A quick guide to sustained and relative innovation

There’s no instant formula for innovation success. It requires a comprehensive approach starting with strategy, supported by strong processes, an efficient organisation and resources and an innovative culture and it can take a long time to achieve. But what if you don’t have the time, resource or the mandate to create new innovation strategies? Here, […]

There’s no instant formula for innovation success. It requires a comprehensive approach starting with strategy, supported by strong processes, an efficient organisation and resources and an innovative culture and it can take a long time to achieve.

But what if you don’t have the time, resource or the mandate to create new innovation strategies? Here, we provide a brief round up of some widely used tools that have a good track record of success.

Innovation boot camp
An immersive experience in which small teams of managers are tasked with developing and then pitching a new product, service or process idea to a senior management “Dragon’s Den”-style panel. It typically takes place over a period of two to three weeks, with team members taken to an offsite location.

Strengths

  • Engaging, intensive experience that has the potential to excite and inspire
  • Should achieve real results with tangible business value
  • Promotes entrepreneurship

Limitations

  • Only involves small group of staff
  • Cost of taking managers offline
  • Hard to conduct frequently

Key success factors

  • Have a mix of skills and experience in the team
  • Make teams cross-functional/cross-divisional
  • Senior leaders need to support strongly and be prepared to invest
  • Outside experts can help kickstart content and/or run process

Innovation sandpit
A team-based exercise that brings participants together from across functions and disciplines, including external organisations. Through an intensive four-to-five-day workshop, there is a deepening understanding of the challenge, a clear definition of the problem and generation of a suite of prioritised, peer-reviewed solutions.

Strengths

  • Engages multi-disciplinary and multi-functional teams
  • Helps to redefine the problem and challenges
  • Enables the “building” of ideas as each participant adds to the solution

Limitations

  • Not every challenge can be solved with this tool. Challenges must be holistic and support input from across disciplines
  • Not everyone is suited to being involved in a sandpit

Key success factors

  • Participants must be free-thinking, collaborative in nature and work well in a team
  • Funding must be readily available for the outcome or participants become demotivated

Innovation coaches
Innovation coaches are tasked with engaging different parts of the organisation in innovation-orientated activities such as idea management, coaching in good innovation practice, implementation of award schemes and exchange of knowledge and insights.

Strengths

  • Helps to diffuse innovation culture through large organisations
  • Provides a network of local focal points to enable and drive implementation of innovation-related activities

Limitations

  • Creating the role itself will only have limited effect unless there is a well-managed innovation programme to be implemented
  • More suitable for larger organisations

Key success factors

  • Need enthusiastic coaches with the right experience
  • Select coaches with excellent networking, communication, creativity and analytical skills
  • Train coaches well in best-practice innovation management and change management
  • Keep the network active through frequent initiatives and activities

Innovation jams
Time-limited, web-based, large-scale cross-sector discussions about specific hot topics, likened to a musical jam session in which the participants react to and spark off each other’s contributions. Typically conducted internally within large corporations and can be intensive, lasting only a few days.

Strengths

  • Actively involves cross-functional, cross-regional staff in innovation activities
  • Helps to build networks and strengthen knowledge sharing
  • Generates valuable outputs in terms of new ideas and projects

Limitations

  • Needs commitment to take ideas forward and to communicate progress
  • Topics must be relevant, challenging and engaging
  • More suitable for larger organisations

Key success factors

  • Ensuring knowledge generated from the discussions is collected and actions taken, visibly
  • Integrating the Jam approach into the innovative culture of the company – repeating it
  • Contributors recognised with increased visibility

Expert networks
An inability to capture and integrate isolated pockets of expertise is a common barrier to innovation. Corporations are increasingly applying enterprise social media tools to strengthen networks of internal and external experts.

Strengths

  • Easy access to expert knowledge for global staff
  • Drives transfer of information rather than just capture
  • Exploits the growing usage of social media
  • Provides fast response and dialogue

Limitations

  • Is only as good as the usage and quality of discussions
  • More suitable for larger organisations
  • Is not a substitute for personal contact and teamworking

Key success factors

  • Effective moderation to ensure that urgent matters are dealt with, discussions are closed out, experts are engaged and successes are publicised
  • Integration with other knowledge management and learning activities to attract engagement and avoid dilution
  • Focus on low effort for access and keep the system simple
  • Have a clear policy on its use and purpose, including privacy details for the users and the content of messages

Award schemes
Encourage staff innovation efforts through either a recognition-based or results-based award.

Strengths

  • Helps to publicise the innovation message
  • Can be tailored to focus on important company priorities
  • Can be used to promulgate examples of “good innovation behaviour”

Limitations

  • Needs long-term senior commitment, otherwise can be seen as “window-dressing” by staff
  • Only limited number of staff participate
  • May actually increase the perception that innovation is an “extra” outside the day job

Key success factors

  • Ensure that the scheme is properly, systematically and transparently managed
  • Public recognition is often more effective than monetary reward
  • Link to business goals and award substantial innovations only

Target schemes
The practice of setting corporate, team and individual innovation-related targets, and measuring progress using suitable metrics.

Strengths

  • Provides direct and visible measures of innovation performance
  • Can be linked to bonus or incentive payments
  • Demonstrates senior commitment to innovation

Limitations

  • New systems or processes may need to be developed to capture the metric data
  • Care needs to be taken that metrics do not cause unwanted side-effects
  • Staff need to be able to directly influence the achievement of the targets

Key success factors

  • Use a suitable balance between input/process/output metrics
  • Ensure the metrics are suitable for your business rather than applying the same metrics from “leading innovators”

While there are certainly no shortcuts to innovation excellence, quick-win tools can play a useful role in building momentum and demonstrating results.

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