Technology sailing effects

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An introduction to the notion of Sailing SHip effects, along with some examples.

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The Sailing Ship Effect

Christian Sandström holds a PhD from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden. He writes and speaks about disruptive

innovation and technological change.

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This presentation introduces and explains the concept of a

Sailing Ship effect.

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In order to do so, the concept of a technology S-curve will be

described first.

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Performance

Time

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Performance

Time

A technology’s performance

evolves slowly in the beginning.

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Performance

Time

At some point, a breakthrough

happens and it now improves rapidly.

A technology’s performance

evolves slowly in the beginning.

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Performance

Time

At some point, a breakthrough

happens and it now improves rapidly.

Limits of what is scientifically possible are reached and performance doesn’t

increase much more.

A technology’s performance

evolves slowly in the beginning.

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When one technology is displaced by another

technology, the pattern might look something like this:

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Performance

Time

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Performance

Time

The initially lower performance makes it

seemingly irrational for firms dominating the

previous technology to invest at an early point.

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When the established technology is threatened, this

usually triggers existing companies to improve it.

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Such improvements are referred to as a sailing ship effect.

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This notion comes from an observation by Gilfillan (1935) who noted that the best sailing

ships were produced when steam ships had already

displaced them.

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A Sailing Ship effect can be illustrated in the following way:

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Performance

Time

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Performance

Time

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Performance

Time

The threat of being displaced triggers investments in the

established technology, increasing its performance.

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Performance

Time

The threat of being displaced triggers investments in the

established technology, increasing its performance.

But it is too late and the new technology wins in the long term.

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Some examples:

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http://www.hdcctvalliance.com/“The HDcctv Alliance is the

trade association for the global HDcctv industry.

HDcctv is the world's only electrical interface

standard for HD surveillance video,

providing 100% digital transmission of

uncompressed HDTV signals over existing coax.

Seeing is believing!”

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http://www.hdcctvalliance.com/“The HDcctv Alliance is the

trade association for the global HDcctv industry.

HDcctv is the world's only electrical interface

standard for HD surveillance video,

providing 100% digital transmission of

uncompressed HDTV signals over existing coax.

Seeing is believing!”

Analog HDCCTV is a contradiction in terms! Why this notion? And why in 2009?

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Analog CCTV is threatened by Digital, IP-based video

surveillance.

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As the image quality of IP surveillance improved and HD

quality was progressively introduced from 2008 and on,

this put pressure on analog CCTV companies.

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HDCCTV can thus be regarded as a sailing ship effect.

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Image Quality

Time

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Image Quality

Time

CCTV was introduced in the 1950s and improved over

the following decades.

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Image Quality

Time

CCTV was introduced in the 1950s and improved over

the following decades.

IP Video started off with a lower performance.

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Image Quality

Time

CCTV was introduced in the 1950s and improved over

the following decades.

IP Video started off with a lower performance.

With HD Quality in 2008, it was

now better than CCTV.

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Image Quality

Time

CCTV was introduced in the 1950s and improved over

the following decades.

IP Video started off with a lower performance.

With HD Quality in 2008, it was

now better than CCTV.

Being increasingly threatened, CCTV companies make som final

improvements to an obsolete technology.

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Image Quality

Time

CCTV was introduced in the 1950s and improved over

the following decades.

IP Video started off with a lower performance.

With HD Quality in 2008, it was

now better than CCTV.

Being increasingly threatened, CCTV companies make som final

improvements to an obsolete technology.

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Grübler (1990) describes a sailing effect pattern in the automotive industry:

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Grübler (1990) describes a sailing effect pattern in the automotive industry:

“It is as if the industry itself anticipates the approaching saturating markets and tries to gain ground by

accelerating the pace of incremental innovations. Note that during periods of steady, regular high growth rates (the steep part of the automobile diffusion curve) the

rates of technological change appeared to be much slower.

Faced with almost saturated markets, the industry appears to be forced to rapidly introduce technological

innovations as part of the competitive "elbowing" in the struggle for market shares.”

Sources

Gilfillan, S.C., Inventing the Ship, Chicago, Follett Publishing Co, 1935.

Grübler, A. (1990) The Rise and Fall of Infrastructures - Dynamics of Evolution and Technological Change in

Transport, Physica-Verlag.

Find out more:

www.christiansandstrom.org

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