When Clayton Christensen, our author, spent twenty years developing his Theory of Jobs to Be Done, he did something which is unusual for an academic - he collected data not from spreadsheets or databases, but from real people and companies, one conversation at a time. This patient, methodical approach reveals the first hint about what makes this book so awesome: deep, practical insights about why customers make the choices they do.
Competing Against Luck introduces readers to this Theory of Jobs to Be Done, a groundbreaking approach to understanding customer behavior and how to successfully innovate accordingly. The theory delves into understanding the fundamental "jobs" customers are trying to accomplish. This includes both the tasks people want to complete and, interestingly, the "negative jobs" - things people actively want to avoid doing. This dual perspective provides a richer understanding of customer motivation.
The theory builds upon Christensen's previous work on disruptive innovation, but takes a different angle. While his earlier work in The Innovator's Dilemma explained how companies can be disrupted despite doing everything right, this book focuses on how companies can create products and services that customers genuinely want. It moves beyond analyzing why innovations fail to understanding why they succeed.
FYI, the theory has been tested and refined through implementation at major corporations like Intuit. And other major companies have already used this theory to create successful innovations, suggesting its potential value for readers in both large corporations and smaller organizations. So, whether you're a business leader, innovator, entrepreneur, or simply interested in understanding why some products succeed while others fail, the Jobs to Be Done Theory offers a fresh perspective on creating successful innovations.
The Milkshake Mystery
Bob Moesta and Rick Pedi, two Detroit consultants, visited Clayton Christensen at Harvard Business School to discuss his theory of disruptive innovation. During their conversation, they shared a fascinating story about a fast-food chain's struggle with milk shake sales - a story that would reshape how businesses think about innovation.The chain had done everything by the traditional playbook. They brought in their ideal customers and bombarded them with questions about improving their milkshakes. "Do you want it cheaper? Chunkier? Chocolatier?" But despite implementing various customer suggestions, sales remained flat. Something wasn't clicking.Then came the breakthrough question: "What job causes people to come here and buy a milkshake?" The team spent 18 hours observing customers, and discovered something surprising. A large number of milk shakes were sold before 9 AM to solo customers who immediately drove off with them. When asked about their purchase, these customers revealed they faced long, boring commutes and needed something to keep them occupied while preventing mid-morning hunger.The morning milkshake wasn't competing with other milk shakes - it was competing with bananas (too quick to eat), bagels (too messy with cream cheese), and doughnuts (crumbly). The thick milkshake, taking 20 minutes to finish through a thin straw, was perfect for the job. It stayed neat in the cup holder and kept commuters full until lunch. But there was another twist. The same milkshake served a completely different job in the afternoon. Parents, tired of saying "no" to their children all week, used it as an opportunity to say "yes" and create a positive moment. Here, the milkshake wasn't competing with breakfast foods - it was competing with a stop at the toy store or a game of catch. This dual-job reality meant the chain needed two different solutions. The morning milkshake needed to be thicker with added chunks for "surprises" during the commute. The afternoon version needed different portion sizes for guilt-free parental bonding. One product, two distinct jobs, two different sets of competitors.The milkshake story perfectly illustrates why sometimes innovation fails. The fast-food chain had been asking what would make their milkshake "better" - a question that led nowhere because "better" means different things for different jobs. Only by understanding why customers "hired" their milk shake could they create truly effective innovations.When developing products, don't just focus on improving features. Instead, study the circumstances in which customers use your product and what job they're trying...
