Activate when: user asks 'what is our real edge?', 'what will our moat look like in 3 years?', 'which capabilities should we invest in?', someone says 'compe...
---
name: dynamic-core-competence
description: "Activate when: user asks 'what is our real edge?', 'what will our moat look like in 3 years?', 'which capabilities should we invest in?', someone says 'competitive advantage' without a specific testable claim, or a team is assessing whether their current position will survive a technology or market shift.
Do NOT activate when: the question is purely operational (no competitive position implication), or the market is too new to assess competence importance trajectories (use lean experimentation instead)."
---
# Dynamic Core Competence
## Overview
Core competence (Prahalad & Hamel, 1990) becomes *dynamic* when you recognize that competences decay, markets change what they reward, and building sequence matters. The common failure: treating competence as a static asset — identify once, defend, leverage indefinitely. Leaders in one technology cycle become entrenched incumbents in the next, not because they stopped being competent but because the market stopped rewarding what they held.
**Skill composition:** Use AFTER [porters-five-forces] to know what the market structure rewards. Use WITH [second-order-thinking] to trace which competences become obsolete as markets evolve. Use BEFORE [okr-goal-setting] — OKRs must target specific competence dimensions.
## When to Use
- Assessing whether a current competitive position will survive a technology or market inflection
- Allocating capability-building investment across multiple potential dimensions
- Pre-fundraising: articulating a specific, testable moat to investors
- Post-acquisition: diagnosing which acquired competences are genuinely core vs. will decay
- Any time someone says "our competitive advantage is [quality/service/brand]" without specifying the mechanism
**When NOT to use:**
- Operational decisions that do not affect competitive position
- Market too new to assess competence importance trajectories (use lean experimentation)
- Executing an already-defined capability investment (use project management)
## Coaching Novices (Adaptive Front Door)
- **Engine mode:** user has a concrete case → run The Process directly.
- **Coach mode:** user is unfamiliar or describes advantage in generic terms ("we're customer-focused") → guide step by step.
In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output only that step's question, then stop.
1. **What-it-is:** Inventory your competitive advantages, rate their decay speed and market importance in 3 years, sequence investment to build the ones that matter before you need them.
2. **Check fit:** Is there a situation where you're unsure whether your position will hold — new entrant, tech shift, pricing pushback?
3. **Elicit their case:** "What business are you thinking about? Name your actual advantages as specifically as possible — not 'great team' but what that team does that competitors don't." > **[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]**
4. **Run The Process one step at a time.** Start with inventory only; generic claims must be decomposed before accepted. > **[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]**
5. **Close:** Name which competences are genuinely durable, which are decaying faster than they thought, and which to build in the next 12 months. > **[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]**
## The Process
**Output artifact:** Dynamic Competence Portfolio
**Gate rule:** Generic claims ("we have a great culture") are not accepted without decomposition into specific, testable mechanisms. Every competence must survive the **new-entrant test**: could a well-funded new entrant replicate this within 18 months? If yes, it is a temporary advantage, not a core competence.
**Step 1 — Inventory** all 16 competence dimensions (sales channels, R&D, talent, cost advantage, intangible assets, culture, patents, economies of scale, network effects, org transformation, switching costs, invention, monopoly, difficult to substitute, capital operations, scarcity). Self-assess [Strong/Moderate/Weak/N/A] + specific evidence. *Gate 1: Every Strong rating has a mechanism statement.*
**Step 2 — Rate each Moderate+ competence** on: (a) Strength 1–5; (b) Decay rate — Fast/Medium/Slow; (c) Market importance in 3 years — Rising/Stable/Declining + named market force. *Gate 2: Specific reasons, not gut feel.*
**Step 3 — Identify at-risk competences:** Type 1 = decaying without investment; Type 2 = declining market importance. Specific threat + timeline for each. *Gate 3: No vague concern.*
**Step 4 — Identify build priorities:** Type 1 = rising importance, currently weak; Type 2 = unlock competences (e.g., talent must precede R&D). Sequence: which ONE first, and why (unlocks others or window closing). *Gate 4: Sequenced with explicit reasoning.*
**Step 5 — Investment plan:** Per build priority: specific action, minimum investment for 12-month milestone, observable signal, explicit opportunity cost (which existing competence gets less). *Gate 5: All four elements present.*
**Stop-rule:** If your competence map is identical to any competitor's, return to Step 1 and require mechanism-level specificity for every Strong rating.
