Don t Just Survive Thrive: Leading Innovation in Good Times and Bad
Executive Summary — The financial
crisis provides a sobering reminder of what happens when innovation fails to
drive productive economic growth. For over a decade, money from around the
world poured into the United States seeking innovation. Despite these massive
investments, when adjusted for inflation, U.S. GDP grew slowly with much of the
growth coming from government, professional, and business services, including
real estate and outsourcing. What's more, inflation adjusted wages stalled for
many, even as consumer spending increased. This paper argues that innovation is
not a side business to a real business: rather, innovation is the foundation of
a successful business. Key concepts include:
- Entrepreneurs can be found and a culture of entrepreneurship can be developed in companies of any size and age.
- Entrepreneurial leaders must relentlessly—but not recklessly—pursue opportunity. They must look beyond the resources currently controlled to harness the power, resources, and reach of their organizations and networks.
- Breakthrough innovations that change people's lives and the very structure and power dynamics of industries cannot be managed as "silos," tucked away in corporate, university, or government research labs, in incubators, or within venture capital funded entrepreneurial start-ups. Access to the marketplace is needed to help speed commercialization and adoption.
- Emerging opportunities must be nurtured and the transition to high growth must be managed. Once breakthrough innovations catch hold, growth must be funded and managed to exploit the full value of the opportunity.
- Incremental innovations must ensure that businesses that have passed through the high-growth stage can continue to deliver the resources, capabilities, and platforms needed to fuel the emerging opportunities of the future.
- Different organizational structures, cultures, governance and risk management systems, and leadership styles are needed to manage the business innovation lifecycle from an initial idea to a sustainable business that leverages entry position and capabilities to exploit the full potential for growth and evolution over time.
Author
Abstract
Battered by contracting markets and
frozen credit, many businesses today are fighting for survival. Indeed, the
current global financial crisis provides a mandate for restructuring. But
survival is not the end goal. In fact, cost cutting and restructuring are
simply the first steps in repositioning and leading a company and industry
through the crisis and in defining how business will be conducted in the
future. This paper describes how IBM managed to, not just survive the crisis it
faced in the early 1990s, but to reposition the company to lead the industry.
The powerful lesson from the IBM story is that innovation is not a side
business to running the real business. Innovation is the business. Breakthrough
innovations that change people's lives and the very structure and power
dynamics of industries can't be managed as "silos," tucked away in
corporate, university, or government research labs, in incubators, or within
venture capital funded entrepreneurial start-ups. Access to the marketplace is
needed to help speed commercialization and adoption. Emerging opportunities
must be nurtured and the transition to high growth must be managed. Once breakthrough
innovations catch hold, growth must be funded and managed to exploit the full
value of the opportunity. And finally, incremental innovations must ensure that
businesses that have passed through the high growth stage can continue to
deliver the resources, capabilities, and platforms needed to fuel the emerging
opportunities of the future. This business lifecycle view of innovation
requires new leadership and organizational models and new approaches to
managing risk and uncertainty.
by Lynda M. Applegate and J. Bruce
Harreldhttp://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/6186.html
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