The eight essentials of innovation
Strategic and
organizational factors are what separate successful big-company innovators from
the rest of the field.
It’s no secret: innovation is difficult for
well-established companies. By and large, they are better executors than
innovators, and most succeed less through game-changing creativity than by
optimizing their existing businesses.
Yet hard as it is for such organizations to
innovate, large ones as diverse as Alcoa, the Discovery Group, and NASA’s Ames
Research Center are actually doing so. What can other companies learn from
their approaches and attributes? That question formed the core of a multiyear
study comprising in-depth interviews, workshops, and surveys of more than 2,500
executives in over 300 companies, including both performance leaders and
laggards, in a broad set of industries and countries.
What we found were a set of eight essential
attributes that are present, either in part or in full, at every big company
that’s a high performer in product, process, or business-model innovation.
Since innovation is a complex, company-wide
endeavor, it requires a set of crosscutting practices and processes to
structure, organize, and encourage it. Taken together, the essentials described
in this article constitute just such an operating system. These often
overlapping, iterative, and nonsequential practices resist systematic
categorization but can nonetheless be thought of in two groups. The first four,
which are strategic and creative in nature, help set and prioritize the terms
and conditions under which innovation is more likely to thrive. The next four
essentials deal with how to deliver and organize for innovation repeatedly over
time and with enough value to contribute meaningfully to overall performance.
To be sure, there’s no
proven formula for success, particularly when it comes to innovation. While our
years of client-service experience provide strong indicators for the existence
of a causal relationship between the attributes that survey respondents
reported and the innovations of the companies we studied, the statistics
described here can only prove correlation. Yet we firmly
believe that if companies assimilate and apply these essentials—in their own
way, in accordance with their particular context, capabilities, organizational
culture, and appetite for risk—they will improve the likelihood that they, too,
can rekindle the lost spark of innovation. In the digital age, the pace of
change has gone into hyperspeed, so companies must get these strategic,
creative, executional, and organizational factors right to innovate
successfully.
Aspire
President John F. Kennedy’s bold aspiration,
in 1962, to “go to the moon in this decade” motivated a nation to unprecedented
levels of innovation. A far-reaching vision can be a compelling catalyst,
provided it’s realistic enough to stimulate action today.
But in a corporate setting, as many CEOs have
discovered, even the most inspiring words often are insufficient, no matter how
many times they are repeated. It helps to combine high-level aspirations with
estimates of the value that innovation should generate to meet financial-growth
objectives. Quantifying an “innovation target for growth,” and making it an
explicit part of future strategic plans, helps solidify the importance of and
accountability for innovation. The target itself must be large enough to force
managers to include innovation investments in their business plans. If they can
make their numbers using other, less risky tactics, our experience suggests
that they (quite rationally) will.
Establishing a quantitative innovation
aspiration is not enough, however. The target value needs to be apportioned to
relevant business “owners” and cascaded down to their organizations in the form
of performance targets and timelines. Anything less risks encouraging inaction
or the belief that innovation is someone else’s job.
For example, Lantmännen, a big Nordic
agricultural cooperative, was challenged by flat organic growth and
directionless innovation. Top executives created an aspirational vision and
strategic plan linked to financial targets: 6 percent growth in the core
business and 2 percent growth in new organic ventures. To encourage innovation
projects, these quantitative targets were cascaded down to business units and,
ultimately, to product groups. During the development of each innovation
project, it had to show how it was helping to achieve the growth targets for
its category and markets. As a result, Lantmännen went from 4 percent to 13
percent annual growth, underpinned by the successful launch of several new
brands. Indeed, it became the market leader in premade food only four years
after entry and created a new premium segment in this market.
Such performance parameters can seem painful
to managers more accustomed to the traditional approach. In our experience,
though, CEOs are likely just going through the motions if they don’t use
evaluations and remuneration to assess and recognize the contribution that all
top managers make to innovation.
Choose
Fresh, creative
insights are invaluable, but in our experience many companies run into
difficulty less from a scarcity of new ideas than from the struggle to
determine which ideas to support and scale. At bigger
companies, this can be particularly problematic during market discontinuities,
when supporting the next wave of growth may seem too risky, at least until
competitive dynamics force painful changes.
