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Open Innovation for Small Companies
Open innovation may seem to be the preserve of big business. After all, it
is often associated with long established monstrosities like Proctor and Gamble
and IBM. But it is an approach that can be used by all companies, especially
start-ups and small businesses. After all, when a business comprises just the
owner-operator or a handful of partners or employees, it lacks diversity of
mind. Yet, diversity feeds creativity and innovation.
As you doubtless know, open innovation is the action of involving in your innovation
process people from outside your company. It may be as simple as inviting a
trusted supplier to help you develop ideas or as elaborate as launching a web
site to collect innovative proposals from the public. For the most part, however,
open innovation focuses on the fuzzy front end of innovation: that is idea generation
and development.
Initial Considerations
Before you get started on your open innovation actions, you need to consider
a number of issues that will help you determine the best approach as well as
prevent you from making disastrous mistakes.
How Much Are You Willing to Share?
Open innovation means sharing information that most senior managers prefer to
keep secret. It may mean sharing confidential information about how your product
is manufactured, it may mean letting people know your marketing strategy for
the near future, it may reveal certain problems or weaknesses about your company.
That can be hard to do.
By the same token, if you invite the public to share ideas on an open platform,
your competitors can also read those ideas and act upon them!
So, one of the first decisions you have to make is how much and what information
you are willing to share with whom. You need not share everything with everyone.
You may simply decide to involve your suppliers more directly with your product
conception and design process. That would make them privy to confidential information,
but your lawyer can draw up non-disclosure agreements that would ensure anything
you share remains secret. In any event, most suppliers are aware that giving
away their customers’ trade secrets is a sure route to a destroyed reputation.
Intellectual Property
Before you even hint to an outsider that you want to involve her in your innovation
process, you need to consider intellectual property issues. If an outsider suggests
an idea to you, that does not make it yours. Indeed, you could develop such
an idea into a highly successful product only to be sued inside out by the idea
contributor if she can prove ownership of the idea – such as a patent.
The easiest solution is to have a legal expert draw up a disclaimer that grants
your company all rights to any ideas generated in any open innovation initiative
that you launch and have participants sign the agreement before getting their
ideas. If you are capturing ideas from the public via an on-line tool, this
disclaimer is normally an on-line agreement the user accepts by clicking a clearly
labelled button acknowledging that acceptance.
Disclaimers are used by nearly every organisation running an open innovation
innitiative. The downside to them is that some people may be reluctant to share
their incredible ideas with you only to let you profit from them. So your initiative
will need some kind of reward system. But we will get back to that in a moment.
You may also run into the scenario that a patented concept is shared with you.
In this case, the patent owner is almost certainly not going to grant you free
rights to exploit her idea – that’s why she patented it. In such
a scenario, you will have to license from her the right to use the idea.
Incidentally, intellectual property is not normally an issue with internal innovation.
The employment contracts you have with your employees should make it clear than
anything developed on company time is company property. If this is not the case,
or you have no employment contract, you need to do something about this immediately!
Rewards
Your customers, of course, will always be happy to share with you ideas about
how to make your product better – at least in their minds – and
will generally share those ideas with no expectation of reward, beyond a better
product. But such ideas are inevitably incremental improvements on existing
products and not breakthrough innovations that will propel your company into
the international limelight and make you and your shareholders filthy rich.
For the latter sort of ideas, you need to offer some kind of compensation or
reward for ideas and their development.
The kind of rewards you offer depend on the open innovation initiative you
intend to launch and who will be participating. Rewards may be favoured supplier
status or exclusivity deals with suppliers who contribute ideas that you decide
to implement. For instance, a well known pharmaceutical company runs open innovation
initiatives with suppliers. Those suppliers whose ideas are implemented are
required to share ideas with other suppliers, but they get favoured status status
enabling them to do more business with the pharmaceutical company.
