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The founders of a respected Silicon Valley advisory firm study legendary category-creating companies and reveal a groundbreaking discipline called category design. Winning today isn’t about beating the competition at the old game. It’s about inventing a whole new game—defining a new market category, developing it, and dominating it over time. You can’t build a legendary company without building a legendary category. If you think that having the best product is all it takes to win, you’re going to lose. In this farsighted, pioneering guide, the founders of Silicon Valley advisory firm Play Bigger rely on data analysis and interviews to understand the inner workings of “category kings”— companies such as Amazon, Salesforce, Uber, and IKEA—that give us new ways of living, thinking or doing business, often solving problems we didn’t know we had. In Play Bigger, the authors assemble their findings to introduce the new discipline of category design. By applying category design, companies can create new demand where none existed, conditioning customers’ brains so they change their expectations and buying habits. While this discipline defines the tech industry, it applies to every kind of industry and even to personal careers. Crossing the Chasm revolutionized how we think about new products in an existing market. The Innovator’s Dilemma taught us about disrupting an aging market. Now, Play Bigger is transforming business once again, showing us how to create the market itself.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is a pretty bold thesis; to forego playing at the same level as your rivals, and instead forge your own category and become the category king. This is unlike any business development book I've come across to heard about.
I would recommend this to someone who is very passionate about building businesses / start-ups / new categories. It has a lot of good insights and rationales about building new categories and how one has better chances of dominating them. The concepts are very fundamental and make sense.
However, a lot of the content feels repetitive at times. Also, I felt sometimes that this was just their way of diversifying their revenue sources or to say “Hey, I've published a book.” Could have easily been a podcast, YouTube video or a shorter book.
Nevertheless, keeping the critic aside, I learnt from them and that's enough!