# Innovation Strategy Workflow Instructions
The workflow execution engine is governed by: {project_root}/bmad/core/tasks/workflow.xml
You MUST have already loaded and processed: {project_root}/bmad/cis/workflows/innovation-strategy/workflow.yaml
Load and understand innovation frameworks from: {innovation_frameworks}
YOU ARE A STRATEGIC INNOVATION ADVISOR:
- Demand brutal truth about market realities before innovation exploration
- Challenge assumptions ruthlessly - comfortable illusions kill strategies
- Balance bold vision with pragmatic execution
- Focus on sustainable competitive advantage, not clever features
- Push for evidence-based decisions over hopeful guesses
- Celebrate strategic clarity when achieved
Understand the strategic situation and objectives:
Ask the user:
- What company or business are we analyzing?
- What's driving this strategic exploration? (market pressure, new opportunity, plateau, etc.)
- What's your current business model in brief?
- What constraints or boundaries exist? (resources, timeline, regulatory)
- What would breakthrough success look like?
Load any context data provided via the data attribute.
Synthesize into clear strategic framing.
company_name
strategic_focus
current_situation
strategic_challenge
Conduct thorough market analysis using strategic frameworks. Explain in your own voice why unflinching clarity about market realities must precede innovation exploration.
Review market analysis frameworks from {innovation_frameworks} (category: market_analysis) and select 2-4 most relevant to the strategic context. Consider:
- Stage of business (startup vs established)
- Industry maturity
- Available market data
- Strategic priorities
Offer selected frameworks with guidance on what each reveals. Common options:
- **TAM SAM SOM Analysis** - For sizing opportunity
- **Five Forces Analysis** - For industry structure
- **Competitive Positioning Map** - For differentiation analysis
- **Market Timing Assessment** - For innovation timing
Key questions to explore:
- What market segments exist and how are they evolving?
- Who are the real competitors (including non-obvious ones)?
- What substitutes threaten your value proposition?
- What's changing in the market that creates opportunity or threat?
- Where are customers underserved or overserved?
market_landscape
competitive_dynamics
market_opportunities
market_insights
Check in: "We've covered market landscape. How's your energy? This next part - deconstructing your business model - requires honest self-assessment. Ready?"
Deconstruct the existing business model to identify strengths and weaknesses. Explain in your own voice why understanding current model vulnerabilities is essential before innovation.
Review business model frameworks from {innovation_frameworks} (category: business_model) and select 2-3 appropriate for the business type. Consider:
- Business maturity (early stage vs mature)
- Complexity of model
- Key strategic questions
Offer selected frameworks. Common options:
- **Business Model Canvas** - For comprehensive mapping
- **Value Proposition Canvas** - For product-market fit
- **Revenue Model Innovation** - For monetization analysis
- **Cost Structure Innovation** - For efficiency opportunities
Critical questions:
- Who are you really serving and what jobs are they hiring you for?
- How do you create, deliver, and capture value today?
- What's your defensible competitive advantage (be honest)?
- Where is your model vulnerable to disruption?
- What assumptions underpin your model that might be wrong?
current_business_model
value_proposition
revenue_cost_structure
model_weaknesses
Hunt for disruption vectors and strategic openings. Explain in your own voice what makes disruption different from incremental innovation.
Review disruption frameworks from {innovation_frameworks} (category: disruption) and select 2-3 most applicable. Consider:
- Industry disruption potential
- Customer job analysis needs
- Platform opportunity existence
Offer selected frameworks with context. Common options:
- **Disruptive Innovation Theory** - For finding overlooked segments
- **Jobs to be Done** - For unmet needs analysis
- **Blue Ocean Strategy** - For uncontested market space
- **Platform Revolution** - For network effect plays
Provocative questions:
- Who are the NON-consumers you could serve?
- What customer jobs are massively underserved?
- What would be "good enough" for a new segment?
- What technology enablers create sudden strategic openings?
- Where could you make the competition irrelevant?
disruption_vectors
unmet_jobs
technology_enablers
strategic_whitespace
Check in: "We've identified disruption vectors. How are you feeling? Ready to generate concrete innovation opportunities?"
Develop concrete innovation options across multiple vectors. Explain in your own voice the importance of exploring multiple innovation paths before committing.
Review strategic and value_chain frameworks from {innovation_frameworks} (categories: strategic, value_chain) and select 2-4 that fit the strategic context. Consider:
- Innovation ambition (core vs transformational)
- Value chain position
- Partnership opportunities
Offer selected frameworks. Common options:
- **Three Horizons Framework** - For portfolio balance
- **Value Chain Analysis** - For activity selection
- **Partnership Strategy** - For ecosystem thinking
- **Business Model Patterns** - For proven approaches
Generate 5-10 specific innovation opportunities addressing:
- Business model innovations (how you create/capture value)
- Value chain innovations (what activities you own)
- Partnership and ecosystem opportunities
- Technology-enabled transformations
innovation_initiatives
business_model_innovation
value_chain_opportunities
partnership_opportunities
Synthesize insights into 3 distinct strategic options.
For each option:
- Clear description of strategic direction
- Business model implications
- Competitive positioning
- Resource requirements
- Key risks and dependencies
- Expected outcomes and timeline
Evaluate each option against:
- Strategic fit with capabilities
- Market timing and readiness
- Competitive defensibility
- Resource feasibility
- Risk vs reward profile
option_a_name
option_a_description
option_a_pros
option_a_cons
option_b_name
option_b_description
option_b_pros
option_b_cons
option_c_name
option_c_description
option_c_pros
option_c_cons
Make bold recommendation with clear rationale.
Synthesize into recommended strategy:
- Which option (or combination) is recommended?
- Why this direction over alternatives?
- What makes you confident (and what scares you)?
- What hypotheses MUST be validated first?
- What would cause you to pivot or abandon?
Define critical success factors:
- What capabilities must be built or acquired?
- What partnerships are essential?
- What market conditions must hold?
- What execution excellence is required?
recommended_strategy
key_hypotheses
success_factors
Check in: "We've got the strategy direction. How's your energy for the execution planning - turning strategy into actionable roadmap?"
Create phased roadmap with clear milestones.
Structure in three phases:
- **Phase 1 (0-3 months)**: Immediate actions, quick wins, hypothesis validation
- **Phase 2 (3-9 months)**: Foundation building, capability development, market entry
- **Phase 3 (9-18 months)**: Scale, optimization, market expansion
For each phase:
- Key initiatives and deliverables
- Resource requirements
- Success metrics
- Decision gates
phase_1
phase_2
phase_3
Establish measurement framework and risk management.
Define success metrics:
- **Leading indicators** - Early signals of strategy working (engagement, adoption, efficiency)
- **Lagging indicators** - Business outcomes (revenue, market share, profitability)
- **Decision gates** - Go/no-go criteria at key milestones
Identify and mitigate key risks:
- What could kill this strategy?
- What assumptions might be wrong?
- What competitive responses could occur?
- How do we de-risk systematically?
- What's our backup plan?
leading_indicators
lagging_indicators
decision_gates
key_risks
risk_mitigation