According to Mr. Shailesh Rajpal , there are three types of innovation:
Low-end and new-market disruption are examples of disruptive innovation, differentiated by their relationships with the existing market. New-market disruption occurs when an innovative product creates a new market segment, whereas low-end disruption enters at the bottom of the existing market to provide a “good enough” product to an over served audience.
Understanding how disruption works can enable you to avoid it if you work at an incumbent business or drive it if you’re a new entrant. Here’s a closer look at one type of disruptive innovation: low-end disruption.
WHAT IS LOW-END DISRUPTION?
Mr. Shailesh Rajpal says, “Low-end disruption occurs when a company uses a low-cost business model to enter at the bottom of an existing market and claim a segment. As the entrant company claims the lowest market segment, the incumbent company typically retreats upmarket where profit margins are higher. ‘Almost always, when low-end disruptions emerge, it creates a situation where the leaders in the industry actually are motivated to flee rather than fight you,’ that’s why low-end disruption is such an important tool to create new growth businesses: The competitors don’t want to compete against you; they just walk away.”
3 Characteristics of Low-End Disruption
Three characteristics separate low-end disruption from other innovation types: