Chapter 1
Setting Context
You know that innovation is a top priority. Chances are that you are or have been on an innovation team or leading one within your organization.
You have a difficult job. We know this from over twenty-five years of helping others design, implement, and capture value from innovation. Weâve done this as consultants and practitioners in large, globally dispersed organizations and in small and midsize companies, B2B and B2C settings, and in both for-profit and nonprofit environments.
We are passionate about innovation because we have seen how it keeps organizations vital and resilient. We want your organization to stay vital and resilient: resilient to the tremendously powerful market forces of globalization, rapid shifts in technology, and an increasingly powerful customer base.
About This Field Guide
There is no lack of innovation books. Many focus on an overarching theory of innovation or focus more deeply on a particular aspect of innovation, such as rapid-cycle experimentation, design thinking, or business model innovation. At the same time, more and more organizations are following the pioneering efforts of companies like Whirlpool Corporation, General Electric, and Proctor & Gamble in viewing innovation as a discipline and process that can be taught, learned, and applied.
As we meet and work with these and other innovation leaders and practitioners globally, we hear consistently that there is not yet a comprehensive, practical, how-to guide detailing market-tested techniques, tools, and frameworks through which you can address the most pressing innovation challenges in your organization. This field guide addresses those challenges in an end-to-end fashion, helping you take action, whether you seek a specific solution, such as de-risking a promising but new-to-the-industry business concept, or you have an ambition to make innovation an enterprise-wide capability.
We write this field guide for innovation leaders and practitioners in organizations large and small who seek step-change improvement in their organizationâs, teamsâ, or individual innovation efforts. Each of you faces different innovation challenges. Our goal is to provide practical techniques, guidance, and examples to help you navigate your unique situation. We hope that whether you are a novice or a master, you will find The Guide indispensable in helping you achieve your innovation goals.
There is great value in having a shared set of tools within your organization. Common tools, techniques, and frameworks help ensure consistency and can serve as a foundation for an enterprise-wide process for innovation. Yet it is important to understand that innovation is not about tools per se. You will not succeed by simply filling in a given tool. Rather, we see tools as scaffolding; they provide structure to achieve the appropriate organizational learning and dialogue about a particular issue or challenge.
Our approach to the topic of innovation is that of business managers and strategists. For over two decades, we have worked with Global 1000 companies to shape and act on their strategic growth agenda. You will see in The Guide that, rather than focusing on technology or a particular product, our innovation work features the business model and its elements as the unit of analysis. We also place enormous emphasis on both fact-based analysis and frame-breaking perspectives.
You will also see we consistently emphasize the importance of creating time and space for innovation inside your organization. By this we mean more than the notion âspend X percent of your time on anything you wantâ as the means by which to innovate at scale. In most organizations, declaring that all engineers should take X percent of their time to think of new things and innovate is simply a nonstarter, and rightfully so.
Instead we recommend that you free up time and space to pursue thoughtful and disciplined approaches and make organizing actions to allow your organization to create and drive innovation. You should, for example, build a point of view that informs your innovation. You must take time to stretch, elaborate, and iterate a given new concept. Leadership should make time to take on the roles of cocreator, sponsor, and visible advocate for innovation. And, together with leadership, you and your innovation colleagues should organize to sustainably pursue your innovation ambition. In this context, creating space to drive innovation is more than freeing up time to think great thoughts and experiment on them. It is a critical enabler to pursuing innovation in a disciplined fashion, leveraging innovation activities, approaches, and organizing elements such as those addressed in this guide.
Each chapter of this field guide focuses on an innovation challenge that consistently emerges as difficult and important within organizations across industries and geographies. In each chapter, we
Set context for the challenge and share the core design principles that should guide your efforts. The principles represent leading practices that are applicable across industries, geographies, and organizations large and small. They will help you stay focused on the outcome you are trying to achieve, allowing you to sift through alternative approaches with greater clarity and purpose.
Share techniques and frameworks that help you address the specific challenge. Most are illustrated with examples from organizations that have learned and applied the principles and achieved marketplace success.
This is the heart of Innovatorâs Field Guide: to share actionable innovation tools and approaches for you to apply, illustrated with real-world examples; and, where appropriate, to identify common pitfalls to avoid and offer specific counsel on what not to do.
The Innovation Challenges
Raising Your Innovation IQ Through Insight-Driven Innovation (Chapter 2)
We begin by sharing techniques and frameworks you can use to develop new perspectives and new thinking about the market, your organization, and your stakeholders. The chapter offers concrete actions for developing frame-breaking insights that are foundational to success throughout a generalized front-end innovation process.
Breaking frame is so important to innovation. Gifted entrepreneurs break frame naturally. The rest of us need a bit of help. We need new perspectives and fresh insights to think and see differently. Most organizations struggle to develop rich, compelling insights, but they are critical to innovating successfully. Without new perspectives, efforts tend toward the incremental or, worse, stall completely. This chapter will help you, your team, and your organization develop the types of insights you will need to raise your innovation IQ.1
Enabling Breakthrough Innovation (Chapter 3)
In this chapter, we continue sharing leading practices to apply within a generalized front end of the innovation process in order to drive breakthrough innovation. We start by illustrating some of our favorite techniques for developing new ideas. We also suggest an approach that will help you focus your innovation efforts on your most important strategic challenges, and you will learn techniques to help bring greater coherence to current and future innovation efforts across your organization. All of this will help you stay away from the business of âone-offâ innovation. You will see how Crayola, Royal Dutch Shell, UnitedHealth Group, and others identify and act on new white space opportunities, sustainably and profitably guided by dynamic innovation architecture.2
From Nascent Idea to Business Concept (Chapter 4)
Chapter Four focuses on the work of moving from a nascent idea to a business concept, helping you advance your thinking to create a more fully fleshed-out business concept and game plan for getting started. Without this work, you may never get beyond a pile of Post-it notes. We share a generalized process to illustrate key techniques, while emphasizing that each organization will need to develop its own tailored process.
