Corante

About this Author
Gwen Smith Ishmael, Sr. Vice President of Insights and Innovation at Decision Analyst in Arlington, TX, has led marketing and new product development activities in the CPG and technology industries since 1986. She also conceived and developed ground-breaking Web-based promotional vehicles, two of which are patent pending. Gwen holds an MBA in Marketing and is a featured speaker on insights and innovation around the world. Her writings have been featured in international text books, most recently in Managing 4 Ps of Marketing FMCG Sector, and Product Innovation: A Strategic Tool for Growth, by ICFAI Publications, 2006 and 2007, respectively.

Founding Author

Renee Hopkins Callahan Renee Hopkins Callahan started IdeaFlow and serves as chief blog-wrangler. She is Director of Innovation Services at Decision Analyst in Arlington, Texas, is a former journalist who worked as an editor and reporter for The Dallas Morning News and the Nashville Tennessean, and was managing editor of D, the Dallas city magazine. She has a master's degree in rhetoric and has also taught college-level English and informal logic.

IdeaFlow

Monthly Archives

June 14, 2006

Updated version of "What Drives Innovation?" available for download

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

We've updated the draft I posted last week of our most recent white paper, What Drives Innovation? A Heuristic Framework for Corporate Innovation. It's the same paper I wrote about here, (and in fact the link to the paper is the same) -- it's just an updated version.

These are the updates we made based on comments sent by those who read the draft I posted last week:

We've made it clear that the heuristic framework for innovation that we put forward in the paper can be used not just at the beginning of the innovation process. That's certainly when you'd need it, but you could also loop back through the questions in the framework at any point in the process that you needed to clarify direction and/or lynchpin drivers.

Also, we included more specific examples of the kinds of questions you would ask at each of the question points in the framework. For reference, these are our heuristic innovation framework questions, and the kinds of questions they might lead to:

Does the innovation fit the organization?

Questions that can be asked here might be: Does it leverage our core competencies? Is it aligned with the mission and vision? Does the current organizational structure work? Is there a cultural fit?

Does the innovation provide a strategic advantage?

Questions that can be asked here might be: Does it help us achieve our goals and objectives (revenue, market share, brand presence, operational efficiencies, etc.)? Does it impact the competitive landscape? Does it shift the customer base?

Is there a demand for the innovation?

Questions that can be asked here might be: Will it address an underserved market? Is it an “up-market” product? Will it meet a stated need? Will it meet an unstated need? What will the adoption curve look like?

How might we pursue the innovation?

Questions that can be asked here might be: Can we build it ourselves? Do we need to partner with some other company in order to produce it?

Is there a clear definition of the innovation’s success?

Questions that can be asked here might be: How do we measure this innovation’s value? Do we use our current metrics and measurements? Do we need to create new metrics?

Will management support the innovation?

Questions that can be asked here might be: Are we capable of making these changes? Are we willing to make these changes? What roadblocks might there be? Is it worth the effort? What needs to be done to gain support?

Comments (1) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Innovation Drivers

June 8, 2006

Innovative marketing blogjam over at Fast Company Now!

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

Several of us Corante bloggers are live-blogging the Corante Innovative Marketing conference today from New York as guests on the Fast Company Now blog. Here's the link that will take you to all the Marketing Blogjam posts.

I'll post some IdeaFlow-specific observations later tonight.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Conferences

June 7, 2006

Corante Innovative Marketing Conference starts tomorrow

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

I'm in New York tonight, getting ready for Corante's Innovative Marketing Conference (held in conjunction with Columbia University Business School's Center on Global Brand Leadership). Several of us who are blogging the conference will also be posting on the Fast Company blog, in an event we're called "the marketing blogjam". I'll cross-post or link to those posts as we go.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Conferences

June 6, 2006

New white paper: 'What Drives Innovation? A Heuristic Framework for Corporate Innovation'

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

What seems like a very long time ago I wrote a series of posts on Innovation Drivers. There was a lot of discussion around the idea. So my colleague Gwen Ishmael and I decided to conduct a research project on the subject. We thought we would interview executives with innovation responsibilities about some of their successful as well as unsuccessful innovations, and then we could analyze these interviews and catalog a whole set of drivers for innovation.

Well, the process of qualitative research often turns the best-thought-out hypotheses on their heads! Once we had done a number of interviews, it became clear that there was something more important to talk about than the classification of drivers. We presented the results at ESOMAR's Global Innovation conference in early May, and now we have just revisited the research and written a new version of the paper, which is now called What Drives Innovation? A Heuristic Framework for Corporate Innovation. So called because that is what we created out of these varied case studies of successful and unsuccessful innovation initiatives -- a framework of six high-level questions that, when asked at the very beginning stages of an innovation effort, help guide you toward identifying the very important one or two lynchpin drivers -- the conditions that will make or break your innovation.

