{"id":3047,"date":"2026-04-20T01:04:16","date_gmt":"2026-04-20T01:04:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/?p=3047"},"modified":"2026-04-20T01:04:24","modified_gmt":"2026-04-20T01:04:24","slug":"osram-at-120-how-a-century-old-oligopolist-was-rewritten-by-its-time","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/de\/osram-at-120-how-a-century-old-oligopolist-was-rewritten-by-its-time\/","title":{"rendered":"OSRAM at 120: How a Century-Old Oligopolist Was Rewritten by Its Time"},"content":{"rendered":"<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full is-resized\"><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1536\" height=\"1024\" src=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3053\" style=\"width:799px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28-18x12.jpg 18w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28-1140x760.jpg 1140w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28-600x400.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1536px) 100vw, 1536px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">From technological leadership and brand power to fragmented, close-range competition \u2014 this is not only the story of OSRAM\/LEDVANCE, but a lesson every former market leader should study.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">Introduction<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">This year, OSRAM marks its 120th anniversary.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">For many, OSRAM is a great German lighting company. But in my view, seeing it only as a \u201clegacy lighting brand\u201d does not go nearly far enough.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">OSRAM was never just a company, and never just a brand. It participated in almost the entire arc of modern lighting history: from incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps, and halogen, to LED, automotive lighting, infrared, sensing, and today\u2019s broader world of photonics and digital light technologies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Yet what is even more worth revisiting than its history is the path it has taken over the past decades: from being a technology-led oligopolist in a seller\u2019s market \u2014 where growth could often be unlocked simply by expanding capacity \u2014 to becoming a company forced to fight, market by market, against thousands of competitors in highly fragmented global battlegrounds.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Was that outcome inevitable because the industry changed? Or was it also the result of strategic misjudgment?I believe the answer is both.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">But the more important question for today\u2019s business leaders is this: when a company has spent decades at the top, can it still reinvent the way it wins?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">I was not an original OSRAM employee. But I was deeply involved in the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from my role as Managing Director within MLS to later serving as CEO of LEDVANCE. I witnessed, from inside the process, how industrial power, brand architecture, channel logic, and competitive rules were all being rewritten.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">So this is not intended to be a simple anniversary tribute. Rather, I want to use OSRAM at 120 as a lens to reflect on the evolution, the challenges, and the lessons of a century-old oligopolist.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">1. OSRAM\u2019s greatness was never just that it was \u201cold\u201d \u2014 it once represented an entire industrial era<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The name OSRAM carries the imprint of the industrial age. It was not a startup story in the modern sense.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">It was born out of a period of deep European industrial consolidation. And because of that, OSRAM never sold only \u201clamps.\u201d It sold a complete industrial capability:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">materials expertise<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">manufacturing scale<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">process know-how<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">quality control<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">standards and certification<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">brand trust<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">global distribution reach<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">In the era of traditional lighting, these capabilities created a very high barrier to entry. Not everyone could do it. Fewer still could do it reliably, globally, and at scale. That is why OSRAM was not simply a \u201clarge company.\u201d It occupied a genuine industry high ground.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">For a long time, it stood for: stronger technology, more stable quality, broader product portfolios, and greater authority in the market. This is why, when we look at OSRAM today, we should not start with what it later struggled with.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">We should first acknowledge what it once truly was: one of the defining winners of its age.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"482\" height=\"361\" src=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/Picture5.png\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3057\" style=\"aspect-ratio:1.3352118781835915;width:799px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/Picture5.png 482w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/Picture5-300x225.png 300w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/Picture5-16x12.png 16w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 482px) 100vw, 482px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">2. From seller\u2019s market to buyer\u2019s market: many giants did not suddenly become weak \u2014 the rules of the game changed<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">To understand the later challenges faced by OSRAM and LEDVANCE, we must begin with one simple truth: this was, first of all, an industry transition that was structurally inevitable.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">In the era of traditional light sources, the industry had several defining characteristics: First, technological and manufacturing barriers were high.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Second, brands and channels were highly concentrated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Third, demand grew steadily over long periods.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Fourth, the number of global competitors was limited, and the market remained, in essence, a seller\u2019s market.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">In that context, if a market leader had strong technology, a trusted brand, and broad channels, growth often really was a matter of capacity expansion.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Then LED changed everything. LED looked like a source substitution, but in reality it rewrote the foundations of the entire industry:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">technology diffused faster<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">manufacturing became more replicable<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">products became more commoditized<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">costs declined more quickly<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">supply chains became more global \u2014 and more China-centered<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">the number of market participants surged<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">channels became more fragmented<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">price competition became more direct and more frequent<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">What had once been a long-distance race among a handful of dominant players gradually turned into a crowded battlefield with thousands of companies competing across markets. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">So what OSRAM and LEDVANCE later faced was not simply \u201cmore competition.\u201d It was something deeper: the lighting industry collapsing from a technology-driven seller\u2019s market oligopoly into an overcompetitive buyer\u2019s market.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">That was not caused by any one company alone, nor by the arrival of any single competitor. It was the result of a structural rewrite of the industry itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">3. But it would be too easy \u2014 and too unfair \u2014 to explain everything by saying \u201cthe times changed\u201d<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">If this were only fate, then all legacy giants should have lost momentum in exactly the same way. They did not.