When working with the public or customers, however, rewards will usually need
to be money or products. For instance, if you run a competition, you will normally
need to offer a cash prize for the idea or ideas implemented. Alternatively,
if you invite outsiders to participate in a day long brainstorming event, you
will probably be expected to pay them for their time. Such payment could be
in cash or it could be in kind: such as products your company makes.
Actions
There are number of open innovation actions you can launch. These can invite
all the world and their grandmothers to participate or can focus on a select
group or can be restricted to people whom you invite. Each action has its advantages
and disadvantages.
Suggestion Web Sites
One of the most visible open innovation actions these days are suggestion web
sites that invite customers and the general public to submit ideas on how to
improve a company’s products and services. No rewards are offered and
some of these site boast 1,000s and 10,000s of ideas. This may seem awfully
seductive: you just make a web site and wait for your customers to submit gazillions
of ideas.
Don’t. Open suggestion web sites are an administrative disaster! They
give no direction on the kinds of ideas wanted.. They simply ask for ideas.
As a result, very few of the ideas received are in any way relevant to your
business. Worse, you will see many idea submissions repeated again and again
– after all, who is going to review 10,000 ideas to see if someone else
has submitted the same suggestion? And a lot of ideas will actually be complaints
about your products. But those are not the real problem with suggestion web
sites.
The real problem is the 1,000 or 5,000 or 10,000 ideas. Stop and think how
long it would take you and your team to read all of those ideas and determine
which are worth taking further? In my experience it will take 5-10 minutes per
idea on average. So even 1000 ideas will take over 80 hours, or two working
weeks to review! Can you afford that? Moreover, based on my experience, no more
than 2% of the submitted ideas will be actionable – and they will be incremental
product and service improvements unlikely to have more than a trivial effect
on your bottom line.
Public Competitions
A better alternative to simply asking the public for ideas is asking the public
for specific solutions to problems. This concept has been around for ages, but
was recently made famous by the Ansari X Prize which offered a reward of US10
million to the first non-government team to launch a manned spacecraft into
space twice within two weeks. The prize was eventually won by a team led by
Burt Rutan who not only won the prize, but was also bombarded with investment
offers and business proposals.
Since then, companies such as Hypios
and Innocentive have launched similar
initiatives on a smaller level. Companies and non-profits can post on the their
web sites challenges together with prizes which typically range from US$5,000
to US$1,000,000. Problem solvers, either as individuals or teams, can submit
solutions. The submitters of the selected solution win the prize. Many of the
challenges on these sites are highly technical or scientific in nature and require
a detailed solution. But all kinds of problems can be posted. A small handful
of similar sites are also doing business. If you need innovative technical ideas
to solve problems, one of these sites might be a suitable place to solicit ideas.
Of course you could also launch an innovation challenge on your own company
web site and promote it through local media. However, the advantage to using
a well known, international site, that specialises in promoting challenges,
is that you have access to an international collection of expert problem solvers.
The downside can be that substantial rewards will be expected.
Another approach, which can be effective for technical and scientific innovation,
is to partner with a local university and invite students to submit solutions.
This would have the benefit of tapping into the creative expertise of young
people as well as the possibility of identifying potential future employees.
At the same time, you give university students the opportunity to work on real-world
problems and get real-world feedback on their suggestions.
Private Brainstorms
The alternative to inviting the public to suggest ideas is to invite a very
select group of people to suggest ideas as well as begin developing them. This
is something my company has done to great success on a number of occasions.
As an example, a company which makes heavy duty construction equipment was looking
for a way to simplify the design of a complex component. Doing so would reduce
their manufacturing costs as well as increase the reliability of the component
– and hence their equipment. They invited employees from one of their
suppliers as well as their own employees to submit and collaborate on-line using
an innovation process management software (Jenni). Within a couple of weeks,
they had a handful of great ideas, several of which were combined in order to
substantially reduce the complexity of the component. They will save a lot of
money thanks to the ideas.
