3
Ways to Measure Bold Ideas
In
the early stages, you can't assess radical ideas using stats like projected
revenues or cost savings. Here's how to determine which bold ideas are worth
keeping.
Organizations
often fail to adopt potentially game-changing ideas. Typically, it's because the internal idea-evangelists
fail to convince the C-Suite that the ideas will either boost profits or cut
costs.
But
the problem, notes author and former McKinsey consultant Kaihan Krippendorff in a fascinating article on
the Knowledge@Wharton site, isn't the idea evangelists. The problem
is that most organizations are erring in using such bottom-line numbers to
measure the potential of new ideas.
Why the Bottom Line Is Less Important in
Early Stages
Intuit
co-founder Scott Cook has famously told his internal disruptive teams to spend almost no time
doing financial forecasting or plotting plans on spreadsheets. The reason is
one Krippendorff would appreciate: An early-stage idea shouldn't be
prematurely assessed by dollar potential.
As
Krippendorff observes, "industry-shaping ideas rarely show signs of
being able to meet these measures early on." Moreover, their value
"cannot be accurately predicted in their early stages."
All
of which makes sense, but it leaves a gaping question: How, then, should
companies evaluate bold ideas in their early stages? Here are three
suggestions:
1.
Assess the idea's potential to help--or harm--the brand. Krippendorff writes
about how one company he worked with "had developed an idea that looked
more like building a movement than producing a can of sugar-water." In
other words, there was a risk that the idea would be dismissed for its scope
and degree of difficulty. The solution was to frame the impact of a movement as
something that could--if not acted on--eventually threaten the company's
brand:
Knowing
the CEO may resist this new idea, we reframed it as a defensive move to protect
against a threat to the company's core brand. The idea won funding. In two to
three years, we hope this idea provides brand protection and also generates
profits. But had we argued its attractiveness based on profits alone, senior
management would have probably killed the idea.
By
aligning a new idea with the company's brand, you're affiliating it with
something that any organization has a vested interest in protecting and
preserving. That's important to recognize, especially when the path to
profitability for a new idea may be difficult to predict or demonstrate.
2.
Assess the idea's potential to bring in new customers. In business circles,
it's generally more acceptable to have smaller margins on new customers, just
to "get them in the door," so to speak. Moreover, the act of customer
acquisition is never an easy thing, whether the organization is young or
mature. Any idea that can potentially add new customers--even if the
initial cost for doing so seems high--is worthy of the top team's
consideration.
There
are countless tools you can use to assess new customer potential, many of which
are low-cost, such as SurveyMonkey. You can also use
social media. Scott Gerber's primer reveals some basic questions you
should ask.
3.
Assess the idea's potential to inspire current and prospective employees. Krippendorff points out
that many innovative employees end up leaving organizations precisely because
the organization did not appreciate the potential of their bold new ideas.
He
cites a recent survey from Accenture, in
which 93 percent of the self-employed respondents who previously worked at
large corporations say that they pursued an entrepreneurial idea within their
previous company first. Of this entire self-employed population, a
whopping 57 percent say their company did not support their pursuits.
"Entrepreneurs want to build their ideas inside companies,"
Krippendorff concludes. "They don't mind doing so while they continue
other duties, but companies are not supporting them."
No
one's saying you should support a miserable idea for the sole purpose of
employee retention. But it's possible to encourage employees in their pursuit
of bold ideas, while still holding the line on which ones get the top team's
attention.
One
way to do this is to actually celebrate when a brave new idea gets killed. That
might sound strange, but one company that makes a habit of such eulogies
is W.L. Gore, the chemical products company that makes
Gore-Tex.
"Mistakes
made in the pursuit of novel solutions are accepted as part of the creative
process. When a project is killed, staff celebrate its passing with beer and
champagne," notes the MIT Sloan Management
Review. "When
a project fails, a post-mortem is conducted. Flawed concept or poor execution?
Bad decisions? The goal of these post-mortems is not to punish, but to learn
and improve."
BY Ilan
Mochari http://www.inc.com/ilan-mochari/measure-bold-ideas.html?cid=em01020week17d
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