Here's the paper's introduction:

If you ask, “what drives successful innovation?” you are likely to get these answers:

“Desire for growth.”

“Demand for increased profitability.”

“People.”

While clearly true, these are superficial answers. There’s no clear way to link these answers to the factors that would lead to success in innovation – or the factors that lead to failure. Innovation is still regarded as somewhat uncontrollable and mysterious, though this perception is beginning to change. The idea that there are factors that, singly and in combination, drive innovation (successful innovation in particular) has just begun to be discussed. An effort to understand innovation drivers – those factors that motivate and shape innovation efforts, and in no small way determine their success or failure – seemed to us to be a promising way to discover what factors make for uccess and failure in innovation.

We interviewed a number of executives from across a wide range of industries, who either were or had been responsible for innovation efforts throughout their careers. Our goal was to find common innovation drivers that could be linked to successes and failures.

During the course of collecting nearly twenty highly diverse innovation stories, we realized these executives were telling us about something much more actionable than drivers. They told us about:

• Questions that were asked and were not asked.

• Issues that were addressed and not addressed.

• Decisions that were and were not made.

• Information that strongly impacted the innovation effort, but was discovered too late to alter the effort.

Ultimately, their stories pointed out that it was these things, rather than the initial driver behind the innovation, that led either to a successful or to a failed innovation. We refer to these critical things as “lynchpin drivers.”

A .PDF of the paper -- a version 1 beta -- can be downloaded here. All comments are welcome -- we are planning an updated version within the next several weeks, and would like as many comments as we can get.

Comments (4) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Innovation Drivers

TRIZ update: 'It *is* an equation for innovation'

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

">My post on the BusinessWeek TRIZ article has had a fair amount of comment, including one I will quote here, as it came to me in an email from TRIZ consultant Jack Hipple, with whom I have had a smattering of TRIZ training. Says Jack:

"I loved this quote:

'It seems to me that TRIZ is trying to create an equation for innovation,' says Harry West, the company's vice-president of strategy & innovation. 'I think it's a great aspiration. But if there's an equation for innovation out there, your competitor can do the same -- which means the competitive challenge can easily be lost.' '

That IS the whole point of TRIZ and this guy should be appropriately afraid. The reason we don't have to use trial and error to solve quadratic equations anymore is that algebra was discovered as a mathematical science A lot of fast guessers were put out of business. There is much less mystery than this guy thinks, and when more of the world discovers they don't need a magician (as opposed to a logical process that anyone can learn--ie science and not psychlogy) he will have a rude awakening as others in the engineering world have discovered. Egos are a terrible thing to waste...."

As for me, I'd like to think that there's a middle ground -- there's a little more mystery to innovation than the TRIZ enthusiasts say, and there's a lot more process to innovation than some of the professional creatives think.

You can read the rest of the comments at the end of the original post.

Comments (2) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Idea Generation | TRIZ

June 5, 2006

What does 'crowdsourcing' mean for business innovation?

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

Wired, the magazine that brought us the meme "long tail" has now brought the new meme "crowdsourcing" to the light of day.

As defined by its creator, Jeff Howe, in a June Wired article and new blog:

"Crowdsourcing represents the act of a company or institution taking a function once performed by employees and outsourcing it to an undefined (and generally large) network of people in the form of an open call. This can take the form of peer-production (when the job is performed collaboratively), but is also often undertaken by sole individuals. The crucial prerequisite is the use of the open call format and the large network of potential laborers.

"For the purposes of the article, we set even stricter parameters: We decided we would only look at case studies involving big established companies (like Getty, Viacom and P&G). For the purposes of the blog, I advocate a slightly more inclusive definition. I interpret crowdsourcing to be taking place any time a company makes a choice to employ the crowd to perform labor that could alternatively be performed by an assigned group of employees or contractors, even if the company is just now putting up a shingle. In other words, crowdsourcing need not require an active shift from current employees (or again, contractors) to the crowd; it can start with the crowd."

The short version: "Everyday people using their spare cycles to create content, solve problems, even do R&D."

The shorter, much more blunt and to-the-point version: "A billion amateurs want your job."

Simply put, this is open innovation on a much larger playing field. Some of us may not yet have made the connection that the revolution in customer-created media -- Flickr, YouTube, etc. -- would extend to R&D. In the innovation media (wow -- it just occurred to me that there is such a thing! and that IdeaFlow and the Innovation Hub are part of it!), we've talked about customer input into innovation and distributed creativity via the Lego's model, for example, and Eric Von Hippel's lead user theory. We've talked about InnoCentive, the website started by Eli Lilly where the likes of Proctor & Gamble and Dupont now post scientific challenges for the InnoCentive community to solve.

Howe's crowdsourcing marries these concepts and describes a playing field for open innovation that includes technology and science -- coding, scientific and engineering problems -- as well as content creation for advertising itself and to sell advertising around.