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Which brings us to the second layer of analysis: industry change may have been inevitable, but how a company responds determines whether it adapts or gets trapped.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">In my view, the most valuable lesson from OSRAM and LEDVANCE is not merely that margins were squeezed or competitors multiplied. It is that every former oligopolist must ask itself a harder set of questions:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Has core technology continued to evolve?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Has the next generation of technology been actively built and prepared?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Were those technologies decisively brought to market?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Has the organization been upgraded to match the new pace of competition?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Has the Go-to-Market model truly respected the differences between markets?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Have brand-building and channel-building been centered on markets \u2014 or have they remained centered on headquarters?<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">These are the questions that matter most. Many companies do not fail because they cannot see the future. They fail because they assume that the logic that made them successful in the past will remain sufficient in the future.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">4. First lesson: technology cannot merely have been leading once \u2014 it must keep evolving and keep converting into market power<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">One of the easiest traps for an oligopolist is to treat technological leadership as a static asset. Being ahead once does not mean remaining ahead. Having the capability to develop technology does not mean having the speed to commercialize it. Owning R&amp;D capacity does not mean having the organizational ability to turn it into new market order.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The real issue is never simply whether a company has technology. The real issue is this: Can it continuously push the next generation forward, and can it decisively translate technical reserves into market capability?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Many former leaders did not lack R&amp;D, patents, labs, or engineering talent. What they often lacked was:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">the willingness to accelerate the next wave<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">the speed to bring emerging technologies into the market<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">the organizational structure to support the transition<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">the ability to form a new business system around the new technology<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">This is why some companies later seem, from the outside, to be neither weak nor obsolete \u2014 only late. Not incapable, but too slow. Not technically empty, but commercially under-converted.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">For any former oligopolist, technology leadership that does not keep renewing itself \u2014 and does not keep converting into market advantage \u2014 eventually turns from moat into museum piece.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">5. Second lesson: what often drags down former oligopolists is not the number of competitors, but the collapse of their decision model<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">This, to me, is one of the most important lessons. Many global leaders build a highly centralized operating logic during their strongest years:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">headquarters defines the products<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">headquarters defines the brand<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">headquarters defines the pricing architecture<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">headquarters defines the pace<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">regional teams execute<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">In an era of supply scarcity, strong brands, and relatively stable product structures, this model can be highly efficient. But once markets start to differentiate sharply, it begins to fail.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Because market reality is never uniform:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">price sensitivity differs<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">buying behavior differs<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">channel power structures differ<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">engineering vs. retail mix differs<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">competitor density differs<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">service expectations differ<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">SKU complexity differs<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">decision chains differ<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">If a company continues to govern everything from a headquarters-centered logic, three things tend to happen: First, local demand gets underestimated. Second, decision speed falls behind market speed. Third, regional teams gradually lose their fighting capability.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">At that point, the issue is no longer one bad product or one weak market. The issue is that the entire decision model has become unfit for the environment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Many former oligopolists do not lose because they lack resources. They lose because: their response speed becomes slower than the speed of market change.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">6. Third lesson: brand and channel strategy cannot only answer to headquarters \u2014 they must answer to market outcomes<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">This is another area where multinational companies often misread the challenge. Headquarters tends to look at branding through the lens of consistency. Markets judge brands through the lens of effectiveness. Headquarters wants one unified narrative, one unified image, one unified asset system.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">But markets ask different questions:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">What does this brand actually mean here?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Does it influence specification or procurement?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Does it help channels make money?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Is its positioning clear enough across price segments?<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">Can it still compete meaningfully against local rivals?<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The same brand can mean very different things in different markets. In mature markets, it may signal reliability and quality. In emerging markets, it may first be compared on price. In project markets, it may need to win through technical support and delivery performance. In retail, it may need to fight through shelf presence, promotions, e-commerce traffic, and consumer education.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">That is why brand strategy cannot only pursue global uniformity; it must also pursue local effectiveness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The same applies to channels. Strong channel-building is not about replicating the headquarters\u2019 ideal blueprint around the world. It is about respecting the actual power structure, economics, and operating logic of each market.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Global brands absolutely need unified direction. But market competition must respect local reality.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">If the brand answers only to headquarters, and the channel does not answer to the market, then even the strongest historical asset will slowly be consumed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">7. Fourth lesson: stronger headquarters control does not necessarily mean stronger market control<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">At their peak, many companies naturally fall into a dangerous assumption: the more tightly we control the organization, the more securely we control the market.