
Why we can't innovate
- “We know the customer well. We’ll know when they want something new.” In fact, this is almost never true. The number of executives that I work with in B2B or B2C industries that are really up-to-date with their customers’ needs is incredibly small, and the notion of a customer journey is something that is not commonly articulated, especially in B2B markets. A colleague told me that last week, among a group of 45 senior executives in a Scandinavian B2B market leader, only 12 had ever been to a customer site. How can we be customer-experience-centric if we have no first-hand familiarity with what this means, or how it works?
- “The future is forever, but the present is this quarter.” I hear this frequently. We are so short-term results driven that we are forced to put off for the future good ideas whose time has come. The growing problem with this, among so many, is that today’s future is shorter than it used to be. With accelerating innovation cycles, industry convergence and lower barriers to entry, S-curves are shortening, and, as a result, the future is advancing quicker.
- There’s no sense of urgency. This is almost never explicitly articulated, but you can feel it in the cadence of the company’s work, or the recognition that the short run is always trumping the long. This affects nearly every aspect of an organization’s life. When BCG speaks of organizational vitality, it emphasizes the that the vital company builds its future through developing growth options, which are generated by top management thinking differently and the firm supporting this new thinking by investing in the right capabilities. Companies without a sense of urgency don’t do such things. As a result, they have few, if any, real growth options.
- “I’m not in the innovative group.” Too many of the organizations that we see are so tied-up in their organizational structures, processes and ownerships that they are unable to recognize and harness the innate creativity that resides within their workforce. Turf-battles, expertise domains, certification, and assumptions about appropriate experience all get in the way of addressing an innovation challenge in the most effective way possible. In all too many instances, “innovation resumes” are studied with the attention typically accorded to filling a seat in a classical symphony orchestra, while jazz and rock groups who are also filled with considerable talent, succeed on the basis of what someone can do next, not what they did in the past. Frequently, the least impressive innovation groups are the ones most insular and procedural in terms of hiring.
- We are too process-oriented to be wild and crazy. Innovativeness thrives with discipline. The most innovative groups typically rely upon processes to ensure that their craziness is best-expressed. Andy Boynton and I, in our Virtuoso Teams project, discovered that innovation magic occurs at the very moment that each member of an innovation team believes that they have full freedom to add their best ideas, while top management believes that it is in complete control; both, at the same time.
- Our margins are too thin to innovate. In fact, this may be the most frequent excuse heard for not pursuing big innovation and the best response to such a shortsighted view is “stay with this attitude and you’ve not seen anything in the way of thin margins, yet!”
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