10 Steps to Boost Corporate
Innovation
by Jeffrey Baumgartner
| 1.
| Know What Innovation Means
Before you start on the path to innovation, be sure you know what
innovation is and is not. A lot of CEOs say, “innovation is
our number one priority.” Yet, I suspect many of them would
be hard put to actually define innovation in simple terms. Don't
worry, the definition is simple. Innovation is the implementation
of creative ideas in order to add value to the firm, usually through
increased income, reduced operational costs or both.
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2.
| Innovation Is a Group Thing
Understand that innovation is not an individual thing. It is a
corporate thing. Although innovation writers like to talk about
individual innovators, they usually mean individual creative thinkers,
or individuals who come up with clever ideas that become the basis
of innovations. But an idea is not an innovation. It is only the
beginning. In business, ideas need to be evaluated for viability,
developed into concepts and turned into reality. A new product idea,
for example, will likely involve developing prototypes, seeking
feedback, testing functionality, setting up production facilities,
seeking suppliers and much more. Each of these steps requires the
participation of numerous different people, all of whom contribute
to the overall innovation process.
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3.
| Define Your Innovation Goals
Just doing innovation is not enough. You need also to have clear
innovation goals to shoot for. Fortunately, these goals tend to
be rather similar to strategy and business goals. So, it is usually
a simple matter of reformulating these. Typical innovation goals
might be to ensure that 25% of your product line is replaced annually;
or to improve process efficiency by 5% per year; or that your firm
is the technology leader in your sector; or that your company achieves
a billion dollar turnover by 2012. Once you have clarified these
goals, you will find innovation initiatives are a breeze to set
up.
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4.
| Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is
If innovation is your firm's number one priority, then you have
surely allotted a number one priority sized budget for that innovation,
haven't you? After all, you need to set up an innovation process,
put a team in charge, invest in innovation tools and probably invest
in training. That all requires money. Moreover, you need to make
a pot of money available for implementing highly risky yet potentially
highly innovative ideas. After all, the ideas with the greatest
innovation potential are by necessity radically different to business
as usual. This means they are also risky. If you are going to aim
for breakthrough innovation, then you need to provide budget for
developing and implementing breakthrough ideas.
Finally, bear in mind that if your innovation budget is zero, the
attention your managers will give to innovation will also be zero!
On the other hand, if there is budget for innovation, you can be
sure your managers will be scrambling to nab some of that budget
for innovation in their own divisions.
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5.
| Work on Your Innovation Culture
For creativity and innovation to thrive, you need to have a corporate
culture that nurtures creative thinking, sees mistakes as on the
job training and embraces every step of the innovation process.
Sadly, very few firms actually do this. For instance, what is the
typical response to an intern who announces a wild and crazy idea
during a unit meeting? Is it (a) to laugh knowingly and explain
that there is no budget, the CEO would never like it and that the
intern clearly does not know how things work in your company? Or
is it (b) to congratulate her on a clever idea, discuss the challenges
that would be faced in implementing that idea and asking her to
work out how she could improve the idea so that it can overcome
the challenges? If your answer is (a), you have a very typical firm
in which innovation is talked about on the surface, but discouraged
in practice. If your answer is (b), you probably don't need to read
this article anyway! Your firm is already well on its way to being
an innovative leader – if it is not there already!
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6.
| Establish Diverse Teams
Diversity is not only politically correct, it is also innovatively
correct! Diversity of membership brings a broader range of knowledge,
experience, thinking and creativity to any team. You should therefore
ensure that project teams, problem solving teams and all teams that
are expected to contribute to your innovation process are as diverse
as possible.
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7.
| Collaborative Tools
Collaborative tools can help support your innovation process, particularly
if your firm has hundreds or thousands of employees. In smaller
firms, Wikis, blogs and shared documents permit a lot of collaboration
with little technological investment. In larger firms, innovation
process management tools can help ensure cross enterprise collaboration,
facilitate collaboration by predefined teams as well as ad hoc virtual
teams and provide a detailed record of your innovation results.
But be careful to choose tools and use them to achieve your innovation
goals. Many tools might be great for generating and sharing ideas,
but if those ideas are completely irrelevant to your goals, they
will not help your firm become more innovative.
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8.
| Make Mistakes
Make mistakes and learn from them. Most great innovations are built
upon mountains of mistakes. As long as you can identify ideas that
will not work relatively early in their implementations, you can
kill them before they eat up too much budget. You can then congratulate
the team responsible for their efforts, evaluate what went wrong,
learn lessons and try again. But as soon as mistakes cost people
jobs, no one will dare to try anything very radical – and
that will kill all but incremental innovation.
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9.
| Implement
Innovation is not about ideas or creativity or training programmes.
It is about implementing creative ideas in order to add value. If
your firm is reluctant to implement highly creative ideas, then
your entire innovation process will be little more than a creative
thinking exercise. Moreover, if employees note that highly creative
ideas are routinely not implemented, they will not bother sharing
or developing such ideas.
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10.
| Evaluate and Improve
Your innovation process can also improve through innovation! That's
why you need to review the process and the results on a regular
basis. Moreover, use your innovation process for generating, developing
and implementing ideas for improving that innovation process!
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If you are looking for a tool to support the innovation process in
your medium to large firm, then check out Jenni
Innovation Process Management: the only idea management solution
designed to align idea generation with your corporate strategy!
By Jeffrey Baumgartner
© 2010 jpb.com
Brussels
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