INNOVATION SPECIAL Innovation Is an Attitude
True
innovation has nothing to do with your company's size or industry. It's a way
of thinking. Here are three ways to make sure you're on the right track.
You
might think that the business world is split between two camps: companies that innovate and those that don't. And
you'd probably be right. However, is the divide between the successful
behemoths and the barbarian entrepreneurs pounding at the gates? Not at all.
Successful
innovation is a matter of attitude and practice, not of size.
There is nothing sacred about being an entrepreneur--many will fumble around
without hitting a spark of genius. Large companies? Some manage to keep
churning out new products and technologies on a regular basis.
Eric
Ries, author of The Lean Startup, has an interesting view. In an
interview with McKinsey & Company, he explains how tech startups successfully challenge
incumbents. Though some of the mechanics apply specifically to that industry,
the places where incumbents fall down are a matter of attitude. They also
aren't a simple matter of size.
In other words, there's a chance
that you're leading a dinosaur. A little baby dinosaur, to be sure, but one as
doomed to extinction as its brethren. Here are the basic problems exhibited by
companies that will ultimately lose, no matter their size.
Are
You Relying on the Old Answers?
In high tech, it's now possible for
a "kid with a credit card--with a $1,000 budget"--to create something
that, to a consumer's eye, looks like the polished mature product of large
competitors, notes Ries. That's an industry dynamic, to be sure, but it doesn't
mean other industries escape the fate.
Everything is running on computers.
You can model problems and solve them on computers. Computers can run inbound
sales and make a company look big and sophisticated. In addition, service providers
run on computers. Want someone to provide fulfillment for your products? Amazon
has it down pat, all riding on computation that helps make things affordable.
Need to manage a more complicated sales process? There's Salesforce.
So, large technology companies not
only face direct competition, but those in areas other than high tech might
find competitors using sophisticated simulation, automation, and communications
to grind down the barriers to competition.
Now, realize that none of this is
restricted to a large versus small view of the world. Ries said, "And so
you're not dealing with one potential competitor but with thousands or
millions." But the same is true for a small company. Are you up to the
level of innovation necessary when everyone in the world is out to eat your
lunch?
Are
Your Failures Productive?
Businesspeople, whether entrepreneurs or the heads of legacy
corporations, don't like to fail. That's a shame, because you don't get
anywhere without failure. Failing is the reconciling force in this great laboratory
of life. You try something, it doesn't work, and you go on to something else.
Only, as the great Samuel Beckett
once wrote: "All of old. Nothing else ever. Ever tried. Ever failed. No
matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better."
Failure is scary, but it's necessary
because without it you can't progress. Just make sure you--and the people who
work for you--learn from all those mistakes. Your company's culture must
welcome failure, even though it can be enormously scary. If a big company slips
up, no one may notice it. If you lose a big gamble, it could be the end of your
company.
But there is no other approach that
can work. Make productive failure part of your corporate culture, even making
its smart existence one of the ways you judge employees (and yourself).
Are
You Keeping Your Head Above Ground?
When it comes to competition and
innovation, the absolutely worst thing to do is to bury your head in the sand.
You might not want to hear about all the dangers, or consider the amount of
hard work success will take, but it's the only way.
Be ready to face reality, and make
sure your employees understand that it's the only thing you want to hear. Any
size company can be willfully blind. Make sure it doesn't happen to you.
BYErik Sherman http://www.inc.com/erik-sherman/3-tips-innovation-attitude.html?cid=em01020week16b
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