Are You Ready to Get Creative?
What
makes companies ready for successful innovation? We know it’s not
the size of their R&D budgets, even relative to their revenues.
Since 2005, the annual Strategy&Innovation 1000 STUDIES have
examined which companies spend the most on R&D and which firms
have the most success with it. The conclusion, year after year, has
been the same: There is no correlation between innovation spend and
business performance.
If
it isn’t spending that leads to success, there must be other
qualities that distinguish truly innovative companies. Successful
business projects often start with someone having a great idea (the
proverbial bolt of lightning), but not all great ideas come to
fruition. Companies need to be set up to encourage, recognize,
support, and implement great ideas if they want them to succeed in
the market.
Companies
need to be set up to encourage, recognize, support, and implement
great ideas.
Five
factors, in particular, seem to make a difference. They have
emerged, over the years, as common to a series of analyses, case
studies, and research projects. They are all related to your
company’s R&D readiness: its ongoing abilities and disciplines
that prepare it for managing innovation well. If you are an R&D
leader, or a top executive at a company seeking to be more
innovative, these elements may provide you with your highest
leverage for improvement:
•
Strategic
alignment.
The
most successful innovators can articulate a clear group of R&D
priorities that are “fit for purpose”: aligned to the company’s
overall business agenda. The ability to do this should not be taken
for granted; getting the story right, and tying it to innovation
priorities, can take a great deal of thought and iteration.
• Innovative capabilities.
• Innovative capabilities.
These
are the everyday activities within your R&D department that you
follow along the path from customer engagement, to generating ideas,
to commercializing them, to executing the launch. The most
successful innovators have developed distinctive R&D processes
tailored to their own value proposition, not benchmarked from
studying other companies. The best of these innovative capabilities
tend to be cross-functional (involving people from marketing, IT,
manufacturing, and other disciplines as well as R&D) and
creative (prepared to experiment, iterate, and evolve practices as
needed).
• External networks and partnerships.
• External networks and partnerships.
Successful
innovators are proficient at building and maintaining productive
relationships with outside suppliers, distributors, educational
institutions, and service providers. They know how to draw ideas and
capabilities from outside the enterprise as needed, for use at
various points along the innovation value chain.
• Organization and processes.
• Organization and processes.
Organizational
design is natural to successful innovators. They make sure the right
incentives, decision rights, and information flows are in place to
drive innovation performance. They also know how to place the right
talent in the right place at the right time.
• Cultural alignment.
• Cultural alignment.
These
companies foster thinking and conversation that promotes innovation.
Their cultural attributes and behaviors lay a foundation for
risk-taking, and they also support the innovation
strategy.
Research on innovation often focuses on one or two of these factors at a time, but it doesn’t consider how they overlap and interrelate. To help understand how these factors fit together, and the leverage they can provide, we’ve developed an online profiler called the Innovation Accelerator. We believe that using a profiler like this—and applying the insights it provides—can be the first in a series of steps companies take to increase their innovation readiness.
Research on innovation often focuses on one or two of these factors at a time, but it doesn’t consider how they overlap and interrelate. To help understand how these factors fit together, and the leverage they can provide, we’ve developed an online profiler called the Innovation Accelerator. We believe that using a profiler like this—and applying the insights it provides—can be the first in a series of steps companies take to increase their innovation readiness.
At
the heart of the Innovation Accelerator is an online attitudinal
survey. It asks employees questions about what they do, and
evaluates the answers accordingly. For example: “How does your
company acquire customer insights?” Or, “What do you do to
encourage creative thinking?” The way you answer these questions,
and others, sheds light on your innovation readiness and how
effective your investments will be.
We
have tested the innovation accelerator a variety of companies—for
instance, with a group of UK-based railroad firms that wanted to
evaluate their current level of innovation capability and focus
their future efforts more effectively. The survey is not specific to
any industry or geography, and we think it has something to teach
all companies that rely on innovation. It can help you see your own
innovation-related proficiencies more clearly, and the relative gaps
that you might need to fill.
The
idea of surveying companies on their innovation prowess isn’t new.
But most current surveys are relatively narrow in their focus on
process issues. They ask about the percentage of revenue the company
allocates to R&D, the number of milestones in its quality-gate
process, and the level of IT support their innovation teams are
getting. This is important for understanding innovative
capabilities, but in itself, data like this does not seem to provide
enough insight about the factors that help or hurt a company’s
creative efforts.
For
instance, suppose a company that produces a complex product is
moving into a fast-developing new area that requires a great deal of
interdepartmental coordination. One unseen factor might be a lack of
cross-functional work on building innovation capabilities, or
organizational incentives that subtly discourage work across
departmental lines. Having identified those weaknesses, the firm can
set a detailed action plan for improvement and then move to
implement it.
A
tool like the Innovation Accelerator can thus provide the first step
in developing innovation readiness. It is designed to be used within
companies, for both startups and for mature enterprises. Even
corporations that were once great at innovation can lose their
touch. For those that feel they may be slipping, or simply want to
do better, the tool can show them where they may need improvement.
The
tool can be applied across the full company or limited to certain
functions, geographies, and business units with perceived problems.
It asks enough questions in each of the five dimensions to determine
a company’s score for each. In turn, these scores form the basis
of a data-informed discussion. A full analysis of the results of the
survey is slated to appear instrategy+business
after
we have collected enough data.
Companies
don’t need to be best in class in every area related to
innovation. But companies that are struggling with their R&D
performance need to start by getting a clear picture of where they
might be weak. Innovators don’t always like to look at their
strengths and weaknesses. But in this case, what you don’t know,
can’t see coming, and haven’t measured, can hurt you.
http://www.strategy-business.com/blog/Are-You-Ready-to-Get-Creative?gko=f61aa&cid=20140930enews&utm_campaign=20140930enews
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