There is no generally accepted definition of innovation. Every industry and every department perceive it differently. How do you define innovation?
For me innovation is about letting go of the past and your so-called past successes for the benefit of the future. It is a mindset and involves curiosity – and has to do with your outlook on the world. Innovation is about exploring the unknown and daring to challenge the conventional ways of doing things.
When speaking of innovations, I think it is useful to be clear about what we are implying. In this regard I am fond of the terminology introduced by Clayton Christensen, who makes the following distinctions:
• Sustaining innovations: innovations that create limited jobs or growth and make things a little better – hence replicative and requiring limited capital.
• Efficiency innovations: innovations that eliminate jobs and create no growth – hence doing “more with less” and freeing up capital.
• Market creating innovations: innovations that create jobs and growth – hence using capital.
Generally when I think of innovations, I have the latter in mind – which involves disruption. Disruption implies the creation of something new – and, to quote Schumpeter, entails “creative destruction”. Disruptions certainly create new jobs, while also destroying old ones, as a natural part of evolution.
Larger types of corporations generally tend to focus on the former two types of innovation. Both are arguably necessary – we naturally wish to sustain our previously gained competitive advantages. Larger corporations also tend to invest in something relatively known – which brings comfort – rather than venturing into the unknown. Disruptions, on the other hand, challenge our comfort zones.
With this in mind, I would recommend maintaining a balanced portfolio of innovation types, while creating customised nurturing environments – ecosystems – for each type.
How do you identify, evaluate and prioritise relevant trends and technologies? How do you react to disruptive technologies and business models?
First of all, I see my role primarily as finding ways to disrupt BillerudKorsnäs before someone else has the chance to. You could compare this to taking a vaccine shot if you will.
Second, we want to avoid falling into similar traps that other larger corporations have historically fallen into – where innovations certainly were being worked on, but where the corporation was not able to switch and overcome their old business logic, hence failing to adapt and capitalising on new technologies and trends.
How do you do this?
You need to set up different and customised nurturing grounds – ecosystems – for the various types of innovations that you manage in your portfolio, as they all have different requirements and benefit from different setups. In this context, the culture, mindset and business logic all play an important role. Therefore, consider to what extent you are creating a supportive and exploratory culture where mistakes are not only allowed but even encouraged – failed experiments and lessons learned. This is also the reason I am a great believer in the following definition of competitive advantage: the ability to learn faster than your competitors.
More specifically:
• I identify technologies by using a combination of push and pull. On the one hand, you need to inform the world what your mission is – what you are trying to achieve and why. On the other hand, you also need to figure out and create systems to scout for interesting people and relevant technologies that fit your mission – by applying search areas, opportunity filters and investment theses.
• I evaluate technologies primarily by strategic fit – what are they selling versus what are we interested in buying, and gauging how good the fit between the two is. It comes down to creating maximum alignment of interest between the two over the longer term.
• Finally, I prioritise technologies by processing the pipeline. If you have done a solid job in the previous steps, then this becomes straightforward.
Ultimately, I react to disruptive technologies and business models with curiosity, awe and inspiration. Disruption is simple, yet hard to attain. It seems obvious once launched – yet so hard to come up with beforehand. Most disruptions are elegant and mostly come down to rebundling – bundling and unbundling the past – connecting the dots in different ways. This type of work typically involves seeing the larger picture, while capitalising on market dynamics, consumer shifts and technology advance. Some timing and luck are usually also required. To be able to work on these things is truly a blessing in disguise.
Innovation needs a structured organisation, but if it is too rigid it can hinder innovation. How can it be managed without slowing things down?
This is why I believe in the concept of ambidexterity – in combination with a portfolio of different types of innovation, as described earlier. What do I mean by ambidexterity?
Similarly to how your right and left hands interact in co-existence, so should your ability to manage your current and future businesses in parallel. In other words, your left and right hands fulfil complementary roles for the benefit of the whole – so should your old and future business models for your organisation. This relates to what we touched upon earlier – the ability to switch and overcome old business logics, along with the ability to disrupt yourself before someone else.
This is why you need to create an environment for ambidexterity throughout your organisation – something that starts with the board of directors selecting the CEO for the long term who also understands the necessity of ambidexterity and creates an environment that enables it. On the one hand you need to defend current market share and secure steady growth quarter by quarter – your current business. On the other hand you need to dare venturing into the unknown, testing many experiments and failing plenty, to gain lessons learned and perhaps even stumble on scenarios where you directly or indirectly would disrupt your old business model logic in the process – your future business.