Innovation is inherently
risky, to be sure, and getting the most from a portfolio of innovation
initiatives is more about managing risk than eliminating it. Since no one knows
exactly where valuable innovations will emerge, and searching everywhere is
impractical, executives must create some boundary conditions for the
opportunity spaces they want to explore. The process of identifying and
bounding these spaces can run the gamut from intuitive visions of the future to
carefully scrutinized strategic analyses. Thoughtfully prioritizing these
spaces also allows companies to assess whether they have enough investment
behind their most valuable opportunities.
During this process, companies should set in
motion more projects than they will ultimately be able to finance, which makes
it easier to kill those that prove less promising. RELX Group, for example,
runs 10 to 15 experiments per major customer segment, each funded with a
preliminary budget of around $200,000, through its innovation pipeline every
year, choosing subsequently to invest more significant funds in one or two of
them, and dropping the rest. “One of the hardest things to figure out is when
to kill something,” says Kumsal Bayazit, RELX Group’s chief strategy officer.
“It’s a heck of a lot easier if you have a portfolio of ideas.”
Once the opportunities are defined, companies
need transparency into what people are working on and a governance process that
constantly assesses not only the expected value, timing, and risk of the
initiatives in the portfolio but also its overall composition. There’s no
single mix that’s universally right. Most established companies err on the side
of overloading their innovation pipelines with relatively safe, short-term, and
incremental projects that have little chance of realizing their growth targets
or staying within their risk parameters. Some spread themselves thinly across
too many projects instead of focusing on those with the highest potential for
success and resourcing them to win.
These tendencies get
reinforced by a sluggish resource-reallocation process. Our research shows that
a company typically reallocates only a tiny fraction of its resources from year
to year, thereby sentencing innovation to a stagnating march of incrementalism.
Discover
Innovation also requires actionable and
differentiated insights—the kind that excite customers and bring new categories
and markets into being. How do companies develop them? Genius is always an
appealing approach, if you have or can get it. Fortunately, innovation yields
to other approaches besides exceptional creativity.
The rest of us can look for insights by
methodically and systematically scrutinizing three areas: a valuable problem to
solve, a technology that enables a solution, and a business model that
generates money from it. You could argue that nearly every successful
innovation occurs at the intersection of these three elements. Companies that
effectively collect, synthesize, and “collide” them stand the highest
probability of success. “If you get the sweet spot of what the customer is
struggling with, and at the same time get a deeper knowledge of the new
technologies coming along and find a mechanism for how these two things can
come together, then you are going to get good returns,” says Alcoa chairman and
chief executive Klaus Kleinfeld.
The insight-discovery
process, which extends beyond a company’s boundaries to include
insight-generating partnerships, is the lifeblood of innovation. We won’t
belabor the matter here, though, because it’s already the subject of countless
articles and books.2 One thing we can add is that discovery is iterative, and
the active use of prototypes can help companies continue to learn as they
develop, test, validate, and refine their innovations. Moreover, we firmly
believe that without a fully developed innovation systemencompassing
the other elements described in this article, large organizations probably
won’t innovate successfully, no matter how effective their insight-generation
process is.
Evolve
Business-model innovations—which change the
economics of the value chain, diversify profit streams, and/or modify delivery models—have
always been a vital part of a strong innovation portfolio. As smartphones and
mobile apps threaten to upend oldline industries, business-model innovation has
become all the more urgent: established companies must reinvent their
businesses before technology-driven upstarts do. Why, then, do most innovation
systems so squarely emphasize new products? The reason, of course, is that most
big companies are reluctant to risk tampering with their core business model
until it’s visibly under threat. At that point, they can only hope it’s not too
late.
Leading companies combat this troubling
tendency in a number of ways. They up their game in market intelligence, the
better to separate signal from noise. They establish funding vehicles for new
businesses that don’t fit into the current structure. They constantly
reevaluate their position in the value chain, carefully considering business
models that might deliver value to priority groups of new customers. They
sponsor pilot projects and experiments away from the core business to help
combat narrow conceptions of what they are and do. And they stress-test newly
emerging value propositions and operating models against countermoves by
competitors.