On another occasion, a European non-profit, working with cultural heritage
sites, wanted to explore how such sites could generate additional value to visitors
by using new technologies. Representatives of museums, tourist attractions and
historical sites went to Brussels for a day of brainstorming. People were put
into smaller, diverse groups and given exercises based around specific creative
challenges. A number of intriguing ideas were generated and have since been
implemented across Europe.
In scenarios such as these, the external participants have a stake in finding
and developing innovative solutions, so no additional reward is necessary. However,
you may also wish to bring together people who have no stake in the solution,
but who have expertise you would like to tap into. In such instances, you may
have to provide a fee for their time. Although this adds to the cost, it does
permit you to bring greater diversity to the problem solving table – and
that can lead to a high level of creativity in the idea generation.
Quick and Dirty Open Innovation
In addition to the structured approaches we’ve looked at already, there
are a number of quick and dirty solutions you can use in order to tap into the
creativity of others. For example, I use Facebook primarily as a means of keeping
in touch with friends, sharing jokes and seeing which on-time classmates look
older and fatter than me! Aside from occasionally promoting my book, Facebook
is a non-business space as far as I am concerned. As a result, it can be a great
place to post questions to a diverse range of people who are often willing to
give feedback.
LinkedIn, the professional networking site, has special interest groups and
forums for asking questions – which can provide places for requesting
ideas and getting suggestions. However, your competitors are probably hanging
out on LinkedIn as well. So you need to think about what you share there.
In addition, there are numerous bulletin boards and specialised networking
web sites where you can post questions and get solutions. Again, others in your
line of business may hang out in such places, so the ideas you get will not
be secret. Nevertheless, you can get some great ideas and feedback from people
in these groups. Moreover, a business which would be a competitor in Johannesburg
is a potential resource for information and ideas if they are based in New York
(assuming you both focus on local markets, of course).
Be Careful About What You Ask Customers
Henry Ford once said that if he had asked his customers what they wanted, they
would have said faster horses. There is great truth in this. Asking customers
what they want will generally lead to product improvement ideas. But it seldom,
if ever, leads to breakthrough innovation. Indeed, if a customer has an incredible
yet viable idea that is a radical improvement on your product, she is more likely
to launch a business making and marketing her improved product than to share
her idea with you. In other words, she is your future competitor!
Nevertheless, you are in the business of pleasing your customers better than
your competitors are capable of doing. So it is important to communicate with
those customers and potential customers in order to ask them questions. But
your questions should be more focused on gathering insights that you can use
to develop radical new products and services.
Great questions to ask include:
“What do you use our product for?” You may find that some customers
are using your product in ways you never intended. Once you know this, you
can look at ways to make the product more suited to this alternative use.
More importantly, you may discover a whole new way to market your product?
You might go one step further and ask “What unusual or unexpected things
do you do with our product?”
“What do you wish to achieve when you use our product?” Clearly
Henry Ford’s customers wanted personal transport that would get them
to their destinations faster.
“What are you unable to do with our product?” This again may
identify that people wish to use your product in ways other than you intended.
Find out what those ways are and identify how you can change the situation.
“What else do you do when you use our product or service?” This
may identify additional opportunities to sell products to your existing customers.
In addition to asking questions, it is useful to visit places, where customers
use your product, and observe. How do they use your product? What else are they
doing? What other products are in this environment? What seems to cause difficulties?
You can also run brainstorming sessions in environments where customers use
your products. Invite in a few customers and suppliers and get to work. Actually
putting yourself into your customers’ shoes while brainstorming is great
for insight and inspiration.
Putting It All Together
Open innovation is an approach every company, from the one-man-band to the world’s
biggest multinationals, can use. It has the advantages of bringing new perspectives,
insights and inspiration to your idea generation and development process. Nevertheless,
you need to consider how much internal information you wish to share with whom
and ensure that you retain – or can license – the intellectual property
to ideas that you receive. You also need to design initiatives that generate
relevant ideas that meet your business needs.
© 2011 jpb.com
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