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">But these are not the same thing. Headquarters control may produce process discipline, brand coherence, and risk management. Market control, however, is reflected in something else:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">whether the front line is respected<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">whether local teams are empowered<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">whether products can be adjusted quickly<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">whether price and channel strategies can react in real time<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">whether branding can adapt to local competition<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">whether decisions are made where the competition actually happens<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">When markets become more fragmented and more immediate, a company that keeps pulling decisions upward turns local teams into execution arms instead of fighting units.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Once the front line loses authority, flexibility, and speed, a familiar pattern appears: internally, the company still looks orderly; externally, it becomes increasingly hard to win.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">For every former oligopolist, the goal should not be ever-stronger central control. It should be a higher-quality model of global-local coordination. Headquarters should own direction, platforms, principles, and capital allocation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The market front line must own sufficient definition power, reaction speed, and battle-readiness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"800\" height=\"533\" src=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img56.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-3054\" srcset=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img56.jpg 800w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img56-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img56-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img56-18x12.jpg 18w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img56-600x400.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">8. The LEDVANCE carve-out and sale were not just a transaction \u2014 they marked a reordering of industrial power<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The capital moves that followed made these structural shifts even more visible. The carve-out, the sale, and the eventual transfer of much of the general lighting business into a new ownership and manufacturing logic were not isolated financial events. They reflected a broader reorganization of value in the global lighting industry.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">In one sense, this was the handoff between two capability systems: On one side stood the accumulated strengths of the traditional European industrial model \u2014 brand, product definition, customer relationships, global organizational experience, channel architecture. On the other stood the capabilities that Chinese companies built during the LED era \u2014 manufacturing efficiency, supply chain control, cost competitiveness, speed, and capital efficiency.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">So this should not be understood merely as \u201cselling a business.\u201d It was, more fundamentally: a formal passing of the baton between the old order and the new order in lighting.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">Having later operated within that reality, I felt this very clearly: This was not simply a case of one company becoming weak. It was a case of an old winning logic no longer being sufficient in a new competitive age.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">9. So was it industry inevitability, or strategic misjudgment?<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">My answer remains: first, it was industry inevitability; second, it was corporate misjudgment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">The inevitability lay in the fact that LED pushed lighting out of an era defined by technological oligopoly, concentrated brands, and relatively stable channels, into one defined by electronics, supply chains, globalization, fragmentation, and speed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">But the misjudgment was also real. Not necessarily as one single wrong decision, but as a pattern:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">not upgrading the technology path fast enough<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">not recognizing early enough that market power was shifting toward the front line<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">not truly rebuilding the Go-to-Market model<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">not making brand and channel strategy genuinely market-centered<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li style=\"font-size:16px\">continuing to manage a new market with methods designed for an old one<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">That, in my view, is the deeper failure mode.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">10. This is not only OSRAM\u2019s story \u2014 it is the shared challenge of every former winner<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">At this point, the real subject is no longer only OSRAM at 120. The deeper point is what this story says to every company that once held a technology high ground, a brand high ground, or a channel high ground: the greatest risk for an oligopolist is not losing yesterday\u2019s advantage; it is mistaking yesterday\u2019s advantage for tomorrow\u2019s capability.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">A company may once have won through technical superiority. Tomorrow it may need organizational superiority, market adaptability, and system capability as well.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">It may once have won through central coordination and scale efficiency. Tomorrow it may lose because it ignored local market intelligence and local competitive reality.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">It may once have built a moat through brand and channels. Tomorrow it will have to prove again that the brand still matters, and that the channels still work in a transformed market structure.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">For every business, the underlying question is the same: Are you willing to accept that a new market requires a new way of winning?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">Conclusion<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">OSRAM at 120 deserves respect. Not only because it is a historic company, but because its journey is a condensed history of the modern lighting industry itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">What deserves the most attention today, however, is not only how strong OSRAM once was. It is what its path now teaches us: no company can keep winning a new era with the methods that defined the old one.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\">That, to me, is the most important lesson OSRAM\u2019s 120 years leave to the industry.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" style=\"font-size:16px\">Short Summary<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p style=\"font-size:16px\"><em>Written on the occasion of OSRAM\u2019s 120th anniversary, this article goes beyond celebrating the company\u2019s history. Drawing from my own experience across the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from Managing Director within MLS to CEO of LEDVANCE \u2014 it reflects on how a century-old market leader moved from technological and brand high ground into fragmented global competition. LED reshaped the rules of the lighting industry; that part was structural and inevitable. But what deserves deeper reflection is how technology renewal, organizational renewal, and market renewal often fail to happen in sync \u2014 especially when the Go-to-Market model remains headquarters-centered long after markets have become deeply local.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"256\" src=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036-1024x256.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-2283\" srcset=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036-1024x256.