This story is part of a series of articles on “Seven Pathways to Strategic Thinking” written by Nigel Malone, Strategy Director at Archetype. If you would like to receive a notification when the next article is published, register here.
When we hear the word ‘disrupter’ our thoughts immediately go to Uber or AirBnB, as the original up-enders of established industry. We can learn a lot from these two examples, but these are not the only case studies we should consider when going to market. Disruptive thinking as a means to knockout the competition has been around since the days of Troy and the Trojan Horse.
Aside from the battlefield, there is no more competitive environment than the sporting arena. And whilst I’m not a fan of the sport, the difference between winning or losing is most harshly felt in the boxing ring. In this, the fourth of my favourite strategy slides, I’ll share a story about one of the greatest examples of strategic planning and execution ever displayed — when it comes to knocking out the competition.
In 1967, Muhammad Ali had been suspended from boxing for three-and-a-half years for his refusal to enter the army. After two comeback fights, he took on Joe Frazier for the heavyweight championship and was beaten, resigning him to lowly contender fights for several years before he would get another shot at the title. Ali was all but washed up.
George Foreman, on the other hand, was on the rise, having won a gold medal at the 1968 Olympics and then seizing the championship from Frazier in grand fashion. When boxing promoter Don King finally brought the two together in 1974 in Zaire — in what became known as the “Rumble in the Jungle’ — George Foreman’s raw power, greater height and reach made him the overwhelming favourite against the ageing Muhammad Ali.
Ali started the fight with an unexpected strategy. He began attacking Foreman by leading with right hand. ‘Leading with the right’ was considered a rookie error due to the fact it left the fighter unprotected. At the same time, it was a tactic that Foreman would never have considered or prepared for, and he suffered several solid hits in this fashion from Ali. They weren’t knock–outs, but it embarrassed and unsettled Foreman. His ego dented, Foreman mounted an aggressive, high–energy counterattack, which played straight into the hands of Ali’s strategy.
Ali was famed for his speed and ability to ‘dance’ around his opponents in the ring. Foreman, on the other hand, was a massive fighter with tremendous punching power, but less mobile. Foreman was ready for Ali’s trademark ‘dancing’. He had trained long and hard to cut him off in the ring, so he could easily finish him with his powerful punches. Ali had other plans.
Instead of ‘dancing’ as everyone expected, Ali immediately started leaning on the ropes and letting Foreman attack him, but constantly clinching and grappling with Foreman to deflect and diffuse his punches. All the while Ali verbally taunted Foreman, inviting him to hit him harder and faster. An enraged Foreman did exactly that. Ali continued this tactic round after round, sticking to the ropes and absorbing Foreman’s punches, conserving his own energy, while Foreman rapidly burnt his.
By the eighth round Foreman was exhausted and Ali easily dispatched him to the canvas. Ali’s now famous ‘rope–a–dope’ strategy entered into legend. Against all the odds and a younger, stronger Foreman, he won the World Heavyweight Championship simply by outthinking the competition. That, for me, is why he was the ‘greatest’ – and the original disrupter.
For business, the analogy is simple. An underdog, start-up or new entrant to the market must study their competitor’s every move. Don’t imagine they won’t retaliate to your advances, but as Ali showed, if you are ready, you can flip it into a huge advantage. Equally, from a marketer’s perspective, doing the completely ‘unexpected’, as Ali did, can pack a tremendous punch.