How to Find "Jobs to Be Done"
Bob Moesta's experience with selling homes reveals a fundamental truth about innovation - sometimes the real opportunity lies beneath the surface. When his Detroit-based building company struggled to sell homes despite offering luxury features and customization options, Moesta discovered that the biggest obstacle wasn't the granite countertops or squeakless floors - it was the dining room table.Through conversations with potential buyers, he learned that people weren't just struggling with choosing a new home; they were grappling with letting go of their old one. That dining room table represented years of family memories, from birthday celebrations to homework sessions. The company had been solving the wrong problem. They were in the business of "moving lives," not just selling homes.This insight led to practical changes. They reduced the overwhelming 30-page customization checklist to three simple options. They created storage spaces where new owners could take their time sorting through belongings. They even offered moving services. The result? While the housing market plunged 49% in 2007, their sales grew by 25%.Similar opportunities emerged when Kimberly-Clark looked beyond the obvious market for adult incontinence products. Their research showed that 40% of adults over fifty face incontinence issues, but many choose to use nothing rather than buy existing solutions. The stigma was so strong that people would rather stay home than risk embarrassment. By understanding this emotional aspect, Kimberly-Clark created Depend Silhouette Briefs that looked and felt like regular underwear.Another example is Procter & Gamble. When Procter & Gamble initially failed to sell diapers in China, they were focused solely on making an affordable product. The breakthrough came when they discovered that parents valued something else entirely - better sleep for their babies, which led to improved family relationships and cognitive development. By addressing these broader needs, P&G became a market leader in China, generating $1.6 billion in diaper sales.The lesson here? Sometimes innovation opportunities come from watching what people actually do, not what they say they do. The key is looking beyond the obvious. Successful innovation requires three specific actions: observing actual customer behavior (like Arm & Hammer did), understanding the emotional context (as in the home-selling case), and identifying situations where people aren't using any solution at all (like Kimberly-Clark's opportunity). The goal isn't to create something entirely new, but to solve existing problems in ways that truly matter to people.Breakthrough innovations come from seeing what others have missed. It's not about inventing...
The Hidden Language of Customer Needs
Customers rarely tell us exactly what they want - not because they're being difficult, but because they often don't know themselves. Take Brian Walker, who bought a mattress at Costco. On the surface, it looked like an impulse purchase. But diving deeper reveals a year-long journey of frustration, failed solutions, and complex emotions.For months, Brian woke up with backaches despite owning an expensive Stearns & Foster mattress. He tried everything - adjusting his sleeping position, removing pillows, even flipping the mattress. Surprisingly, when traveling for work and sleeping in hotel beds, the pain disappeared. His wife eventually started experiencing similar discomfort, adding another layer to his motivation to change. Yet despite this clear problem, Brian didn't immediately buy a new mattress. The delay wasn't about indecision or lack of resources. Brian had deep-seated anxieties about mattress stores - the pushy salespeople, the questionable cleanliness of display models, and the overwhelming number of choices. These emotional barriers were so strong that he preferred buying a mattress he'd never tested at Costco over visiting a specialized store. The trust in Costco's return policy and his wife's presence during the purchase helped overcome his anxieties.What does that teach you? That the path to purchase isn't just about the product itself. Brian wasn't primarily concerned about mattress features like coil count or firmness. His real goal was getting good sleep so he could be a better businessman, husband, and father. The mattress was simply a means to that end.So, understand that jobs operate on multiple levels simultaneously. Beyond meeting functional requirements, products fulfill emotional desires and social aspirations. A father buying a crib isn't just acquiring furniture for an infant; he's creating safety for someone precious, demonstrating his parental competence, and perhaps continuing family traditions. By uncovering these interwoven dimensions, we see that products serve as vehicles for personal identity, relationship building, and self-expression. The most compelling innovations address this full spectrum of human needs, creating solutions that resonate on all levels rather than merely solving technical problems.Companies often miss these deeper motivations because they focus on the wrong data. They track the "Big Hire" (the purchase) but ignore the "Little Hire" (actual product use), which is like counting wedding ceremonies but ignoring whether the marriages last. Both moments matter equally in understanding customer satisfaction.The key to uncovering these unstated needs lies in detailed customer conversations that explore the full context of their struggles....