### Output: Dynamic Competence Portfolio
```
Dynamic Competence Portfolio — [Entity] — [Date]
1. Current Inventory: | Dimension | Strength 1-5 | Decay Rate | Market Importance 3yr | Mechanism |
2. At-Risk: | Competence | Risk Type (decay/declining importance) | Specific Threat | Timeline |
3. Build Priorities (sequenced): | Priority | Competence | Reason | Investment | 12-Month Milestone | Signal |
4. Unlock Map: which competences must be built before others
5. Opportunity Cost Statement: which competences receive less investment and why
```
*→ Method in Action: [Corning Incorporated's Competence Evolution, 1851–2007](examples/corning-incorporated-1851-2007.md)*
## Competence Domain Packs
*Apply the framework to specific industry contexts. Contributions welcome via the repo.*
| Pack | Key rising dimensions | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Software & Platforms | Network effects, switching costs (data lock-in) | Patent protection declining vs. AI cycles; build network effects before scale |
| Manufacturing & Industrial | Cost advantage mechanism (scale vs. process vs. geography — different decay rates) | "Good people" without systematic talent infrastructure |
| Early-Stage Startups | Pre-PMF: R&D + talent → post-PMF: switching costs + network effects → scale: economies of scale + brand | Spending on sales channels before PMF |
## Applying It Well
1. **Name the mechanism, not the outcome.** "Cost advantage" is an outcome; name the specific source and barrier that protects it.
2. **Dynamic depreciation is the default.** Every competence depreciates without active investment — the question is rate vs. reinvestment.
3. **Sequence over scope.** Building 2 competences to category-defining strength beats 10 built weakly.
4. **Analyze competitors at the competence level.** Features copy in months; competences take years.
5. **The window for building competences closes.** Build before you need them — while you are still strong.
*→ Primary sources: [references/sources.md](references/sources.md)*
## Common Rationalizations
**[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.**
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "Our competitive advantage is our people." | People are a vector, not a competence. Name what they do together systematically that competitors cannot replicate. |
| [D] "Our brand is our moat." | Brand is an output. The competence is the operational capability that consistently delivers the brand promise. |
| [D] "Our technology is proprietary." | Temporary without an R&D competence that continuously renews it. Static proprietary tech has a finite half-life. |
| [D] "We've always been the cost leader." | Diagnose the mechanism — scale, process, geography — each decays differently. History is not protection. |
| [D] "Our customer relationships are our moat." | Only if switching costs are deliberately engineered (integration depth, data lock-in). Relationship moats decay when the rep leaves. |
| [D] "We'll build new competences when we need them." | The window closes before the need is evident. Network effects and switching costs cannot be built after the leader has critical mass. |
| [D] "Competitors can't copy us — we've done this 20 years." | Time is not a barrier. What would a well-funded entrant need? If "2 years and $50M," you lack a durable moat. |
| [D] "Our patents protect us for 20 years." | Technology cycles are often shorter than patent terms. Patents protect specific claims; technology moves to work-arounds. |
| *→ Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern* | *What went wrong and why* |
## Red Flags
- Competence map identical to generic industry description — no element differs from what any competitor would claim
- Every competence rated as rising in market importance — no declining ones identified
- No explicit sequencing — all build priorities treated as equally urgent
- Competences described at outcome level ("brand," "trust") without mechanism statements
- At-risk competences identified but no investment reduction or protection plan exists
- Opportunity cost never mentioned — every investment is additive, nothing is reduced
## Verification
- [ ] Every Strong-rated competence has a mechanism that survives the new-entrant test (18-month horizon)
- [ ] Every competence has a decay rate + specific reason, and a 3-year market importance trajectory + named market force
- [ ] At-risk competences (both types) identified with specific threats and timelines
- [ ] Build priorities sequenced with explicit reasoning (unlock dependencies or closing windows)
- [ ] Every build priority has a specific investment action, 12-month milestone, observable signal, and opportunity cost named
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*Part of **deciqAI Knowledge Skills** — open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. Built by deciqAI · https://deciqai.com · Contributions welcome — see the template at the repo root.*
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