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036-300x75.jpg 300w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036-768x192.jpg 768w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036-1140x285.jpg 1140w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036-600x150.jpg 600w, https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/1760450781036.jpg 1400w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>From technological leadership and brand power to fragmented, close-range competition \u2014 this is not only the story of OSRAM\/LEDVANCE, but a lesson every former market leader should study. Introduction This year, OSRAM marks its 120th anniversary. For many, OSRAM is a great German lighting company. But in my view, seeing it only as a \u201clegacy lighting brand\u201d does not go nearly far enough. OSRAM was never just a company, and never just a brand. It participated in almost the entire arc of modern lighting history: from incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps, and halogen, to LED, automotive lighting, infrared, sensing, and today\u2019s broader world of photonics and digital light technologies. Yet what is even more worth revisiting than its history is the path it has taken over the past decades: from being a technology-led oligopolist in a seller\u2019s market \u2014 where growth could often be unlocked simply by expanding capacity \u2014 to becoming a company forced to fight, market by market, against thousands of competitors in highly fragmented global battlegrounds. Was that outcome inevitable because the industry changed? Or was it also the result of strategic misjudgment?I believe the answer is both. But the more important question for today\u2019s business leaders is this: when a company has spent decades at the top, can it still reinvent the way it wins? I was not an original OSRAM employee. But I was deeply involved in the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from my role as Managing Director within MLS to later serving as CEO of LEDVANCE. I witnessed, from inside the process, how industrial power, brand architecture, channel logic, and competitive rules were all being rewritten. So this is not intended to be a simple anniversary tribute. Rather, I want to use OSRAM at 120 as a lens to reflect on the evolution, the challenges, and the lessons of a century-old oligopolist. 1. OSRAM\u2019s greatness was never just that it was \u201cold\u201d \u2014 it once represented an entire industrial era The name OSRAM carries the imprint of the industrial age. It was not a startup story in the modern sense. It was born out of a period of deep European industrial consolidation. And because of that, OSRAM never sold only \u201clamps.\u201d It sold a complete industrial capability: In the era of traditional lighting, these capabilities created a very high barrier to entry. Not everyone could do it. Fewer still could do it reliably, globally, and at scale. That is why OSRAM was not simply a \u201clarge company.\u201d It occupied a genuine industry high ground. For a long time, it stood for: stronger technology, more stable quality, broader product portfolios, and greater authority in the market. This is why, when we look at OSRAM today, we should not start with what it later struggled with. We should first acknowledge what it once truly was: one of the defining winners of its age. 2. From seller\u2019s market to buyer\u2019s market: many giants did not suddenly become weak \u2014 the rules of the game changed To understand the later challenges faced by OSRAM and LEDVANCE, we must begin with one simple truth: this was, first of all, an industry transition that was structurally inevitable. In the era of traditional light sources, the industry had several defining characteristics: First, technological and manufacturing barriers were high. Second, brands and channels were highly concentrated. Third, demand grew steadily over long periods. Fourth, the number of global competitors was limited, and the market remained, in essence, a seller\u2019s market. In that context, if a market leader had strong technology, a trusted brand, and broad channels, growth often really was a matter of capacity expansion. Then LED changed everything. LED looked like a source substitution, but in reality it rewrote the foundations of the entire industry: What had once been a long-distance race among a handful of dominant players gradually turned into a crowded battlefield with thousands of companies competing across markets. So what OSRAM and LEDVANCE later faced was not simply \u201cmore competition.\u201d It was something deeper: the lighting industry collapsing from a technology-driven seller\u2019s market oligopoly into an overcompetitive buyer\u2019s market. That was not caused by any one company alone, nor by the arrival of any single competitor. It was the result of a structural rewrite of the industry itself. 3. But it would be too easy \u2014 and too unfair \u2014 to explain everything by saying \u201cthe times changed\u201d If this were only fate, then all legacy giants should have lost momentum in exactly the same way. They did not. Which brings us to the second layer of analysis: industry change may have been inevitable, but how a company responds determines whether it adapts or gets trapped. In my view, the most valuable lesson from OSRAM and LEDVANCE is not merely that margins were squeezed or competitors multiplied. It is that every former oligopolist must ask itself a harder set of questions: These are the questions that matter most. Many companies do not fail because they cannot see the future. They fail because they assume that the logic that made them successful in the past will remain sufficient in the future. 4. First lesson: technology cannot merely have been leading once \u2014 it must keep evolving and keep converting into market power One of the easiest traps for an oligopolist is to treat technological leadership as a static asset. Being ahead once does not mean remaining ahead. Having the capability to develop technology does not mean having the speed to commercialize it. Owning R&amp;D capacity does not mean having the organizational ability to turn it into new market order. The real issue is never simply whether a company has technology. The real issue is this: Can it continuously push the next generation forward, and can it decisively translate technical reserves into market capability? Many former leaders did not lack R&amp;D, patents, labs, or engineering talent. What they often lacked was: This is why some companies later seem, from the outside, to be neither weak nor obsolete \u2014 only late. Not incapable, but too slow. Not technically empty, but commercially under-converted. For any former oligopolist, technology leadership that does not keep renewing itself \u2014 and does not keep converting into market advantage \u2014 eventually turns from moat into museum piece. 5. Second lesson: what often drags down former oligopolists is not the number of competitors, but the collapse of their decision model This, to me, is one of the most important lessons. Many global leaders build a highly centralized operating logic during their strongest years: In an era of supply scarcity, strong brands, and relatively stable product structures, this model can be highly efficient. But once markets start to differentiate sharply, it begins to fail. Because market reality is never uniform: If a company continues to govern everything from a headquarters-centered logic, three things tend to happen: First, local demand gets underestimated. Second, decision speed falls behind market speed. Third, regional teams gradually lose their fighting capability. At that point, the issue is no longer one bad product or one weak market. The issue is that the entire decision model has become unfit for the environment. Many former oligopolists do not lose because they lack resources. They lose because: their response speed becomes slower than the speed of market change. 6. Third lesson: brand and channel strategy cannot only answer to headquarters \u2014 they must answer to market outcomes This is another area where multinational companies often misread the challenge. Headquarters tends to look at branding through the lens of consistency. Markets judge brands through the lens of effectiveness. Headquarters wants one unified narrative, one unified image, one unified asset system. But markets ask different questions: The same brand can mean very different things in different markets. In mature markets, it may signal reliability and quality. In emerging markets, it may first be compared on price. In project markets, it may need to win through technical support and delivery performance. In retail, it may need to fight through shelf presence, promotions, e-commerce traffic, and consumer education. That is why brand strategy cannot only pursue global uniformity; it must also pursue local effectiveness. The same applies to channels. Strong channel-building is not about replicating the headquarters\u2019 ideal blueprint around the world. It is about respecting the actual power structure, economics, and operating logic of each market. Global brands absolutely need unified direction. But market competition must respect local reality. If the brand answers only to headquarters, and the channel does not answer to the market, then even the strongest historical asset will slowly be consumed. 