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    "display_name": "Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework",
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    "abbreviation": null,
    "short_definition": "Use Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework to steer reinforcing competitive advantages; it organizes relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability and makes defense investment versus expansion bets…",
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    "definition": {
      "key": "definition",
      "title": "一言でいうと",
      "text": "Use Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework to steer reinforcing competitive advantages; it organizes relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability and makes defense investment versus expansion bets explicit. The output captures assumptions and enables consistent follow-up. It is most valuable under downside or stress scenarios, capping exposure with defense investment versus expansion bets while tracking relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability in the recommendation.",
      "items": []
    },
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    "usage": [
      {
        "key": "meaning",
        "title": "意味",
        "text": "Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework describes a practical concept that helps teams frame a situation, compare options, and decide the next operating move. The value is not the label itself; it is the discipline of defining scope, evidence, owner, and decision consequence before the team acts.",
        "items": []
      },
      {
        "key": "usage",
        "title": "役立つ場面",
        "text": "Best for reinforcing competitive advantages if stakeholders interpret competitor moves, customer switching data, and value proposition testing differently. It forces a common metric set, documents assumptions, and reduces re-litigation when conditions shift.",
        "items": [
          "Priority | Clarifies what matters now | Prevents scattered execution",
          "Ownership | Makes the responsible team explicit | Reduces handoff ambiguity",
          "Evidence | Connects the concept to observable facts | Keeps decisions from becoming opinion-driven"
        ]
      },
      {
        "key": "usage",
        "title": "使い方のポイント",
        "text": "Clarify scope and horizon, then lock success metrics (relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability) and data definitions so teams compare the same baseline. Assemble inputs (competitor moves, customer switching data, and value proposition testing) and normalize timing, units, and ownership to remove inconsistencies before analysis. Model scenarios to test how the balance of defense investment versus expansion bets shifts; record thresholds that would change the recommendation. Choose a preferred path, document decision criteria, and list required approvals or constraints before execution. Set monitoring cadence, owners, and revisit triggers so the decision log can be updated as evidence changes. Template: Background and objective; Scope and time horizon; Success metrics (relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability); Key assumptions (competitor moves, customer switching data, and value proposition testing); Options A/B/C; Scenario ranges; Trade-off summary (defense investment versus expansion bets); Risks and mitigations; Decision criteria; Recommendation; Owner and timeline; Review triggers. Add data sources, confidence notes, and variables that would change the conclusion. Use Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework with a clear context and decision owner. Define the scope before comparing alternatives. Separate facts, assumptions, and open questions. Tie the concept to a decision, not only to a vocabulary explanation. Review the definition when the customer, market, or operating context changes.",
        "items": [
          "Clarify scope and horizon, then lock success metrics (relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability) and data definitions so teams compare the same baseline.",
          "Assemble inputs (competitor moves, customer switching data, and value proposition testing) and normalize timing, units, and ownership to remove inconsistencies before analysis.",
          "Model scenarios to test how the balance of defense investment versus expansion bets shifts; record thresholds that would change the recommendation.",
          "Choose a preferred path, document decision criteria, and list required approvals or constraints before execution.",
          "Set monitoring cadence, owners, and revisit triggers so the decision log can be updated as evidence changes.",
          "Define the scope before comparing alternatives.",
          "Separate facts, assumptions, and open questions.",
          "Tie the concept to a decision, not only to a vocabulary explanation.",
          "Review the definition when the customer, market, or operating context changes."
        ]
      }
    ],
    "misunderstandings": [
      {
        "key": "misunderstandings",
        "title": "判断するときの注意点",
        "text": "Use Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework as a decision aid, not as a substitute for judgment. Do not hide weak evidence behind a clean framework. Do not compare options with inconsistent assumptions. Do not keep using the framework after the market, customer, or operating constraint changes.",
        "items": [
          "Do not hide weak evidence behind a clean framework.",
          "Do not compare options with inconsistent assumptions.",
          "Do not keep using the framework after the market, customer, or operating constraint changes."
        ]
      },
      {
        "key": "misunderstandings",
        "title": "よくある誤解 / 落とし穴",
        "text": null,
        "items": [
          "Misconception | It is only a dictionary term | In practice it should change a decision or operating behavior",
          "Misconception | Everyone means the same thing | Teams should write the scope and assumptions",
          "Misconception | It is always positive | The term can reveal constraints, risks, or reasons not to act",
          "Defining relative cost position, switching cost index, and share stability differently across teams creates false comparisons and undermines trust.",
          "Overweighting one side of defense investment versus expansion bets can reopen the decision when priorities shift.",
          "Leaving competitor moves, customer switching data, and value proposition testing unverified increases the chance of audit challenges or reversal."
        ]
      }
    ],
    "examples": [
      {
        "key": "examples",
        "title": "最小例",
        "text": "A team discussing Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework first writes the decision it needs to make, the evidence it has, and the trade-off it is willing to accept. After that, the team compares options and records why one path is better for the current quarter. This makes the term useful in planning, review, and handoff conversations.",
        "items": []
      }
    ],
    "comparisons": [
      {
        "key": "comparisons",
        "title": "似ている言葉との違い",
        "text": "Compare Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework with adjacent concepts before deciding. Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework | Current concept | Use when the team needs the primary decision lens Adjacent metric or framework | Supporting lens | Use when the team needs evidence or process detail General vocabulary | Broad explanation | Use only for orientation, not final decision-making",
        "items": [
          "Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework | Current concept | Use when the team needs the primary decision lens",
          "Adjacent metric or framework | Supporting lens | Use when the team needs evidence or process detail",
          "General vocabulary | Broad explanation | Use only for orientation, not final decision-making"
        ]
      }
    ],
    "faq": [
      {
        "question": "When should I use Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework?",
        "answer": "Use it when the team needs to decide scope, priority, owner, or trade-off, not when it only needs a short definition."
      },
      {
        "question": "What makes Competitive Moat Reinforcement Framework useful in practice?",
        "answer": "It becomes useful when it is tied to evidence, a decision owner, and a concrete next operating choice."
      },
      {
        "question": "What should I avoid?",
        "answer": "Avoid using the term as a label without clarifying assumptions, boundaries, and how success will be judged."
      }
    ]
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