Posts

Innovation Fails Because…

2014

The widespread interest in innovation is also combined with a sense of frustration. Many studies show that the success rate for innovation initiatives is not very high. Umair Hoque recently conducted an interesting experiment on Fast Company. He asked readers to complete the sentence – “Innovation Fails because…..”

Many people responded and continue to respond – Here are some recent results. The article lists the responses in the form of a running list. That is not very helpful, since I would have preferred to see the patterns, if there were any.

Some time back, I had shared a couple of presentations on Slideshare – “Modes in Innovation”, and “Innovation Praxis”. I decided to evaluate these responses using the frameworks I had proposed. The analysis is in the embedded document here below:

Failure-of-Innovation.docx

The classification of the responses in the various categories is not absolutely perfect or accurate, but it is a fairly good first approximation.

What is interesting to me is how people perceive why innovation fails. A disproportionate number of responses attribute the failure of innovation to issues related to what I would call innovation culture or ‘Practice’ in the terminology of our framework, with some attribution to poorly designed Programs.

What is even more interesting is how many of the other issues that actually contribute to Innovation success, such as proper Framing, Mobilization or Staging are or are not mentioned. There is almost no mention, for example, of the importance of Discovery – assessing what the current conditions are and whether or not the systemic elements that would contribute to success are present.

Culture is indeed one of the most important cause of failure across an enterprise. However, I hesitate to put all the blame on the shoulders of culture. There are many other factors that are necessary to ensure success and it is quite clear from this set of responses that people are not widely aware of what those might be. Some of the people who perhaps should know, such as the authors of these articles and Fast Company, should perhaps structure these responses and provide guidance to people to see how their understanding lacks a total systemic understanding of what innovation is. What use are such surveys otherwise?

Innovation fails because people do not understand its systemic nature and are not aware of the factors that need to be paid attention to in order to make it succeed.

Just how many wearables might we wear?

2014

I was just looking at a Fast Company article on the new Ditto – a device with the form factor perhaps of a tie clip, that buzzes, kind of in synch with your phone. My first thought was – yet another! How many such devices will there be a place for on our persons?

wearables

I for one cannot imagine not only the proliferation of devices, but more importantly the challenge of managing them physically and integrating them functionally.

I am inclined to think that this has to be a platform play (that is not a new idea!). The eventual winners will be integration platforms that anchor application and sensor ecosystems.

While early versions work with phones and other devices, we should see some form of co-evolution between for example the phone and the wearable platform device – some functions moving from the phone to the device and vice-versa over time.

I have to wonder though, if that end-state vision would discourage entrepreneurs in the field today and those who continue to introduce new devices from venturing into this field. Is the platform a foregone conclusion – or is the future of the wearable as a device on the body still open?

I will allow for many possibilities since we are still fairly early in the evolution of the idea.

Digital Innovation – A Concise Take

July 24, 2014

This is a very short take on what I think is the essence of digital innovation:

We can now instrument ever smaller parts of the world, make trapped facets and attributes of this world fluid, autonomous, smarter and sometimes even intelligent. We can interconnect our world for meaningful communications, transactions and commerce, and through these interconnections, relate to our humanity and sociality, and reconfigure these relationships in real time and often on the fly, making this world of ours transparent and accessible at all scales, through simple ubiquitous interfaces where the interaction at all touch points complements our being and creates extraordinary experiences.

NewImage

(Image Source: http://bschool.pepperdine.edu/studentblog/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/digital-innovation.jpg)

Now that is a mouthful and more – but that does it for me!

Strategic Latency – Foresight to Avert Disruption

July 24, 2014

Over the years as I have thought about strategic foresight, I have often coupled the idea with the notion of latency. To me latency implied the time it took for an enterprise to respond to a contextual shift or event. Built into that idea was the notion that the concept of latency differs from enterprise to enterprise and that enterprises can be designed reduce their latency to foreseen events and contexts.

Military Image of Ukraine

I came across an article this morning in the Diplomatic Courier, that talks about China’s efforts to reduce its strategic latency, particularly with respect to defence technologies, and its drive to innovate.

Indeed when it comes to responding to threats, it is absolutely critical to reduce the latency if in fact you cannot anticipate.

However, I wonder if today there is a specific technology that you can innovate for in preparation. It is no longer a technology by itself that is a source of a security risk. Each technology brings with it a certain complement of capabilities and these can combine in myriad ways. Individually each technology can be applied for positive or negative outcomes. One can easily understand and prepare for negative outcomes, intentional or inadvertant.