7. Fourth lesson: stronger headquarters control does not necessarily mean stronger market control At their peak, many companies naturally fall into a dangerous assumption: the more tightly we control the organization, the more securely we control the market. But these are not the same thing. Headquarters control may produce process discipline, brand coherence, and risk management. Market control, however, is reflected in something else: When markets become more fragmented and more immediate, a company that keeps pulling decisions upward turns local teams into execution arms instead of fighting units. Once the front line loses authority, flexibility, and speed, a familiar pattern appears: internally, the company still looks orderly; externally, it becomes increasingly hard to win. For every former oligopolist, the goal should not be ever-stronger central control. It should be a higher-quality model of global-local coordination. Headquarters should own direction, platforms, principles, and capital allocation. The market front line must own sufficient definition power, reaction speed, and battle-readiness. 8. The LEDVANCE carve-out and sale were not just a transaction \u2014 they marked a reordering of industrial power The capital moves that followed made these structural shifts even more visible. The carve-out, the sale, and the eventual transfer of much of the general lighting business into a new ownership and manufacturing logic were not isolated financial events. They reflected a broader reorganization of value in the global lighting industry. In one sense, this was the handoff between two capability systems: On one side stood the accumulated strengths of the traditional European industrial model \u2014 brand, product definition, customer relationships, global organizational experience, channel architecture. On the other stood the capabilities that Chinese companies built during the LED era \u2014 manufacturing efficiency, supply chain control, cost competitiveness, speed, and capital efficiency. So this should not be understood merely as \u201cselling a business.\u201d It was, more fundamentally: a formal passing of the baton between the old order and the new order in lighting. Having later operated within that reality, I felt this very clearly: This was not simply a case of one company becoming weak. It was a case of an old winning logic no longer being sufficient in a new competitive age. 9. So was it industry inevitability, or strategic misjudgment? My answer remains: first, it was industry inevitability; second, it was corporate misjudgment. The inevitability lay in the fact that LED pushed lighting out of an era defined by technological oligopoly, concentrated brands, and relatively stable channels, into one defined by electronics, supply chains, globalization, fragmentation, and speed. But the misjudgment was also real. Not necessarily as one single wrong decision, but as a pattern: That, in my view, is the deeper failure mode. 10. This is not only OSRAM\u2019s story \u2014 it is the shared challenge of every former winner At this point, the real subject is no longer only OSRAM at 120. The deeper point is what this story says to every company that once held a technology high ground, a brand high ground, or a channel high ground: the greatest risk for an oligopolist is not losing yesterday\u2019s advantage; it is mistaking yesterday\u2019s advantage for tomorrow\u2019s capability. A company may once have won through technical superiority. Tomorrow it may need organizational superiority, market adaptability, and system capability as well. It may once have won through central coordination and scale efficiency. Tomorrow it may lose because it ignored local market intelligence and local competitive reality. It may once have built a moat through brand and channels. Tomorrow it will have to prove again that the brand still matters, and that the channels still work in a transformed market structure. For every business, the underlying question is the same: Are you willing to accept that a new market requires a new way of winning? Conclusion OSRAM at 120 deserves respect. Not only because it is a historic company, but because its journey is a condensed history of the modern lighting industry itself. What deserves the most attention today, however, is not only how strong OSRAM once was. It is what its path now teaches us: no company can keep winning a new era with the methods that defined the old one. That, to me, is the most important lesson OSRAM\u2019s 120 years leave to the industry. Short Summary Written on the occasion of OSRAM\u2019s 120th anniversary, this article goes beyond celebrating the company\u2019s history. Drawing from my own experience across the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from Managing Director within MLS to CEO of LEDVANCE \u2014 it reflects on how a century-old market leader moved from technological and brand high ground into fragmented global competition. LED reshaped the rules of the lighting industry; that part was structural and inevitable. But what deserves deeper reflection is how technology renewal, organizational renewal, and market renewal often fail to happen in sync \u2014 especially when the Go-to-Market model remains headquarters-centered long after markets have become deeply local.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_coblocks_attr":"","_coblocks_dimensions":"","_coblocks_responsive_height":"","_coblocks_accordion_ie_support":"","_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_glsr_average":0,"_glsr_ranking":0,"_glsr_reviews":0,"_jetpack_feature_clip_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2},"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3047","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v28.0 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>OSRAM at 120: How a Century-Old Oligopolist Was Rewritten by Its Time -<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"noindex, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"de_DE\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"OSRAM at 120: How a Century-Old Oligopolist Was Rewritten by Its Time -\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"From technological leadership and brand power to fragmented, close-range competition \u2014 this is not only the story of OSRAM\/LEDVANCE, but a lesson every former market leader should study. Introduction This year, OSRAM marks its 120th anniversary. For many, OSRAM is a great German lighting company. But in my view, seeing it only as a \u201clegacy lighting brand\u201d does not go nearly far enough. OSRAM was never just a company, and never just a brand. It participated in almost the entire arc of modern lighting history: from incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps, and halogen, to LED, automotive lighting, infrared, sensing, and today\u2019s broader world of photonics and digital light technologies. Yet what is even more worth revisiting than its history is the path it has taken over the past decades: from being a technology-led oligopolist in a seller\u2019s market \u2014 where growth could often be unlocked simply by expanding capacity \u2014 to becoming a company forced to fight, market by market, against thousands of competitors in highly fragmented global battlegrounds. Was that outcome inevitable because the industry changed? Or was it also the result of strategic misjudgment?I believe the answer is both. But the more important question for today\u2019s business leaders is this: when a company has spent decades at the top, can it still reinvent the way it wins? I was not an original OSRAM employee. But I was deeply involved in the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from my role as Managing Director within MLS to later serving as CEO of LEDVANCE. I witnessed, from inside the process, how industrial power, brand architecture, channel logic, and competitive rules were all being rewritten. So this is not intended to be a simple anniversary tribute. Rather, I want to use OSRAM at 120 as a lens to reflect on the evolution, the challenges, and the lessons of a century-old oligopolist. 1. OSRAM\u2019s greatness was never just that it was \u201cold\u201d \u2014 it once represented an entire industrial era The name OSRAM carries the imprint of the industrial age. It was not a startup story in the modern sense. It was born out of a period of deep European industrial consolidation. And because of that, OSRAM never sold only \u201clamps.\u201d It sold a complete industrial capability: In the era of traditional lighting, these capabilities created a very high barrier to entry. Not everyone could do it. Fewer still could do it reliably, globally, and at scale. That is why OSRAM was not simply a \u201clarge company.