INNOVATION SPECIAL How Attention From Top Managers Impacts Innovation
When
companies acquire external knowledge, they need to make sure management
attention doesn’t wane.
It
seems strange to buy something without using it, but people do it all the
time. Some buy gym memberships, planning on
changing their lives, but never get around to using them. Companies too make
purchases believing that the purchase itself is enough to make a change at the
firm. When licensing external knowledge, for example, management might believe
that once the knowledge has been acquired, it is being used efficiently. But,
like that unused gym card, buying outside knowledge on its own doesn’t mean
that it is put to the best use. It needs to be integrated into the firm for the
best result.
Licensing
external knowledge to create new products
Licensing outside
knowledge is now a factor in the way that we
innovate. More and more firms are moving from doing everything themselves to
bringing in ideas from the outside through purchasing wholesale packages of
knowledge. Two different licensing options are common – either standard
licences, in which knowledge is bought without further engagement from the
data/knowledge creator, or partnership/embedded licences, which establish a
relationship with the provider.
In
a recent article in Research Policy, “Standard
vs. partnership-embedded licensing: Attention and the relationship between
licensing and product innovations”, my co-authors,
Thomas Klueter and Denise Dunlap, and I looked at the two ways innovative
companies successfully use external knowledge. Companies can either engage in a
partnership-type of licence, investing in cross-company teams, or they can
purchase a standard licence for external knowledge. And the success of bringing
in and using this knowledge effectively depends on the attention it gets from
management.
We
know that partnership licences, often more expensive and definitely more time
consuming, have an important impact on innovation. What we were surprised to
find in our study is that even standard licences may inspire the same level of
innovation, as long as managers give their attention to the project at hand.
A
conscious choice
We
often think about innovation as lightbulb moments or something done entirely by
R&D teams, discounting leadership. But leaders, and the attention they
bestow, can have an important impact on revolutionary products or ideas. One
example of an out-of-this-world innovation was the race to the moon: NASA
credits the vision of John F. Kennedy as a motivator in
its work. Kennedy didn’t direct the project himself, but he spoke about it,
giving it attention which then focused the rank and file to reach for the moon.
Leaders,
and the way they direct their attention, impact innovation. Yet one of the
scarcest resources in an organisation is attention. CEOs and directors have
overfull agendas and heavy priority lists. Of course, they can’t pay attention
to everything; they need to make conscious choices about how to direct their
focus. Attention from the top affects all activities in a firm – from responses
to innovation, to the different technologies they choose to pay attention to.
In my previous research,
I have examined the way headquarters allocate attention; specifically, the way
their focus impacts isolated subsidiaries or how companies tend not to pay
attention to external ideas that challenge their existing dominant logic.
Attention
influences the extent to which outside information will be transformed into product
innovation. Our study found this to be true for radical innovation, such as
fundamentally novel drugs targeting a cure for cancer, not incremental
modifications to a product.
Two
types of attention
When
it comes to creating innovative products, attention has multiple aspects. We
looked at two types of attention: top-down (the top ranks) and bottom-up (e.g.
scientists in a R&D lab).
For
our study, we selected the top 50 global bio-pharmaceutical companies in 1997,
and then traced their licensing agreements from 1997 to 2006.
We
measured bottom-up attention based on R&D units’ patenting focus. If they
had patents spread out over many therapeutic areas, we recorded their attention
as low; those R&D units that concentrated on a few therapeutic areas were deemed
able to give more attention to their particular projects.
Bottom-up
attention concerns trying to identify and measure other tasks a team is being
asked to do. When people work on too many projects, there is a tremendous
amount of competition for their attention, making them less likely to pay
attention to external knowledge.
Top-down
attention was harder to calculate. We searched the most comprehensive news
sources (e.g. Factiva) for press announcements, then news articles related to
the licensing agreements we initially found. We controlled for many factors:
key characteristics of the licensing deal, late stage of the innovation, the
size of the deal, complexity and many others.
Attention
by perspective
Attention
from top management doesn’t have to be the CEO directly assigning a task or
participating in meetings. It’s an acknowledgement from the top that a
particular project is important. The mere fact that top management is paying
attention is enough.
We
found management attention, both bottom-up and top-down, important when
bringing in external knowledge with a standard licence in order to impact a
truly innovative project. Having this attention increases the likelihood of a
standard licence leading to a radical innovation because the outside knowledge
is more likely to be used.
Top
management has a sizable role because not only do they influence their
organisation, but they also affect assignment workloads, or the direction of
their R&D teams. Managers know that if they assign too many projects or if
the company is working with too many different technological areas, R&D
teams are less likely to benefit from the external knowledge they bring in.
The
worst-case scenario is when an organisation purchases an external knowledge
licence for an area that's already overloaded, and with a top management team
that doesn't pay attention to it. In this scenario, external knowledge is very
likely to fall through the cracks.
The
best-case scenario is when top management is already paying attention to the
licensed knowledge and the R&D team receiving it is focused and not
overextended. When a company is looking for a major innovation, management
must recognise its own importance.
Knowledge
is just the beginning
Remember
that our findings have to do with radical innovations, not improvements in an
app or tweaks to existing products. The CEO doesn’t have to drive a marketing
campaign about an innovative project to have an impact. It may suffice for
top-level managers to mention the project in a company meeting. Since attention
is a scarce resource, when the top brass expresses an interest in a project,
people in the organisation do notice.
When a company
buys outside knowledge, it’s vital for managers not to fall into the trap of
believing that that purchase is a completed event. Buying knowledge
off-the-shelf does not necessarily make for innovation. Managers must
continue to pay attention to what happens next if their company is to create
something completely different. Attention is a key ingredient of innovatio
Felipe Monteiro, INSEAD Affiliate Professor of Strategy | November 28, 2017
Read more at
https://knowledge.insead.edu/strategy/how-attention-from-top-managers-impacts-innovation-7801?utm_source=INSEAD+Knowledge&utm_campaign=6bb2a74dab-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_11_30&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e079141ebb-6bb2a74dab-249840429#zHD1zwXP37dbBpFX.99
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