The task of anticipation however becomes onerous when these technologies are used in combination with others and uniquely in particular contexts. Sometimes the technologies used for such purposes are in themselves not particularly sophisticated, but combinations can be devastating as we have seen in recent experiences.

The road to reducing strategic latency therefore is as much a task of systematically practiciing Technology Foresight as is it is one of practicing Strategic Foresight, imagining potential scenarios and plausible misuses leading to potential security threats. If one must innovate, it must be in the domain of responding to potential negative or inadvertant uses of extant or future technology developments.

Even when the context is not one of assessing for and preparing against security threats, every enterprise must strive to reduce its strategic latency. The term has a very reactive connotation – often it is very hard to respond to a disruptive innovation after the fact. While it seems commonsense, it bears repeating, that the ideal response is only possible when one has anticipated adequately.

Disruptive innovations are around us for a long time in a form we might term ‘weak signals’, and they have not yet become significant enough to show up on our radars. It is our task to sharpen our senses so we can notice them through the noise and give ourselves the time to react – a systemic challenge that requires time.

Better still is to imagine disruptive possibilities, and shift the challenge of reducing strategic latency to the other.

The Social Dynamics of Innovation Networks

May 29, 2014

I work out of the Cambridge Innovation Center, one of the supposedly largest such places in the world with over 400 startups and early-stage technology companies that collectively claim a couple of billion dollars in funding.

The core idea of such a place is that not only does it make the startup process easier, but the fact that you have so many of these entrepreneurs in a phycial setting that encourages serendipitous encounters and complementary partnerships, actually accelerates the innovation process and likelihood of success.

The idea of creating such places is no longer novel. There are many such places that have sprung-up in Boston itself and more such places are coming up in the US. Frequently visitors from other countries come to learn how to replicate the success of CIC in their own neighborhoods.

(Image: http://noduslabs.com/tag/sociology/ )

The idea that you need physical proximity at all in a world where technology has made it possible for people to work remotely and collaborate with anyone in the world is what is interesting.

A recent report from the University of Twente titled ‘The Social Dynamics of Innovation Networks‘, caught my attention.

…why are governments across the world investing billions of euros in developing ‘innovation campuses’ that are justified precisely on the grounds that they help build up dense inter-personal networks that can help drive innovation processes?

I have been at CIC and other co-working locations before. There was a time when I worked out of offices and not remotely from home. In all those situations, there are a social dynamic that never happened once I increasingly started working from home. Not, that I did not build relationships remotely, but they did not have that opportunity to accidentally bump into each other, sometimes in the presence of a third person, or in the context of a discussion or an artifact.

There is nothing surprising here of course – those chance encounters, did not always spark something, but they laid the ground for a possibility, that sometimes built up over time. On one among many such occassions, all the accumulated tinder of ideas would catch fire and something novel would spring in our minds.

There is much attempt to de-skill, and deconstruct the magic of innovation. There is even talk of an ERP package for Innovation Management. There are certainly aspect of orchestrating large-scale innovation that can indeed be systematized, but underneath them all is this intangible layer that is formed by social relationships, and the unpredictable, unforeseen tipping points that happen through unexpected encounters in social networks.

Fail Faster, Fail Often with Poor Design

2014

There has been disappointing news in the entrepreneurial / new venture world in recent weeks.

Recent studies by the Economist showed a decline in new ventures and entrepreneurial activity in the US and this article by James Surowiecki in The New Yorker, tries to analyze the phenomena of large scale failure among startups.

Start up – Runner on the blocks

While it is generally assumed that entrepreneurship is for those who have a healthy appetitie for risk, he argues that that is not necessarily true. What distinguishes this class of adventurers according to him is their self-confidence.

There is a culture that has been created around entrepreneurship too – advice that recommends “Fail often and fail fast”, the relatively easy task of getting money and started and other circumstantial and contextual aspects that encourage such risk-taking.

Somewhere in such a system are mechanisms that are supposed to identify and filter the good from the poor ideas. It is assumed that the financiers have the acumen and wisdom to identify the ventures most likely to succeed. Then why I wonder is the failure rate so high.

I have had some exposure to a number of such entrepreneurs due to the location where I work in Cambridge. I am surrounded by the highest density in any one location of startups anywhere in the world. These are really smart people with great ideas, energetic, often young, enthusiastic, and also sincere.

However, I have often found, whether due to the culture of the entrepreneurial sector or due to their self-cofnidence, that their ventures are usually based primarily on product ideas or rooted in some novel technology. However, in most cases, they do not seem to have robust business concepts.