\u201d It occupied a genuine industry high ground. For a long time, it stood for: stronger technology, more stable quality, broader product portfolios, and greater authority in the market. This is why, when we look at OSRAM today, we should not start with what it later struggled with. We should first acknowledge what it once truly was: one of the defining winners of its age. 2. From seller\u2019s market to buyer\u2019s market: many giants did not suddenly become weak \u2014 the rules of the game changed To understand the later challenges faced by OSRAM and LEDVANCE, we must begin with one simple truth: this was, first of all, an industry transition that was structurally inevitable. In the era of traditional light sources, the industry had several defining characteristics: First, technological and manufacturing barriers were high. Second, brands and channels were highly concentrated. Third, demand grew steadily over long periods. Fourth, the number of global competitors was limited, and the market remained, in essence, a seller\u2019s market. In that context, if a market leader had strong technology, a trusted brand, and broad channels, growth often really was a matter of capacity expansion. Then LED changed everything. LED looked like a source substitution, but in reality it rewrote the foundations of the entire industry: What had once been a long-distance race among a handful of dominant players gradually turned into a crowded battlefield with thousands of companies competing across markets. So what OSRAM and LEDVANCE later faced was not simply \u201cmore competition.\u201d It was something deeper: the lighting industry collapsing from a technology-driven seller\u2019s market oligopoly into an overcompetitive buyer\u2019s market. That was not caused by any one company alone, nor by the arrival of any single competitor. It was the result of a structural rewrite of the industry itself. 3. But it would be too easy \u2014 and too unfair \u2014 to explain everything by saying \u201cthe times changed\u201d If this were only fate, then all legacy giants should have lost momentum in exactly the same way. They did not. Which brings us to the second layer of analysis: industry change may have been inevitable, but how a company responds determines whether it adapts or gets trapped. In my view, the most valuable lesson from OSRAM and LEDVANCE is not merely that margins were squeezed or competitors multiplied. It is that every former oligopolist must ask itself a harder set of questions: These are the questions that matter most. Many companies do not fail because they cannot see the future. They fail because they assume that the logic that made them successful in the past will remain sufficient in the future. 4. First lesson: technology cannot merely have been leading once \u2014 it must keep evolving and keep converting into market power One of the easiest traps for an oligopolist is to treat technological leadership as a static asset. Being ahead once does not mean remaining ahead. Having the capability to develop technology does not mean having the speed to commercialize it. Owning R&amp;D capacity does not mean having the organizational ability to turn it into new market order. The real issue is never simply whether a company has technology. The real issue is this: Can it continuously push the next generation forward, and can it decisively translate technical reserves into market capability? Many former leaders did not lack R&amp;D, patents, labs, or engineering talent. What they often lacked was: This is why some companies later seem, from the outside, to be neither weak nor obsolete \u2014 only late. Not incapable, but too slow. Not technically empty, but commercially under-converted. For any former oligopolist, technology leadership that does not keep renewing itself \u2014 and does not keep converting into market advantage \u2014 eventually turns from moat into museum piece. 5. Second lesson: what often drags down former oligopolists is not the number of competitors, but the collapse of their decision model This, to me, is one of the most important lessons. Many global leaders build a highly centralized operating logic during their strongest years: In an era of supply scarcity, strong brands, and relatively stable product structures, this model can be highly efficient. But once markets start to differentiate sharply, it begins to fail. Because market reality is never uniform: If a company continues to govern everything from a headquarters-centered logic, three things tend to happen: First, local demand gets underestimated. Second, decision speed falls behind market speed. Third, regional teams gradually lose their fighting capability. At that point, the issue is no longer one bad product or one weak market. The issue is that the entire decision model has become unfit for the environment. Many former oligopolists do not lose because they lack resources. They lose because: their response speed becomes slower than the speed of market change. 6. Third lesson: brand and channel strategy cannot only answer to headquarters \u2014 they must answer to market outcomes This is another area where multinational companies often misread the challenge. Headquarters tends to look at branding through the lens of consistency. Markets judge brands through the lens of effectiveness. Headquarters wants one unified narrative, one unified image, one unified asset system. But markets ask different questions: The same brand can mean very different things in different markets. In mature markets, it may signal reliability and quality. In emerging markets, it may first be compared on price. In project markets, it may need to win through technical support and delivery performance. In retail, it may need to fight through shelf presence, promotions, e-commerce traffic, and consumer education. That is why brand strategy cannot only pursue global uniformity; it must also pursue local effectiveness. The same applies to channels. Strong channel-building is not about replicating the headquarters\u2019 ideal blueprint around the world. It is about respecting the actual power structure, economics, and operating logic of each market. Global brands absolutely need unified direction. But market competition must respect local reality. If the brand answers only to headquarters, and the channel does not answer to the market, then even the strongest historical asset will slowly be consumed. 7. Fourth lesson: stronger headquarters control does not necessarily mean stronger market control At their peak, many companies naturally fall into a dangerous assumption: the more tightly we control the organization, the more securely we control the market. But these are not the same thing. Headquarters control may produce process discipline, brand coherence, and risk management. Market control, however, is reflected in something else: When markets become more fragmented and more immediate, a company that keeps pulling decisions upward turns local teams into execution arms instead of fighting units. Once the front line loses authority, flexibility, and speed, a familiar pattern appears: internally, the company still looks orderly; externally, it becomes increasingly hard to win. For every former oligopolist, the goal should not be ever-stronger central control. It should be a higher-quality model of global-local coordination. Headquarters should own direction, platforms, principles, and capital allocation. The market front line must own sufficient definition power, reaction speed, and battle-readiness. 8. The LEDVANCE carve-out and sale were not just a transaction \u2014 they marked a reordering of industrial power The capital moves that followed made these structural shifts even more visible. The carve-out, the sale, and the eventual transfer of much of the general lighting business into a new ownership and manufacturing logic were not isolated financial events. They reflected a broader reorganization of value in the global lighting industry. In one sense, this was the handoff between two capability systems: On one side stood the accumulated strengths of the traditional European industrial model \u2014 brand, product definition, customer relationships, global organizational experience, channel architecture. On the other stood the capabilities that Chinese companies built during the LED era \u2014 manufacturing efficiency, supply chain control, cost competitiveness, speed, and capital efficiency. So this should not be understood merely as \u201cselling a business.