Amazon does a
particularly strong job extending itself into new business models by addressing
the emerging needs of its customers and suppliers. In fact, it has included
many of its suppliers in its customer base by offering them an increasingly
wide range of services, from hosted computing to warehouse management. Another
strong performer, the Financial Times, was already experimenting
with its business model in response to the increasing digitalization of media
when, in 2007, it launched an innovative subscription model, upending its
relationship with advertisers and readers. “We went against the received wisdom
of popular strategies at the time,” says Caspar de Bono, FT board
member and managing director of B2B. “We were very deliberate in getting ahead
of the emerging structural change, and the decisions turned out to be very
successful.” In print’s heyday, 80 percent of the FT’s revenue came from
print advertising. Now, more than half of it comes from content, and two-thirds
of circulation comes from digital subscriptions.
Accelerate
Virulent antibodies undermine innovation at
many large companies. Cautious governance processes make it easy for stifling
bureaucracies in marketing, legal, IT, and other functions to find reasons to
halt or slow approvals. Too often, companies simply get in the way of their own
attempts to innovate. A surprising number of impressive innovations from
companies were actually the fruit of their mavericks, who succeeded in
bypassing their early-approval processes. Clearly, there’s a balance to be
maintained: bureaucracy must be held in check, yet the rush to market should
not undermine the cross-functional collaboration, continuous learning cycles,
and clear decision pathways that help enable innovation. Are managers with the
right knowledge, skills, and experience making the crucial decisions in a
timely manner, so that innovation continually moves through an organization in
a way that creates and maintains competitive advantage, without exposing a
company to unnecessary risk?
Companies also thrive by testing their
promising ideas with customers early in the process, before internal forces
impose modifications that blur the original value proposition. To end up with
the innovation initially envisioned, it’s necessary to knock down the barriers
that stand between a great idea and the end user. Companies need a
well-connected manager to take charge of a project and be responsible for the
budget, time to market, and key specifications—a person who can say yes rather
than no. In addition, the project team needs to be cross-functional in reality,
not just on paper. This means locating its members in a single place and
ensuring that they give the project a significant amount of their time (at
least half) to support a culture that puts the innovation project’s success above
the success of each function.
Cross-functional
collaboration can help ensure end-user involvement throughout the development
process. At many companies, marketing’s role is to champion the interests of
end users as development teams evolve products and to help ensure that the
final result is what everyone first envisioned. But this responsibility is
honored more often in the breach than in the observance. Other companies,
meanwhile, rationalize that consumers don’t necessarily know what they want
until it becomes available. This may be true, but customers can certainly say
what they don’t like. And the more quickly and frequently a
project team gets—and uses—feedback, the more quickly it gets a great end
result.
Scale
Some ideas, such as luxury goods and many
smartphone apps, are destined for niche markets. Others, like social networks,
work at global scale. Explicitly considering the appropriate magnitude and
reach of a given idea is important to ensuring that the right resources and
risks are involved in pursuing it. The seemingly safer option of scaling up
over time can be a death sentence. Resources and capabilities must be marshaled
to make sure a new product or service can be delivered quickly at the desired
volume and quality. Manufacturing facilities, suppliers, distributors, and
others must be prepared to execute a rapid and full rollout.
For example, when TomTom launched its first
touch-screen navigational device, in 2004, the product flew off the shelves. By
2006, TomTom’s line of portable navigation devices reached sales of about 5
million units a year, and by 2008, yearly volume had jumped to more than 12
million. “That’s faster market penetration than mobile phones” had, says Harold
Goddijn, TomTom’s CEO and cofounder. While TomTom’s initial accomplishment lay
in combining a well-defined consumer problem with widely available technology
components, rapid scaling was vital to the product’s continuing success. “We
doubled down on managing our cash, our operations, maintaining quality, all the
parts of the iceberg no one sees,” Goddijn adds. “We were hugely well
organized.”
Extend
In the space of only a few years, companies in
nearly every sector have conceded that innovation requires external
collaborators. Flows of talent and knowledge increasingly transcend company and
geographic boundaries. Successful innovators achieve significant multiples for
every dollar invested in innovation by accessing the skills and talents of
others. In this way, they speed up innovation and uncover new ways to create value
for their customers and ecosystem partners.