An immoderate example perhaps in big corporations today, yet something that might be applied sooner or later, is the introduction of a chief entrepreneur – as described by Alexander Osterwalder in the Harvard Business Review. According to him, the chief entrepreneur oversees the future business – typically financed by the current business – as rigorously as the CEO manages the current business. Both report to the board. It will be interesting to see any upcoming early adopters catching on to this type of organisational design.
On a similar note, I recall Guy Kawasaki talking about the dynamics between the Apple 2 and Macintosh parts of the organisation back in the days. Apparently, the Apple 2 people – who were highly successful at the time and financing the Macintosh people – were not even allowed to enter the Macintosh part of the building – or even find out what the Macintosh people were doing in their labs. This could certainly be regarded extreme behaviour, yet it serves to illuminate important aspects of truly ambidextrous organisations.
With this in mind, consider what steps you and your organisation are willing to take to embrace ambidexterity.
What are the main criteria for developing an innovative corporate culture? What are the main barriers?
Culture is an underlying and recurring theme in my work and I believe it all starts with the vision and idea of the founder, via the board and CEO all the way through the organisation, and most importantly the people who choose to join the mission and quest for a brighter future. When an organisation has alignment all the way through the ranks, this shines through. You can tell that the people are aligned and dedicated to the mission of the organisation. You can feel the culture in the walls, enforced by storytelling, rituals and heroes. The people all understand what you are trying to achieve and why. There is no shilly-shallying. Rest assured, this does not just happen by chance. Rather it is something that comes as a result of very dedicated, determined and congruent leadership practice.
Consider what type of people you are repelling and attracting to your organisation. People come and people go – this is quite natural in any organisation. The key is to look for who is joining and who is leaving. Consider what qualities you are looking for and understand what people are looking for when considering you as an employer. I would say that it mostly comes down to storytelling, rituals and empowerment.
Let me share an example with you that I discovered recently while listening to an interview between Reid Hoffman and Eric Schmidt as part of the “Blitzscaling” series at Stanford.
Schmidt goes to the local Google cafeteria on a Friday afternoon to grab some food after a long day at work. An employee sits nearby and they begin to chat. The employee states that he has thought about a solution to solve general artificial intelligence but needs 10,000 servers over the weekend to fix it – this was a big deal at the time. Schmidt ultimately agrees after a few minutes. Note that this decision involved a huge risk to the current business in order to serve an experiment and potentially benefit the future business of Google. Long story short, many years later, the employee has not yet solved the conundrum, yet remains a faithful employee at Google.
To me this story is very powerful and illuminates what I mean by culture, storytelling and empowerment. This story is about daring to venture into the unknown and believing in your people. It is about walking the talk and nurturing the correct behaviour. As Steve Jobs said, you hire smart people, not to tell them what to do, but rather having them tell you what to do.
Therefore, consider to what extent you give your people the right conditions to create magic. Are you empowering and equipping your people with the tools required to fulfil their roles. Are you creating the right environment – as Simon Sinek would argue? Ultimately, it comes down to cultural fit – whether you have created alignment between the organisational needs and the people who you have attracted and who joined the organisation to fulfil its mission.
Product and service innovation are done by nearly every company. Recently, firms increasingly try to do business model innovation. What are the three biggest risks of doing business model innovations and what are the success factors in order to overcome these hurdles?
I think that most product and service type of innovations generally match the two types of innovations described earlier – efficiency and sustaining innovations – while business model innovations are generally more inclined towards market-creating innovations.
In terms of managing the risks of business model innovations, to sum up parts of what we have talked about earlier, you need to:
• Be able to understand and manage ambidexterity.
• Work with storytelling, rituals and empowerment.
• Be able to overcome your old business logic while forgetting about past successes.
With these in place, you create a solid nurturing ground for future business model innovation.
The greater risk would be not daring to step out of your comfort zone and change your old business. Instead you play wait and see – staying in your comfort zone, relying on old successes and making slight improvements over time. Suddenly one day you wake up and realise that someone stepped in and disrupted you, taking your customers away and making you obsolete. There are plenty examples throughout corporate history where this has been the case.
Amazon, on the other hand, constitutes a great example of a big corporation with a culture of charting unknown territories and challenging your old business logic, while capitalising on new opportunities and forgetting about past successes. Amazon Prime is certainly a good example of business model innovation and Amazon Web Services an example of overcoming your old business logic.
In this context, I would consider it good practice to have a dedicated team with the sole role of figuring out ways to disrupt your current business. Remember ambidexterity – you need the right hand to survive today, and you need the left hand to feed you tomorrow. In other words, both co-exist in an ambidextrous equilibrium.
With this in mind – what are you going to do next?
This article was first published on Innoboard