BOOK SUMMARY 300
Innovation and
Entrepreneurship
·
Summary
written by: Lutfiyya Dhalla
“The temptation in the existing business is always to feed
yesterday and to starve tomorrow. It is, of course, a deadly temptation. The
enterprise that does not innovate inevitably ages and declines. And in a period
of rapid change, such as the present, an entrepreneur period, the decline will
be fast.”
- Innovation and Entrepreneurship, page 30
Peter
Drucker is renowned as the founder of modern day management. The words
“innovation” and “entrepreneurship” are usually associated with chance or luck.
Drucker dismisses this notion and makes it evident that innovation and
entrepreneurship are principles that can be measured and learned if effective
strategies and practices are applied.
The
Golden Egg
Entrepreneurs
Search for, Respond to and Exploit Change as an Opportunity
"Entrepreneurs
see change as the norm and as healthy. Usually, they do not bring about the
change themselves. But—and this defines entrepreneur and entrepreneurship—the
entrepreneur always searches for change, responds to it, and exploits it as an
opportunity."- Innovation and Entrepreneurship, page 28
Innovation
and Entrepreneurship was originally published in 1985, however the practices
and teachings are still relevant today. This book is split into three distinct
sections: the practice of innovation, the practice of entrepreneurship, and
entrepreneurial strategies. In the practice of innovation Drucker discusses the
importance of constantly innovating and actively searching for opportunities,
as it is necessary for survival in the marketplace. In the second section,
Drucker highlights the notion of entrepreneurial leadership and how it is necessary
for any innovations to be successful in business, service institutions or new
ventures. In the third section Drucker shares the best strategies to introduce
innovations to the marketplace.
The
thesis of this book is summarized in the following key themes:
1. Innovation
is purposeful and a discipline
2. Entrepreneurship
is the institution which carries the innovation
3. Management
and entrepreneur strategy is required in order to successfully bring innovation
to the market
Gem #1
The
Seven Main Sources of Innovation
"Entrepreneurs
innovate. Innovation is the specific instrument of entrepreneurship. It is the
act that endows resources with a new capacity to create wealth. Innovation,
indeed, creates a resource. There is no such thing as a “resource” until man finds
a use for something in nature and thus endows it with economic value."-
Innovation and Entrepreneurship, page 30
Through
Drucker’s definition of innovation it is clear that the one who “innovates” is
merely taking something that has already existed previously and positioning it
in a way that will create value and therefore, generate wealth. Systematic
innovation is purposeful and is an organized search for change. Wherever an
innovation is introduced it changes the economy from a supply driven to a demand
driven economy.
In this
section, Drucker explores the seven main sources in which innovative
opportunity can be found. It is possible for the lines between these sources to
become blurred as there is a degree of overlap between them. Drucker describes
them as seven windows, each is a different side of the same building. The seven
sources are:
1. The
unexpected – the unexpected success, the unexpected failure, the
unexpected outside event
2. The
incongruity – between reality as it actually is and reality as it is assumed
to be or as it “ought to be”
3. Innovation
based on process need
4. Changes
in industry structure or market structure that catch everyone
unaware
5. Demographics
6. Changes
in perception, mood, or meaning
7. New
knowledge, both scientific and nonscientific
The
first four of these sources lie within the enterprise, whether it be business,
public-service institution or within an industry or service sector. Which
means they are usually only visible to the people within that industry. They
can be thought of as the symptoms, and therefore reliable indicators of changes
that either have happened or could be pursued.
The
last three sources of innovative opportunity involve the changes that reside
outside the enterprise or industry.
Drucker
goes on to further explain that purposeful innovation—one which results from
analysis, systems and hard work—is the practice of innovation. The foundational
principles of the discipline are:
DOs
1. Start
with an analysis of all the opportunities: think through the sources of
innovative activity.
2. Innovation
is conceptual and perceptual. Go out to look, to ask, to listen.
3. To be
effective, be simple and be focused.
4. Effective
innovations start small. Do one specific thing and then be able to adapt.
5. Aim at
leadership in an industry or market. If not, you will create an opportunity for
the competition.
DON’Ts
1. Don’t
try to be clever: aim at ordinary human beings.
2. Don’t
diversify, don’t splinter, don’t do too many things at once.
3. Don’t
innovate for the future: innovate for the present!
Gem #2
Treat
Entrepreneurship as a Duty
"Entrepreneurial
businesses treat entrepreneurship as a duty. They are disciplined about it they
work at it, they practice it."- Innovation and Entrepreneurship, page 150
Drucker
makes it clear that entrepreneurship and innovation can be achieved by any
business if it is a priority and consciously strived for. Both disciplines can
be learned through effort and commitment.
When it
comes to business operations of any size, there will always be conflicting
priorities or a daily crisis that must be dealt with right away and cannot be
postponed. This is why it is pertinent for the disciplines of innovation and
entrepreneurship to be deeply rooted and baked into the organization and set as
a priority.
The art
of entrepreneurial management requires policies and practices in four major
areas:
1. The
organization must be receptive to innovation and perceive change as an
opportunity rather than a threat. Policies and practices are necessary to
create an entrepreneurial climate in the business.
2. The
systematic measurement or appraisal of a company’s performance as an
entrepreneur and innovator is mandatory, as well as built-in learning to
improve performance.
3. Entrepreneurial
management requires specific practices pertaining to organizational structure,
to staffing and managing and to compensation, incentives and rewards.
4. There
are some “DONT’s” in entrepreneurial management
The
three core fundamental “DONT’s” that Drucker advises are:
·
Do not mix managerial units and entrepreneurial ones.
·
Innovative efforts that take the existing business out of its
own field are rarely successful.
·
It is almost always futile to avoid making one’s own business
entrepreneurial by “buying in,” that is by acquiring small entrepreneurial ventures.
Through
the principles of innovation, the principles of entrepreneurship and
entrepreneurial strategies Drucker has taken the notion of innovation and
entrepreneurship and bottled it into a formula.
When it
comes to the essentialism of innovation and entrepreneurship, Drucker states
“In fact if today’s products or services do not generate a continuing and large
revenue stream, the enterprise will not be able to make the substantial invest
in tomorrow that innovation requires.”
It is
essential for the future of the business to focus on the day-to-day business
operations but also invest in their future through consistently innovating and
creating a culture of entrepreneurial spirit.
In
today’s corporate driven society we view entrepreneurs as risk takers. Drucker
however sees it the opposite, that an entrepreneur is not a risk taker per se,
but rather one who has managed the risk that they are going to be embarking on.
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