Smart collaboration with external partners,
though, goes beyond merely sourcing new ideas and insights; it can involve
sharing costs and finding faster routes to market. Famously, the components of
Apple’s first iPod were developed almost entirely outside the company; by
efficiently managing these external partnerships, Apple was able to move from
initial concept to marketable product in only nine months. NASA’s Ames Research
Center teams up not just with international partners—launching joint satellites
with nations as diverse as Lithuania, Saudi Arabia, and Sweden—but also with
emerging companies, such as SpaceX.
High-performing innovators work hard to
develop the ecosystems that help deliver these benefits. Indeed, they strive to
become partners of choice, increasing the likelihood that the best ideas and
people will come their way. That requires a systematic approach. First, these
companies find out which partners they are already working with; surprisingly
few companies know this. Then they decide which networks—say, four or five of
them—they ideally need to support their innovation strategies. This step helps
them to narrow and focus their collaboration efforts and to manage the flow of
possibilities from outside the company. Strong innovators also regularly review
their networks, extending and pruning them as appropriate and using
sophisticated incentives and contractual structures to motivate high-performing
business partners. Becoming a true partner of choice is, among other things,
about clarifying what a partnership can offer the junior member: brand, reach,
or access, perhaps. It is also about behavior. Partners of choice are fair and
transparent in their dealings.
Moreover, companies that make the most of
external networks have a good idea of what’s most useful at which stages of the
innovation process. In general, they cast a relatively wide net in the early
going. But as they come closer to commercializing a new product or service,
they become narrower and more specific in their sourcing, since by then the new
offering’s design is relatively set.
Mobilize
How do leading companies stimulate, encourage,
support, and reward innovative behavior and thinking among the right groups of
people? The best companies find ways to embed innovation into the fibers of
their culture, from the core to the periphery.
They start back where we began: with
aspirations that forge tight connections among innovation, strategy, and
performance. When a company sets financial targets for innovation and defines
market spaces, minds become far more focused. As those aspirations come to life
through individual projects across the company, innovation leaders clarify
responsibilities using the appropriate incentives and rewards.
The Discovery Group, for example, is upending
the medical and life-insurance industries in its native South Africa and also
has operations in the United Kingdom, the United States, and China, among other
locations. Innovation is a standard measure in the company’s semiannual
divisional scorecards—a process that helps mobilize the organization and
affects roughly 1,000 of the company’s business leaders. “They are all required
to innovate every year,” Discovery founder and CEO Adrian Gore says of the
company’s business leaders. “They have no choice.”
Organizational changes may be necessary, not
because structural silver bullets exist—we’ve looked hard for them and don’t
think they do—but rather to promote collaboration, learning, and
experimentation. Companies must help people to share ideas and knowledge
freely, perhaps by locating teams working on different types of innovation in
the same place, reviewing the structure of project teams to make sure they
always have new blood, ensuring that lessons learned from success and failure
are captured and assimilated, and recognizing innovation efforts even when they
fall short of success.
Internal collaboration and experimentation can
take years to establish, particularly in large, mature companies with strong
cultures and ways of working that, in other respects, may have served them
well. Some companies set up “innovation garages” where small groups can work on
important projects unconstrained by the normal working environment while
building new ways of working that can be scaled up and absorbed into the larger
organization. NASA, for example, has ten field centers. But the space agency
relies on the Ames Research Center, in Silicon Valley, to maintain what its
former director, Dr. Pete Worden, calls “the character of rebels” to function
as “a laboratory that’s part of a much larger organization.”
Big companies do not easily reinvent themselves as leading
innovators. Too many fixed routines and cultural factors can get in the way.
For those that do make the attempt, innovation excellence is often built in a
multiyear effort that touches most, if not all, parts of the organization. Our
experience and research suggest that any company looking to make this journey
will maximize its probability of success by closely studying and appropriately
assimilating the leading practices of high-performing innovators. Taken
together, these form an essential operating system for innovation within a
company’s organizational structure and culture.
byMarc de Jong, Nathan Marston, and Erik Roth
FOR EXHIBITS AND VIDEO GO TO http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/innovation/The_eight_essentials_of_innovation?cid=mckgrowth-eml-alt-mkq-mck-oth-1504
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