\u201d It was, more fundamentally: a formal passing of the baton between the old order and the new order in lighting. Having later operated within that reality, I felt this very clearly: This was not simply a case of one company becoming weak. It was a case of an old winning logic no longer being sufficient in a new competitive age. 9. So was it industry inevitability, or strategic misjudgment? My answer remains: first, it was industry inevitability; second, it was corporate misjudgment. The inevitability lay in the fact that LED pushed lighting out of an era defined by technological oligopoly, concentrated brands, and relatively stable channels, into one defined by electronics, supply chains, globalization, fragmentation, and speed. But the misjudgment was also real. Not necessarily as one single wrong decision, but as a pattern: That, in my view, is the deeper failure mode. 10. This is not only OSRAM\u2019s story \u2014 it is the shared challenge of every former winner At this point, the real subject is no longer only OSRAM at 120. The deeper point is what this story says to every company that once held a technology high ground, a brand high ground, or a channel high ground: the greatest risk for an oligopolist is not losing yesterday\u2019s advantage; it is mistaking yesterday\u2019s advantage for tomorrow\u2019s capability. A company may once have won through technical superiority. Tomorrow it may need organizational superiority, market adaptability, and system capability as well. It may once have won through central coordination and scale efficiency. Tomorrow it may lose because it ignored local market intelligence and local competitive reality. It may once have built a moat through brand and channels. Tomorrow it will have to prove again that the brand still matters, and that the channels still work in a transformed market structure. For every business, the underlying question is the same: Are you willing to accept that a new market requires a new way of winning? Conclusion OSRAM at 120 deserves respect. Not only because it is a historic company, but because its journey is a condensed history of the modern lighting industry itself. What deserves the most attention today, however, is not only how strong OSRAM once was. It is what its path now teaches us: no company can keep winning a new era with the methods that defined the old one. That, to me, is the most important lesson OSRAM\u2019s 120 years leave to the industry. Short Summary Written on the occasion of OSRAM\u2019s 120th anniversary, this article goes beyond celebrating the company\u2019s history. Drawing from my own experience across the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from Managing Director within MLS to CEO of LEDVANCE \u2014 it reflects on how a century-old market leader moved from technological and brand high ground into fragmented global competition. LED reshaped the rules of the lighting industry; that part was structural and inevitable. But what deserves deeper reflection is how technology renewal, organizational renewal, and market renewal often fail to happen in sync \u2014 especially when the Go-to-Market model remains headquarters-centered long after markets have become deeply local.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/de\/osram-at-120-how-a-century-old-oligopolist-was-rewritten-by-its-time\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2026-04-20T01:04:16+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2026-04-20T01:04:24+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28.jpg\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"1536\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"1024\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"LRS Admin\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta 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-","robots":{"index":"noindex","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"og_locale":"de_DE","og_type":"article","og_title":"OSRAM at 120: How a Century-Old Oligopolist Was Rewritten by Its Time -","og_description":"From technological leadership and brand power to fragmented, close-range competition \u2014 this is not only the story of OSRAM\/LEDVANCE, but a lesson every former market leader should study. Introduction This year, OSRAM marks its 120th anniversary. For many, OSRAM is a great German lighting company. But in my view, seeing it only as a \u201clegacy lighting brand\u201d does not go nearly far enough. OSRAM was never just a company, and never just a brand. It participated in almost the entire arc of modern lighting history: from incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps, and halogen, to LED, automotive lighting, infrared, sensing, and today\u2019s broader world of photonics and digital light technologies. Yet what is even more worth revisiting than its history is the path it has taken over the past decades: from being a technology-led oligopolist in a seller\u2019s market \u2014 where growth could often be unlocked simply by expanding capacity \u2014 to becoming a company forced to fight, market by market, against thousands of competitors in highly fragmented global battlegrounds. Was that outcome inevitable because the industry changed? Or was it also the result of strategic misjudgment?I believe the answer is both. But the more important question for today\u2019s business leaders is this: when a company has spent decades at the top, can it still reinvent the way it wins? I was not an original OSRAM employee. But I was deeply involved in the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from my role as Managing Director within MLS to later serving as CEO of LEDVANCE. I witnessed, from inside the process, how industrial power, brand architecture, channel logic, and competitive rules were all being rewritten. So this is not intended to be a simple anniversary tribute. Rather, I want to use OSRAM at 120 as a lens to reflect on the evolution, the challenges, and the lessons of a century-old oligopolist. 1. OSRAM\u2019s greatness was never just that it was \u201cold\u201d \u2014 it once represented an entire industrial era The name OSRAM carries the imprint of the industrial age. It was not a startup story in the modern sense. It was born out of a period of deep European industrial consolidation. And because of that, OSRAM never sold only \u201clamps.\u201d It sold a complete industrial capability: In the era of traditional lighting, these capabilities created a very high barrier to entry. Not everyone could do it. Fewer still could do it reliably, globally, and at scale. That is why OSRAM was not simply a \u201clarge company.\u201d It occupied a genuine industry high ground. For a long time, it stood for: stronger technology, more stable quality, broader product portfolios, and greater authority in the market. This is why, when we look at OSRAM today, we should not start with what it later struggled with. We should first acknowledge what it once truly was: one of the defining winners of its age. 2. From seller\u2019s market to buyer\u2019s market: many giants did not suddenly become weak \u2014 the rules of the game changed To understand the later challenges faced by OSRAM and LEDVANCE, we must begin with one simple truth: this was, first of all, an industry transition that was structurally inevitable. In the era of traditional light sources, the industry had several defining characteristics: First, technological and manufacturing barriers were high. Second, brands and channels were highly concentrated. Third, demand grew steadily over long periods. Fourth, the number of global competitors was limited, and the market remained, in essence, a seller\u2019s market. In that context, if a market leader had strong technology, a trusted brand, and broad channels, growth often really was a matter of capacity expansion. Then LED changed everything. LED looked like a source substitution, but in reality it rewrote the foundations of the entire industry: What had once been a long-distance race among a handful of dominant players gradually turned into a crowded battlefield with thousands of companies competing across markets. So what OSRAM and LEDVANCE later faced was not simply \u201cmore competition.\u201d It was something deeper: the lighting industry collapsing from a technology-driven seller\u2019s market oligopoly into an overcompetitive buyer\u2019s market. That was not caused by any one company alone, nor by the arrival of any single competitor. It was the result of a structural rewrite of the industry itself. 3. But it would be too easy \u2014 and too unfair \u2014 to explain everything by saying \u201cthe times changed\u201d If this were only fate, then all legacy giants should have lost momentum in exactly the same way. They did not. Which brings us to the second layer of analysis: industry change may have been inevitable, but how a company responds determines whether it adapts or gets trapped. In my view, the most valuable lesson from OSRAM and LEDVANCE is not merely that margins were squeezed or competitors multiplied. It is that every former oligopolist must ask itself a harder set of questions: These are the questions that matter most. Many companies do not fail because they cannot see the future. They fail because they assume that the logic that made them successful in the past will remain sufficient in the future. 