)
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Competitors adapting to evolved components force others to follow. Stagnation becomes unviable.
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### 7. Past Success Breeds Inertia
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Existing suppliers resist evolution because transitional domains deliver maximum profitability. Amazon - unencumbered by legacy models - industrialised computing while established vendors resisted.
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## Key Insight
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Amazon dominated cloud not through superior engineering but because they had no legacy business model creating inertia. Pat Gelsinger dismissed Amazon as "a company that sells books" - precisely why Amazon could disrupt.
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## Application
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Using these patterns on a map enables:
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- Anticipating which components will commoditize
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- Predicting resistance to change (inertia)
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- Identifying platform evolution trajectories
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- Spotting opportunities from compound evolution
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- Making assumptions visible for collaborative discussion
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## Key Takeaways
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1. Maps enable pattern recognition for strategic foresight
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2. Evolution is inevitable but uneven across components
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3. Industrialization paradox: reduces near-term advantage while enabling unpredictable future value
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4. Organizational adaptation is competitive necessity
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5. Visible assumptions on maps beat assumptions locked in minds
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