Integrating Around Jobs to Be Done
Organizations often get caught up in org charts, efficiency metrics, and departmental silos. But the most successful companies focus on a different approach - they understand the Jobs to Be Done (JTBD) and so build their entire structure around what customers need, not just what's convenient for the company.The Mayo Clinic demonstrates this brilliantly. When Christensen visited as a patient dealing with nerve inflammation, he noticed something unique. Unlike traditional hospitals where patients chase down appointments and coordinate between specialists, Mayo Clinic assigned someone to own his entire care process. This person arranged all specialist visits, ensured test results were ready on time, and removed common patient anxieties before they could even arise. The clinic had designed its processes specifically around patients' needs.Or consider Amazon's approach. Rather than just tracking when packages ship, they measure actual delivery times because that's what matters to customers. This reflects in their product pages, which show precise delivery windows.The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) also took this lesson to heart when building their organization from scratch. Instead of creating typical government silos, they grouped different functions - like enforcement and supervision - together based on their shared job of protecting consumers. This approach helped them avoid typical government bureaucracy and paralysis. Their weekly policy meetings focused entirely on how to solve consumer problems, not on departmental territories.The Southern New Hampshire University story further reinforces this principle. They shifted from responding to student inquiries in weeks to calling back within minutes. More importantly, they took on tasks that traditionally burdened students, like tracking down transcripts.This is what integrating JTBD means - understanding and then adapting according to the real challenges in their customers' journey.But implementing these changes isn't simple. Traditional metrics like sales numbers or efficiency ratios don't capture how well you're solving customer jobs. Besides, organizations don't need massive reorganizations to improve. Instead, they need to understand what job customers are truly hiring them to do, then build processes that deliver on that job consistently. This means measuring what matters to customers, not just internal metrics, and having someone responsible for ensuring the entire customer experience works seamlessly. As Christensen's research shows, when organizations truly grasp and organize around their customers' Jobs to Be Done, they create lasting competitive advantages that go far beyond any individual product or service feature. The key is building integrated processes that solve real customer problems.One last lesson!
The Art of Staying True to Your Purpose
Companies often start with a brilliant solution to a customer's problem. But as they grow larger and more successful, many lose sight of why customers chose them in the first place. Clayton Christensen illustrates this through the fascinating story of V8 vegetable juice.V8's journey is particularly telling. In 1933, they created a drink from eight vegetables. The product found real success when they discovered their true purpose - helping busy people fulfill their promise to eat vegetables without the hassle of preparing them. A customer could drink V8 while driving and truthfully tell their mother they were eating their vegetables. When V8's team focused on this specific job, their sales quadrupled in under a year. However, the company later drifted into creating numerous variants like Spicy Hot V8, Lemon V8, and V8 Splash, losing focus on their core purpose.This drift happens because companies fall into three common traps.The first is prioritizing "active data" (like sales numbers and metrics) over "passive data" (understanding customer needs). It's similar to how schools sometimes teach students just to pass tests rather than ensure real learning. The numbers look good, but the core purpose is lost.The second trap is "surface growth" - trying to sell more products to existing customers without considering if these products serve a real need. That's what V8 fell into.The third trap involves seeing only the data that supports existing beliefs. Google created a flu-tracking service meant to predict flu outbreaks faster than traditional methods used by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Their approach seemed comprehensive - they matched 50 million search terms against 1,152 data points. The result? It failed spectacularly. For over two years, GFT significantly overestimated flu cases in the United States. The problem wasn't the amount of data - it was how Google interpreted it. They made assumptions about how search terms (like symptoms, medical providers, remedies) connected to actual flu cases. These assumptions were flawed for several reasons. For one, some people might repeatedly search the same terms month after month (like hypochondriacs). And the connection between searches and actual flu cases was too complex to predict reliably. This becomes the Fallacy of Conforming Data - just because data exists and can be analyzed doesn't mean it's telling you what you think it's telling you.These problems occur because companies start managing numbers instead of solving customer problems. The solution isn't complicated, but it requires...
Summary
Innovation isn't about luck or random chance - it's about deeply understanding why customers make the choices they do. The Jobs to Be Done theory provides a powerful framework for creating products and services that truly matter to people. By focusing on the actual problems customers are trying to solve, rather than just product features or market data, companies can consistently develop successful innovations that make a real difference in people's lives. Success comes from solving genuine customer needs.
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About the Author
Clayton Magleby Christensen (April 6, 1952 – January 23, 2020) was an American academic and business consultant who developed the theory of "disruptive innovation", which has been called the most influential business idea of the early 21st century. Christensen introduced "disruption" in his 1997 book The Innovator's Dilemma, and it led The Economist to term him "the most influential management thinker of his time." He served as the Kim B. Clark Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School (HBS), and was also a leader and writer in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). He was one of the founders of the Jobs to Be Done development methodology.
Christensen was also a co-founder of Rose Park Advisors, a venture capital firm, and Innosight, a management consulting and investment firm specializing in innovation.
More on: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clayton_Christensen
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