There is however also no appetite or patience for the effort it would take to design a venture. Having developed a business plan, in their mind, is a good enough substitute for a business design. I do not think they are to be held a fault here. The system encourages such thinking.

One argument is that, a good design evolves. Evolution does indeed happen in business, but then it also leaves too much to chance. Perhaps, the failure of an individual entrepreneur or venture is but a matter of statistics for the venture capitalist.

But, there is indeed a better way. It would do all in the system good to take the time to design the venture well – even if in visionary terms, before going too far forward. It would take some more deliberate work up front, but we would not see the kind of failures we see.

It is romantic indeed to think in terms of the tooth and claw nature of the world of competition and failure and extinction of species in biological/ecological terms. But, we are humans, our social systems are an improvement on that logic. We can change things through design.

If, I want to be an entrepreneur, I do not want to discover what the Germans found – that failure does not necessarily guarantee future success. I do not want to be a statistic in someone’s portfolio. I can design my way to better outcomes.

Maintaining Continuity while Reinventing

2014

One of the mainfestations of the rapid acceleration and change we are facing these days is that business ideas and concepts become invalid more frequently than ever before.

Strategic innovation is precisely focused on this issue and could also be termed “Business Concept Innovation”.

As one deconstructs the existing business concept and reinvents it to correspond to current and future reality, using new design principles, the question often arises as to – what of the previous business design must one carry forward into the future.

In the quest for agility in the face of contextual change, when all dimensions of business are subject to change, what an enterprise attempts to do, is to maintain the integrity of its identity. This identity is refelcted in its values, mission and embedded in its culture. It is this identity that I believe is the strongest link in the continuity between the past and the future.

Polaroid Images (Fubiz.net)

No other enterprise perhaps indicates the wrenching change it has faced recently than Polaroid. This article in Fast Company, describes how the company managed to pull itself out of a destiny of certain oblivion.

The article clearly illustrates the point I make above. Polaroid ensured that as it found new avenues to redeploy its assets and capabilities in a new context, it also made sure, that its identity, its ‘Brand’, was not compromised.

Great lesson and case here.

The Apple Ecosystem and the Concept of Lock-in

April 7, 2014

A recent article on cnet discusses Steve Job’s intention to lock-in customers into the Apple Ecosystem.

Steve Jobs

Based on Richard Normann’s work described in his book “Reframing Business“, I have been thinking about the emerging importance of innovating ecosystems of value, reconceiving offerings and value-creation as dynamic processes within living systems.

Ecosystems have many interacting actors that play diverse and complementary roles. Some, such as Apple, play a critical role, that of a keystone, or a Prime Mover, according to the language that Normann uses.

The Prime Mover, orchestrates the system of value, but is not alone in the process of value creation. As much as there are partners, various other stakeholders, including customers as individuals and social groups, participate in this dynamic.

If one looks at the Apple Ecosystem (see image below), this becomes very apparent, that Apple is not the lone player or entity

Apple Ecosystem

(Image courtesy: Judith Vargas)

Here is another image from Time Magazine

Apple Ecosystem

It is clear to me that Apple chose to be a Prime Mover, and had the knowledge and power to shape the ecosystem. The Apple platform is simultaneously an infrastructure, implying a system of proprietary standards, but also a conceptual platform, around which many participants including the users can create value according to their own needs. In the latter sense, it is a Design System, an active offering, that provides a ‘genetic’ code for others to leverage.

Apple’s excellence, among other things, stems from having successfully executed on both levels. It owns the conceptual architecture of this innovating ecosystem, as much as IKEA owns the conceptual architecture of its home design ecosystem.

The alternative is of course an open platform, and there are those, however, so far none have been successful in the same way. Perhaps, there will be another innovating ecosystem in the near future that is based on an open platform. Open systems are very powerful and in the democratized future (Josephine Green of Philips), we will see more of those.

But, whatever be that ecosystem, participating in them is a form of committment – an acceptance of “lock-in”. That is the sense in which Steve Jobs was possibly using the word. In itself that is not a bad thing.

iWatch and Ecosystems

February 5, 2014

There is much anticipation and excitement around a possible iWatch from Apple.

iWatch and other Wearables

This Fast Company article adds several interesting dimensions to the debate, such as privacy, data security, etc, and whether Apple will become a platform provider for others to build applications on.

Interesting also is the huge focus on personal fitness data and the impact that could have on healthcare.

Wearables are indeed an interesting multi-dimensional opportunity space. The proximity to the wearer’s body and therefore the ability to integrate sensors, the idea of the accessory and its potential for fashion, the notion of an alternate approach to the mobile device – a replacement or an extension of the current mobile device and so on.

