Dr. Higgins is president of James M.
Higgins & Associates, Inc. in Winter Park, Florida, helping
organizations increase creativity and innovation (Phone
407-647-5344). He is also a professor of management at The
Crummer School, Rollins College, and is author of 101
Creative Problem Solving Techniques and Innovate or
Evaporate (The New Management Publishing Company, Winter
Park, FL, 1994, 1995).
Recently, NEC Corporation was forced to
withdraw its low-priced monochrome ink jet printer from the
market only four months after its introduction. Why? Because
the dominant firm in that industry, Hewlett-Packard, had
already beaten them to the market with a cost reduction of
forty percent on its monochrome ink jet printer and the
introduction of an improved color printer. HP used product
innovation to enhance the existing products, and process
innovation to reduce costs and create a relative low-cost
position in the market. HP’s entire philosophy of business is
based on innovation, from product development to human
resource management. There are other firms where innovation
is also a way of life.
Then there are firms where innovation may
not be a way of life, but where it has been critical to
success. For example, when Intel was faced with new and
nimble competitors, it chose speed of product development as
its key strategy, and blew the competition out of the water.
Finally, General Electric’s introduced
best practices (GE’s version of benchmarking), process mapping
(reengineering) and workouts (energetic, highly participative
employee-manager retreats), all in order to get more new ideas
from employees. These ideas were aimed at significantly
increasing innovation in order to substantially increase
productivity. These actions were taken in a firm which
already, in most years, files more U.S. patents than any other
firm headquartered in the U.S. In each case, these
firms—Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and GE—as well as some others,
met strategic challenge through innovation.
All of the above companies live and
breathe innovation; or, at the very least, find it fundamental
to their success. These types of firms are the ones that
others should emulate for they know that to do business, as
Peter Drucker suggested in a recent Harvard Business Review
article, “Every organization—not just businesses—needs one
core competence: innovation.”
Innovation and Competitiveness
Innovation gives these firms a
competitive advantage. Now and in the future, more than any
time in history, the secret to competitive advantage is
innovation. But innovation can help businesses meet all of
their strategic challenges, not just competition; for example,
in confronting accelerating rates of change, globalization,
rapidly advancing technology, a more diverse work force, and a
change from an industrial to a knowledge-based economy.
Meeting all of these challenges helps the firm achieve
competitiveness, and meeting these challenges appropriately
depends on innovation.
If a firm uses textbook solutions for
these or other market-oriented challenges, it becomes
dangerously predictable, and at best, ends up in the same
relative position as its competition. The more likely
scenario is that the firm ends up at a competitive
disadvantage. We know that a firm must differentiate itself
from its competition and/or possess a relative low-cost
position compared to its competitors. Innovation allows a
firm to solve its challenges in unique ways that build
competitive advantage either through relative differentiation,
a relative low-cost position, or some acceptable level of
both. Innovation can’t guarantee success, but success cannot
be achieved in the long run without it.
The Innovation Quotient Inventory (IQI)
Many firms fail to produce much that’s
new or to improve the processes by which they provide their
products or services. Is there something different about
organizations that are consistently innovative? Absolutely!
Extensive examination of case and research studies has
revealed a set of characteristics that are shared by
innovative firms, despite certain differences in their
organizational cultures. It is these characteristics that
will enable a firm to survive and prosper in the coming
years. These characteristics create the profile of the
innovative organization.
In the following survey, I’ve organized
14 of the 49 product innovation characteristics according to
the McKinsey Seven S’s: strategy, structure, systems, style,
staff, shared values, and skills. The survey of these 49
characteristics and similar surveys for process, marketing and
management innovation comprise the “Innovation Quotient
Inventory” or IQI. Check this sample of the IQI for product
information as it relates to your firm.
Product Innovation
Characteristics Rating (from 1 to
10,
with 1 being
low,
and 10 being high)
To what extent does your organization:
Strategy
Have a stated and working strategy of
product innovation. ____
Require relevant managers to have
objectives for product innovation and
evaluate their performance relative to these
objectives. ____
Structure
Use alliances to obtain product
innovation.
____
Require cross-functional and
customer/supplier new-product teams.
____
Systems
Reward product creativity and
innovation.
____
Have management information systems for
product innovation to scan the
environment, monitor and benchmark competitors, determine
best
practices, keep abreast of new technologies, monitor market
conditions,
and exchange information
internally.
____
Style
Use special approaches when managing
innovative personnel. ____
Allow employees to make mistakes when
innovating products. ____
Staff
Use many of the 100 or more creativity
techniques such as brainstorming,
verbal checklists, mind mapping, storyboarding, etc. for
product development. ____
Provide physical facilities that are
conducive to the exchange of ideas and
creative
thinking.
____
Shared Values
Place a high value on change and make it
part of organizational culture. ____
Manage organizational culture to make it
more innovative. ____
Skills
Proactively create new opportunities, and
respond to change relative to new
products.
____
Continuously create new products or
services and/or enhance old ones. ____
Scoring Your Responses
Simply add up your total score from all
fourteen questions. Experience suggests that scores higher
than 115 indicate a very innovative organization. Scores
between 100 and 115 are good. Scores between 85 and 100 are
acceptable. A score below 85 leaves plenty of room for
improvement. Scores below 57 reveal firms likely to possess
little innovation. Scores below 28 indicate firms in serious
trouble.
Generally, the higher the score, the more
likely the firm is to be innovative. But the requirements of
some industries and/or certain situations may cause a firm to
have a high score but not be as innovative as another because
one or two vital characteristics are missing. For example,
speed strategies (of product development and placement in the
market) are more critical in rapidly changing environments
than in others with a slower pace of change.
How did you score your company? How did
your colleagues, at various levels in the organization, score
your company? Perhaps this can initiate further discussion on
what needs to occur to improve your innovative capabilities.