THE FOUR KINDS OF CORPORATE INNOVATION
It seems everyone is talking about corporate innovation these days. Erkki Liikanen,
the European Commissioner in charge of the Information Society and Enterprise
Directorates General can hardly open his mouth without speaking of European
business's need to be more innovative. Nevertheless, to look at all corporate
innovation as being the same kind of innovation is dangerous. Defining categories
of innovation not only clarifies the kinds of innovation necessary, but also
points out approaches for promoting appropriate innovation within the organisation.
Corporate innovation can be divided into four categories:
1. customer oriented innovation
2. product innovation
3. process innovation
4. strategic innovation
Let's look at each.
1. Customer oriented innovation
“The customer comes first.” This is just as true with innovation
as with anything else in business. If you cannot serve your customers cleverly,
you might as well not bother with innovation at all.
Customer oriented innovation refers to all aspects of corporate-customer interaction,
including: marketing, sales, delivery, customer service and everything in between.
Although this comprises a diverse range of activities from advertising to after-sales
service, the focus should always be the same: how to better serve your customers.
Better advertising can provide more information to customers as well as remind
existing customers that they made the right choice by your products. Better
after-sales service can make all the difference between a making a single sale
and developing a long-term relationship of multiple sales.
These days, as there is less and less to differentiate one product from another,
customer oriented innovation is one area where your firm can demonstrate a real
lead over the competition.
Moreover, every act of product or strategic innovation generally requires customer
oriented innovation to ensure innovations are successfully delivered to the
customers.
2. Product innovation
When most people think of corporate innovation, they think of product innovation,
in particular, launching that stunning new product that brings in billions of
Euro (or dollars or pounds or yen...), makes them industry leaders and puts
them on top of Ingvar Kamprad and Bill Gates in the Fortune list of wealthy
individuals.
While such innovation is nice, it is equally, if not more, important to solicit
incremental product innovation from your company. Small improvements in your
product are not only easier to come by, but can help keep you one step ahead
of the competition. Moreover, small improvements are easier to sell and generally
do not require big changes in your business.
But when that big idea for a radically new product - that will knock the competition's
socks off - comes, be sure you have the means of recognising it (previous issues
of Report 103 have looked at big innovations that big companies have made and
lost because they did not recognise what they had invented).
A radically new product also demands an innovative marketing approach that
will allow you to bring the product to market successfully. Introducing a radically
new product to your customers is in large part about educating your customers
to your product and helping them realise how much they need or want your product
(see 1. Customer oriented innovation above).
3. process innovation
Process innovation may sound comparatively dull, but it is the bread and butter
of corporate innovation. In most large companies lots of people are involved
in internal processes that allow the company to run smoothly and legally. These
are the people in middle management, human resources, accounting, finance, administration,
and the like. In general, they recognise processes that do not work well and
have ideas about how to make those processes more efficient. Sometimes, of course,
they are wrong. But often they are right. Their ideas improve efficiency and
help companies save money. If a company has operational expenses of Euro 1 billion
annually and an accountant comes up with an idea that shaves costs by 0.5%,
it translates into a savings off Euro 5 million – nothing to sneeze at.
Likewise, 1,000 employees each with ideas worth Euro 10,000 in cost savings
each will save the company Euro 10 million.
4. Strategic innovation
Strategic innovation is rare because it is about fundamental changes in how
a company operates. And in a large company, that is about the most difficult
task of all. Strategic innovation requires an innovative CEO with vision and
determination. Jack Welch transformed GE from an old fashioned American industrial
company into a powerful global services company.
Jorma Ollila transformed Nokia from being a Finnish conglomerate with a forestry
background into becoming the world's leading mobile telephone manufacturer.
While Messrs Welch's and Ollila's innovations involved all of four kinds of
innovations, successful strategic innovation was central to their success.
Strategic innovation may not necessarily come from CEOs. But visionary CEOs
are nevertheless necessary for implementing strategic innovation across the
enterprise.
General comments about corporate innovation
One of the biggest mistakes a company can make is to assume that only people
in relevant departments can provide innovative ideas for a particular kind of
innovation. Believing that only the research department can have ideas about
product innovation or that only management can have ideas about process innovation
is wrong.
If top management of any company were to place listening devices in the staff
canteen or the staff's favourite pub, they would quickly discover...
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that everyone in the company has ideas about all aspects of the company.
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that many of those ideas are well thought out.
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that the people with ideas come from all divisions and all levels
of the corporate hierarchy.
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that many of those ideas are worth good money to the company.
Only by installing an idea management or innovation strategy that ENCOURAGES
everyone in the firm to contribute ideas can top management truly maximise their
firm's innovation potential. For more information about our idea management
solution, visit http://www.jpb.com/jenni/.
Based on an article (by Jeffrey Baumgartner) published in Report103,
4 May 2004 issue
© 2004 Jeffrey Baumgartner
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