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The genesis of blue ocean strategy
Teaching case study

The genesis of blue ocean strategy

Gregory Unruh, Guillaume Carton and Fernanda Arreola
International Journal of Teaching and Case Studies
17/03/2026

Abstract

blue ocean strategy academic-practitioner divide mode 2 knowledge production strategy research
This case study traces the development of blue ocean strategy from its academic origins to its emergence as a global management phenomenon. Through an in-depth examination of W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne's research journey from 1984 to 2005, we analyse how two INSEAD professors successfully bridged the academic-practitioner divide to create one of the most influential strategy frameworks of the 21st century. The case study reveals how their approach evolved from traditional academic publishing toward practice-based research, culminating in a framework that challenged Michael Porter's dominant Five Forces model. The paper demonstrates how Kim and Mauborgne developed dynamic capabilities for sensing market opportunities, seizing practitioner needs, and reconfiguring their research approach to create both academic credibility and practical utility. The blue ocean strategy phenomenon exemplifies how academic ideas can achieve global influence when researchers successfully navigate competing institutional logics and build authentic relationships with practitioner communities.
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