Originating from McKinsey & Company, the Three Horizons Framework is a strategic tool designed to help businesses systematically manage growth, innovation, and transformation across time. It emphasizes the necessity of balancing short-term performance with long-term vision, particularly important for executives operating in environments defined by volatility and disruption.
Rather than viewing strategic planning as a linear roadmap, the framework enables organizations to manage present operations (Horizon 1), incubate emerging opportunities (Horizon 2), and pursue transformative innovations (Horizon 3), all concurrently.
Breakdown of the Three Horizons
Horizon 1: Core Business and Incremental Improvements
- Focuses on sustaining and optimizing existing capabilities
- Investments are geared toward performance metrics, efficiency, and defending market share
- Strategic orientation is typically short-term, operational, and execution-driven
Linked theories:
- Porter’s Operational Effectiveness: firms achieve superior performance through efficient execution, but this alone is not strategy
- Exploration vs. Exploitation: Horizon 1 represents exploitation of existing knowledge and processes
Horizon 2: Emerging Growth Platforms
- Focuses on developing initiatives in adjacent markets or capabilities
- Activities include strategic partnerships, pilot programs, and investment in scalable innovation
- Risk profile is moderate, requiring entrepreneurial leadership and resource balancing
Linked theories:
- Strategic Intent (Hamel & Prahalad): ambitious stretch goals can inspire innovation and resource leverage
- Innovation Portfolio Management: allocates resources across initiatives based on risk and time horizon
Horizon 3: Transformative Innovation and Visionary Growth
- Focuses on radical innovation that redefines business models and industry norms
- Involves disruptive technologies, cultural reinvention, and forward-looking R&D
- Often uncertain, exploratory, and led by innovation labs or venture arms
Linked theories:
- Disruptive Innovation Theory (Christensen): Horizon 3 innovations often emerge from non-core markets to displace incumbents
- Dynamic Capabilities (Teece): emphasizes sensing, seizing, and transforming in response to environmental shifts
Theoretical Integration Across Horizons
The framework aligns strategically with:
- Ambidextrous Organizations (O’Reilly & Tushman): balancing exploitation (H1) and exploration (H2 & H3)
- Scenario Planning and Strategic Foresight: especially valuable in Horizon 3 to test assumptions under deep uncertainty
- Resource-Based View (Barney): different horizons enable accumulation and deployment of strategic assets across time
Together, these linkages position the Three Horizons as both a strategic planning and portfolio governance mechanism, useful for aligning leadership, investment, and innovation.
Example: Amazon Inc.
Amazon exemplifies strategic execution across all three horizons:
Horizon 1: Core Business
- Optimizing e-commerce platforms and logistics infrastructure
- Leveraging data to enhance customer experience and improve operational efficiency
- Execution focused on scale and supply chain mastery
Horizon 2: Growth Platforms
- Amazon Web Services (AWS), once an emerging adjacency, is now a dominant cloud computing division
- Continued expansion into areas like Amazon Fresh and Prime Video
- Represents significant internal innovation with clear market potential
Horizon 3: Transformational Innovation
- Investing in AI-driven logistics, cashier-less stores (e.g., Amazon Go), and drone-based delivery
- Developing ambient computing ecosystems via Alexa and Echo products
- Exploring new digital interfaces and edge technologies that reshape commerce and interaction
Amazon’s ability to balance these horizons simultaneously enables it to lead in multiple domains while continuously redefining its strategic identity. The horizon-based approach also guides its capital allocation, talent development, and R&D strategy.