Sometimes opportunities stall. So we suggest specific techniques to help you stretch, elaborate, and iterate your thinking about and framing of the opportunity so that you can unstick that opportunity. We also provide guidelines to help you decide why you may wish to kill it off entirely.
These and other techniques will help you jump-start innovation in your organization, regardless of where the idea came from. The chapter takes you up to the âcommercializationâ step of a given innovation process, an area that most innovation efforts too often ignore or take for granted. Taken together, Chapters Two through Four serve as a blueprint for breakthrough innovation across the front-end innovation process, enabling you to jump to the next S-curve and propel growth for your organization.
Propelling Fast Innovation (Chapter 5)
We understand that you may not always have the time to build the types of rich insights described in Chapter Two or to pursue breakthrough innovation as we describe in Chapter Three. Sometimes you are asked to âget innovation fast.â In this chapter, we share a series of case examples which illustrate how you can improve the quality of your innovation portfolio for the near termâtwelve to twenty-four months out. Through the examples we share ways in which you can combine techniques already described in The Guide to achieve âinnovation fastââwhether infusing innovative thinking into your annual planning process or in a workshop-based format. We touch on collaborative idea management, open innovation, innovation accelerators, and supplier and customer collaborations.
Experimentation and De-Risking (Chapter 6)
The kind of breakthrough innovation we discuss in Chapter Three is often new to an organization and sometimes new to its industry. When you surface something that is new with respect to your past experiences, an individual, a team, or management is likely to perceive a high degree of uncertainty and risk in the new concept or business model. In this chapter, we share market-tested techniques that help you separate risk from uncertainty. The approaches help you de-risk promising but uncertain opportunities and guide you in moving your efforts forward in smart and risk-managed ways.
Innovating While in Market (Chapter 7)
In this chapter, we extend current experimentation practice, describing ways in which you can turbocharge opportunities that are already in market and reshape them for greater success. For in-market opportunities that are falling short of their ambition, we describe techniques through which you can iteratively test, learn, and refine efforts so that you can get the new product or service heading in the right direction, and optimize the âupside.â For opportunities that are performing as planned, you will learn how to infuse more innovation. You might think of this as âinnovating while flying the plane.â
Organizing for Innovation (Chapter 8)
We opened this book with the declaration that innovation is now a top priority across organizations globally. Yet despite innovationâs higher profile, we find that many organizations struggle with how to best organize for innovation. Chapter Eight guides you through ways to think about organizing for innovation within the context of your objectives and culture. We speak to specific ways in which you can strengthen innovation muscle, improve processes, and dramatically improve your chances that innovation will happen âbecause of the systemâ rather than in spite of it. We hope that this chapter guides your efforts in making innovation an enterprise discipline, process, and capability within your organization.
Leading Innovation (Chapter 9)
Much of this field guide speaks to leading innovation efforts as a lead designer and practitioner, and assumes that you have some level of organizational permission for driving systematic innovation. In Chapter Nine, we speak specifically to the leaderâs role in innovation. We start at the point of leadershipâs recognition that innovation will provide the means to achieve a particular growth goal and, when desired, to help enable cultural change. We describe the leaderâs role in making innovation a reality both commercially and as a process and system within the organization. We also speak to how a practitioner with little or no formal accountability for innovation can lead innovation from withinâan important topic when you do not have the full set of permissions or sponsorship necessary for success.
Getting Started (Chapter 10)
Chapter Ten helps you structure and begin your innovation efforts in ways that ensure success. We provide examples of program designs that you can use to tackle the challenges described in this guide, and conclude by sharing suggested profiles of skills and mind-sets you will want to include in your efforts as you get going.
Conclusion and Looking Ahead (Chapter 11)
We conclude by sharing a few general thoughts and suggestions on driving success in your innovation efforts and systems and posit a view on the next frontiers for innovation in large organizations.
Principles of Innovation
Over the years, weâve seen what works and what does not. In looking across these successes and failures, one can tease out a set of principles of successful innovation that hold true regardless of industry, constraints, or circumstanceâprinciples that organizations apply to help them innovate and to do so systematically over time.
You will see that the principles advocate driving strategic innovation. In this context, we recommend that you enter the innovation room through the strategy door, so to speak. Aim innovation efforts at your most central growth issues and needs. Drive holistic, business-concept-level thinking and iteration. Develop a shared point of view on what qualifies as innovation and what is most important to drive toward. Develop multilevel points of view of innovation targeting priority growth spaces and concepts within the spaces. Engage in strategic dialogue and decision making to ensure that there is shared and aligned leadership understanding and commitment. Each of these actions follows from the principles guiding strategic innovation and is central to your success.
Of course, in translating principles to action, your specific designs and approach will vary greatly. But the principles are centrally important. Therefore, we make them explicit here and throughout The Guide so that you will keep them top of mind. You should think of these principles as âwhy you are doing what you are doing.â
- Articulate a clear definition of innovation for your organization by definin...