Slate
 
 
 
 
Stop “Disrupting” Everything
How a once-useful concept turned into a meaningless  buzzword.
By _Matthew  Yglesias_ (http://www.slate.com/authors.matthew_yglesias.html) 
|Posted Wednesday, May 1, 2013
 
 
 
Today marks the end of the _TechCrunch: Disrupt NY_ 
(http://techcrunch.com/events/disrupt-ny-2013/event-info/)  conference. But 
never fear, if you want 
 to disrupt something else there’s _Disrupt SF_ 
(http://techcrunch.com/disrupt/)  coming in September and Disrupt Europe in 
Berlin in  October. 
That’s a lot of disruption. Enough to lead a person to the conclusion that  
it’s become an all-purpose technology industry buzzword, drained of 
meaning. A  “synergy” for our time. This is a shame, because while all 
innovation 
is great,  the idea of disruptive innovation as a distinctive kind of 
innovation  has real value. And while disruptive innovation is generally a good 
thing,  nothing inherent to the idea implies it’s the only good thing or the 
best thing.  Entrepreneurs should not be ashamed to admit that their ideas 
aren’t  particularly disruptive. 
As you undoubtedly know, the term “disruptive innovation” comes to us from 
 Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen and his excellent 
1997  book _The Innovator’s Dilemma_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0062060244/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0062060244
&linkCode=as2&tag=slatmaga-20) . Christensen observes that  many successful 
companies spend most of their time working on what he calls  “sustaining 
innovations.” You are IBM, the world’s most successful manufacturer  of 
mainframe computers, and so you pour your energy into building better and  
better 
mainframes. You look at your client base—the universe of institutions  that 
need mainframes—and ask yourself how to keep upselling those clients on  
more and better mainframes. This leaves you vulnerable to a “disruptive”  
innovation like the personal computer. 
What makes disruptive innovations so deadly is they’re not better than your 
 product. They’re worse. Anyone who needed a mainframe at the dawn of  the 
personal computer era would find a PC to be an incredibly lame and  
underpowered alternative. So you ignore the alternative in favor of meeting the 
 
needs of your customers and perfecting your product. But the disruptive product 
 keeps iterating and improving and selling to people who didn’t need  
mainframe computers but who do have use for a cheap, flexible PC. Soon  enough, 
the PC market has swamped the mainframe market and your firm is on its  last 
legs. You’ve fallen victim to the innovator’s dilemma: Your own success in  
the mainframe market blinded you to the real trajectory in the industry. 
This is a great idea with lots of applications. PCs are one example  
Christensen uses, but it doesn’t just apply to tech: Steel manufacturing is  
another case study in the book. You start small and cheap and low-service, you  
get bigger and better and eventually eat the industry. That’s disruption. It  
happens all the time and it’s a great concept. 
But there’s more to innovation and technology than disruption! And lots of  
companies represented at the Disrupt conference clearly aren’t disrupting  
anything. I love Match.com—it’s how I met my wife—but nobody would ever 
have  mistaken it for a too-junky-to-be-usable alternative to personal ads. It’
s  clearly superior, and always was. The same is true, for that matter, of  
Google. Yahoo built a search engine and Google built a better one. Then 
Google  built a better webmail client. And good for them! Uber is a _clever  
hack of misguided taxi regulations_ 
(http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technocracy/2011/12/uber_car_service_exposing_the_idiocy_of_american_city_taxi
_regulations_.html)  and its software is a huge advance over  traditional 
taxi dispatch methods. But like Gmail, Uber is a pretty  straightforward case 
of entering an existing market with a better product. 
Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Christensen’s point about  
disruption and innovation initially caught on because it’s a smart idea. But  
it’
s become a fad because it sounds cool. 
Everyone wants to be a disruptor. But there’s nothing uniquely virtuous 
about  disrupting, either as a way of changing the world or as a way of getting 
rich.  Mobile phones disrupted traditional fixed line telephony (the voice 
quality is  still worse, but nobody cares) and Nokia got rich. Then Apple 
invented a better,  more expensive, more profitable kind of mobile phone and 
got way richer than  Nokia ever was. And good for them! Indeed, for most of 
life’s tasks, what we  really want is just better stuff. Walgreens’ _new  
deluxe stores are great_ 
(http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/04/03/walgreens_flagship_store_chinatown_branch_of_drugstore_chain_is_the_future.html)
 
, I keep meaning to try _the  greatest hoodie ever made_ 
(http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2012/12/american_giant_hoodie_this_is_the_g
reatest_sweatshirt_known_to_man.html) , the _trend  toward higher-quality 
fast food is _ 
(http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2012/08/cantina_bell_the_upscale_taco_bell_menu_shows_the_influence_of_chipotle_on_the_ind
ustry_and_the_future_of_american_food.html) wonderful, and _“sustaining” 
innovations like an airplane with higher cabin  pressure so you don’t get so 
tired and dehydrated_ 
(http://www.ausbt.com.au/why-business-travellers-will-love-the-boeing-787-dreamliner)
  improve the world just as  much as 
disruptive ones. 
There are a few key sectors—think of health care—where it seems like the  
world really would benefit from the cheaper/simpler paradigm of disruption.  
These are areas where the problem isn’t that the best stuff available isn’
t good  enough but that it’s too expensive or complicated for most people to 
get the  best stuff most of the time. Yet the idea of deliberately 
fostering  lower-quality alternatives sounds counterintuitive to people. 
The moral of the disruption story is that this is often how progress is 
made.  Some new idea really can’t equal the best the status quo has to offer,  
but that doesn’t always matter. Turning disruption into an all-purpose tech  
buzzword obscures its importance while simultaneously distracting 
innovators  from real opportunities. 

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