4. First lesson: technology cannot merely have been leading once \u2014 it must keep evolving and keep converting into market power One of the easiest traps for an oligopolist is to treat technological leadership as a static asset. Being ahead once does not mean remaining ahead. Having the capability to develop technology does not mean having the speed to commercialize it. Owning R&amp;D capacity does not mean having the organizational ability to turn it into new market order. The real issue is never simply whether a company has technology. The real issue is this: Can it continuously push the next generation forward, and can it decisively translate technical reserves into market capability? Many former leaders did not lack R&amp;D, patents, labs, or engineering talent. What they often lacked was: This is why some companies later seem, from the outside, to be neither weak nor obsolete \u2014 only late. Not incapable, but too slow. Not technically empty, but commercially under-converted. For any former oligopolist, technology leadership that does not keep renewing itself \u2014 and does not keep converting into market advantage \u2014 eventually turns from moat into museum piece. 5. Second lesson: what often drags down former oligopolists is not the number of competitors, but the collapse of their decision model This, to me, is one of the most important lessons. Many global leaders build a highly centralized operating logic during their strongest years: In an era of supply scarcity, strong brands, and relatively stable product structures, this model can be highly efficient. But once markets start to differentiate sharply, it begins to fail. Because market reality is never uniform: If a company continues to govern everything from a headquarters-centered logic, three things tend to happen: First, local demand gets underestimated. Second, decision speed falls behind market speed. Third, regional teams gradually lose their fighting capability. At that point, the issue is no longer one bad product or one weak market. The issue is that the entire decision model has become unfit for the environment. Many former oligopolists do not lose because they lack resources. They lose because: their response speed becomes slower than the speed of market change. 6. Third lesson: brand and channel strategy cannot only answer to headquarters \u2014 they must answer to market outcomes This is another area where multinational companies often misread the challenge. Headquarters tends to look at branding through the lens of consistency. Markets judge brands through the lens of effectiveness. Headquarters wants one unified narrative, one unified image, one unified asset system. But markets ask different questions: The same brand can mean very different things in different markets. In mature markets, it may signal reliability and quality. In emerging markets, it may first be compared on price. In project markets, it may need to win through technical support and delivery performance. In retail, it may need to fight through shelf presence, promotions, e-commerce traffic, and consumer education. That is why brand strategy cannot only pursue global uniformity; it must also pursue local effectiveness. The same applies to channels. Strong channel-building is not about replicating the headquarters\u2019 ideal blueprint around the world. It is about respecting the actual power structure, economics, and operating logic of each market. Global brands absolutely need unified direction. But market competition must respect local reality. If the brand answers only to headquarters, and the channel does not answer to the market, then even the strongest historical asset will slowly be consumed. 7. Fourth lesson: stronger headquarters control does not necessarily mean stronger market control At their peak, many companies naturally fall into a dangerous assumption: the more tightly we control the organization, the more securely we control the market. But these are not the same thing. Headquarters control may produce process discipline, brand coherence, and risk management. Market control, however, is reflected in something else: When markets become more fragmented and more immediate, a company that keeps pulling decisions upward turns local teams into execution arms instead of fighting units. Once the front line loses authority, flexibility, and speed, a familiar pattern appears: internally, the company still looks orderly; externally, it becomes increasingly hard to win. For every former oligopolist, the goal should not be ever-stronger central control. It should be a higher-quality model of global-local coordination. Headquarters should own direction, platforms, principles, and capital allocation. The market front line must own sufficient definition power, reaction speed, and battle-readiness. 8. The LEDVANCE carve-out and sale were not just a transaction \u2014 they marked a reordering of industrial power The capital moves that followed made these structural shifts even more visible. The carve-out, the sale, and the eventual transfer of much of the general lighting business into a new ownership and manufacturing logic were not isolated financial events. They reflected a broader reorganization of value in the global lighting industry. In one sense, this was the handoff between two capability systems: On one side stood the accumulated strengths of the traditional European industrial model \u2014 brand, product definition, customer relationships, global organizational experience, channel architecture. On the other stood the capabilities that Chinese companies built during the LED era \u2014 manufacturing efficiency, supply chain control, cost competitiveness, speed, and capital efficiency. So this should not be understood merely as \u201cselling a business.\u201d It was, more fundamentally: a formal passing of the baton between the old order and the new order in lighting. Having later operated within that reality, I felt this very clearly: This was not simply a case of one company becoming weak. It was a case of an old winning logic no longer being sufficient in a new competitive age. 9. So was it industry inevitability, or strategic misjudgment? My answer remains: first, it was industry inevitability; second, it was corporate misjudgment. The inevitability lay in the fact that LED pushed lighting out of an era defined by technological oligopoly, concentrated brands, and relatively stable channels, into one defined by electronics, supply chains, globalization, fragmentation, and speed. But the misjudgment was also real. Not necessarily as one single wrong decision, but as a pattern: That, in my view, is the deeper failure mode. 10. This is not only OSRAM\u2019s story \u2014 it is the shared challenge of every former winner At this point, the real subject is no longer only OSRAM at 120. The deeper point is what this story says to every company that once held a technology high ground, a brand high ground, or a channel high ground: the greatest risk for an oligopolist is not losing yesterday\u2019s advantage; it is mistaking yesterday\u2019s advantage for tomorrow\u2019s capability. A company may once have won through technical superiority. Tomorrow it may need organizational superiority, market adaptability, and system capability as well. It may once have won through central coordination and scale efficiency. Tomorrow it may lose because it ignored local market intelligence and local competitive reality. It may once have built a moat through brand and channels. Tomorrow it will have to prove again that the brand still matters, and that the channels still work in a transformed market structure. For every business, the underlying question is the same: Are you willing to accept that a new market requires a new way of winning? Conclusion OSRAM at 120 deserves respect. Not only because it is a historic company, but because its journey is a condensed history of the modern lighting industry itself. What deserves the most attention today, however, is not only how strong OSRAM once was. It is what its path now teaches us: no company can keep winning a new era with the methods that defined the old one. That, to me, is the most important lesson OSRAM\u2019s 120 years leave to the industry. Short Summary Written on the occasion of OSRAM\u2019s 120th anniversary, this article goes beyond celebrating the company\u2019s history. Drawing from my own experience across the LEDVANCE chapter \u2014 from Managing Director within MLS to CEO of LEDVANCE \u2014 it reflects on how a century-old market leader moved from technological and brand high ground into fragmented global competition. LED reshaped the rules of the lighting industry; that part was structural and inevitable. But what deserves deeper reflection is how technology renewal, organizational renewal, and market renewal often fail to happen in sync \u2014 especially when the Go-to-Market model remains headquarters-centered long after markets have become deeply local.","og_url":"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/de\/osram-at-120-how-a-century-old-oligopolist-was-rewritten-by-its-time\/","article_published_time":"2026-04-20T01:04:16+00:00","article_modified_time":"2026-04-20T01:04:24+00:00","og_image":[{"width":1536,"height":1024,"url":"https:\/\/lightingrecipe.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/img28.jpg","type":"image\/jpeg"}],"author":"LRS Admin","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Verfasst von":"LRS Admin","Gesch\u00e4tzte 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