There is much happening in this space and it is too early to say how this will shape up. It is indeed interesting to see how much focus there is on lifestyle and fitness. I however, do not yet see a completeness of vision from a user’s perspective.

In this context, I wanted to reflect a little on Apple as a value-provider. I have seen many opinions on Apple and the iWatch – the tenor of most of these seem to be from consumer life-style perspectives – “If you do not give me a gadget that amuses me, you are not much of an innovator!”

By now I think it should be clear to anyone in the technology innovation space, that while Apple engineers and designs beautiful devices, it is much more than a device company. This too has been well-documented – it is often a later entrant and is much more an ecosystem builder rather than just a device vendor.

When it can build a radically different and meaningful ecosystem around home entertainment, it will bring out a TV – when it can reshape the retail experience, it will be there with the entire ecosystem of commerce – not just with a gizmo or a gadget.

Similarly, when the value ecosystem of wearables goes beyond the siloed, health, music, communication worlds into one where it can integrate a meaningful totality for the user, it will introduce the iWatch.

Perhaps in that vision there are technical challenges it has not yet surmounted – but that should not lead us to question its ability to innovate as some ‘gurus’ are eager to do.

The iWatch experience will be centered around a new node in the human digital experience, not some fragmented experience of personal health data, but a seamless integration not only of data with meaning but with the ecosystem of other devices.The issues of data privacy are pertinent but not restricted to Apple alone.

When there is that clarity of an architecture for fluid and seamless integration of experience, and the absolute clarity of a non-superfluous device and a new member of the personal digital ecosystem, there will be an iWatch. In the future this device could cannibalize current incumbents, but it will be done gracefully.

Perhaps that device will indeed create an open platform for others to build applications on. Those applications will again be an important component of the total value proposition.

It is for that completeness of vision that I subscribe to the platform that this company consistently creates. It demands for a larger understanding and comprehension of the idea of design – when you experience it, you know what that is.

A High-Level POV on Innovation

January 1, 2014

Briefly this is how we think of Innovation, a Point-of-View that informs our work.

  1. The enterprise is a system embedded in a context whose purpose is to sustainably create value and a positive surplus for its stakeholders.

  2. The enterprise system comprises of the following key elements:

– Value-Creating and Capturing entities (aka Business Model/s).
– Offerings that co-produce value with other stakeholders.
– A Value Platform (aka Enterprise), that supports the business models and creates shared resources.
– Business Models also consist of various processes.

  1. The objectives driving the innovation initiatives are often diverse – A business and competitive necessity, desire for distinction, growth or performance improvement.

  2. All the above elements of the system – Business Models, Offerings, Processes and Platforms provide opportunities for innovation.

– While any one of these might be the subject of an innovation project – all efforts maintain the integrity of the whole system, which is why we prefer to start there.

  1. Innovation is as much a discipline as it is an art.

– The Whole Enterprise must participate – It is essentially a collaborative effort.
– The Enterprise must manage the effort with a disciplined approach – ‘Total Innovation Management’ ( this is similar to the notion of TQM, an idea we have come up with).

  1. We focus on the TIM discipline to ensure impact and outcomes.

– The Dynamic capabilities of Innovation are complemented by Strategic and Operational capabilities, all of which an enterprise must excel at.
– It takes time to develop these capabilities and we recommend a progressive focus on growing the maturity of capabilities to take on more ambitious innovation efforts. Disruption does not happen overnight.
– The discipline of TIM is codified in our Methodologies.

  1. The basic approach to Innovating any of the dimensions of the enterprise relies on:

– Developing a deep understanding of the ideas underlying the design of particular object of focus through Modeling (Business Model, Offering, Enterprise, Process etc.) and Validating its viability in a desired context.
– Expanding and Reframing these underlying ideas and principles provide the sources for innovation.

  1. Innovations are interventions in systems (Value Receiving Systems) by systems (Value Creating systems).

– We understand how change and the introduction of something new impacts the creators and receivers of value.
– This sensitivity informs the design, innovation management and execution processes of our methodology, ensuring successful adoption and impact.

  1. We use techniques from the following to expand, design and innovation spaces, to find new and interesting intersections and confluences.

– Foresight,
– Insights (new developments and understanding of his things works),
– Needs (detailed understanding of the needs of those served),
– Drivers (New Developments, Drivers of Change), and,
– Looking ‘Sideways’ to other systems, in order to expand our Design and Innovation Space-Time as appropriate.