Here are some of my thoughts about the effect crowdsourcing will have on business innovation:

-- Increased competition: What took you years to build will take your competition much less time if they are able to harness distributed solutions in order to do it.

-- A shift of emphasis from production to filtering: If crowdsourcing means that the cost of solving problems and of generating content will go down, it also means the cost and the need for filtering will go up. You will need to filter not only for what's good vs what's bad, but for what fits your strategy. As Henry Chesbrough says, "not all the smart people work for you." The challenge will not be to find the smart people and hire them, nor to outsource to the cheapest source -- but to find the right sources.

This will require a shift of thinking. For instance -- if you have an idea management program for your employees, is there a way to alter it to include ideas and/or content from the outside? If you are outsourcing jobs to India or China, would it be better to find or build a marketplace on which to offer not jobs but projects to the highest possible qualified pool of labor at the cheapest possible cost? What does this do to your processes for getting ideas into the pipeline? To your development process?

What is crowdsourcing going to do for -- or to -- *your* business?

To give you more to think about, I'll include some quotes of what others are saying:

Comments on digg.com: "Although 'crowdsourcing' has existed in the open source community for years, the difference now is that the technology has evolved to allow anyone to participate in these communities. Fifteen years ago, you almost needed a computer science degree just to use open source products, not to mention actually contributing to them. With the web 2.0 technology of today, even those with minimal computer skills can join and become active participants in online communities to contribute thoughts and ideas via blogs, photography via Flickr and iStockphoto, and maybe even solve a complex R&D problem for a major company. 'Crowdsourcing,' while not a new idea, is now becoming a mainstream phenomenon.

Techdirt: "It then raises two issues: how does that challenge existing ways of doing business and what types of companies spring up to take advantage of the new possibilities....It's a case where companies are recognizing that sometimes a fresh perspective is quite valuable, rather than assuming that they need to somehow protect their traditional way of doing business. Unfortunately, as with many buzzwords, expect to start seeing lots of new business models that talk up how they're leveraging "crowdsourcing" when the truth will be that very few are actually doing so." (Note: TechDirt also recommends this BuinessWeek article on the rise of the "digital working class.")

ZDNet blogs: "Will crowdsourcing eclipse long tail [as a buzzword]?"

Bruce Sterling in Wired Blogs: "Like Jeff Howe, I also believe that 'crowdsourcing' is indeed a useful neologism. That's because "crowdsourcing" names part of the same elephant as 'Long Tail,' 'Invisible Tail,' 'collective intelligence,' 'folksonomy,' 'search and publish/publish and search,' 'attention economy,' 'collaborative web filters,' 'architecture of participation' and 'commons-based peer-production, among other such. New terminology is boiling out of this realm of activity practically every day now. It is being created because there is a pressing and demonstrable need for it."

And, finally, from the Crowdsourcing article itself: "Technological advances in everything from product design software to digital video cameras are breaking down the cost barriers that once separated amateurs from professionals. Hobbyists, part-timers, and dabblers suddenly have a market for their efforts, as smart companies in industries as disparate as pharmaceuticals and television discover ways to tap the latent talent of the crowd."

Comments (3) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Crowdsourcing

June 1, 2006

TRIZ makes BusinessWeek!

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

I like TRIZ, though I admit it intimidates me, despite Jack Hipple's best training efforts! Yet as much as I like TRIZ, here's a day I never thought I'd see -- Business Week featuring an article on this formerly obscure Russian idea-generation technique. Yet here it is: The World According to TRIZ --

" With 'innovation' such a hot buzzword in business circles these days, companies are scrambling to find the magic formula for creating inventive products and services. One method that's gaining converts -- and breeding skeptics -- is a 60-year-old theory known as TRIZ."
And just prior to that my blogger friend Olivier Blanchard sent me a link to a post on TRIZ in a blog called Swamp Fox that is associated with the Southeastern Innovation Corridor. According to the post, three-day certification courses in Inventive Problem Solving, which is Ideation International's flavor ofTRIZ, are being offered to entrepreneurs by the University of South Carolina.

The BusinessWeek article doesn't get into much detail, but deftly points out the pros and cons. Pros: it's structured innovation: "This could be a parallel to Six Sigma," the article quotes Insourcing Innovation co-author David Silverstein. Yet the other quotes in the article that support this muddy up the idea of a structure for coming up with ideas -- which is what TRIZ is -- with a structure for developing innovation. Example: "When asked if 'structured innovation" à la TRIZ is a contradiction in terms, Stowell [Davin Stowell, founder and chief executive of New York-based Smart Design, a leading product-design firm] defends the general idea. 'Innovation absolutely needs to be structured to finish a project. Or else you wander all over the place.' "

On the opposite side: "some product-design firms approach TRIZ with caution. One of them is Design Continuum. 'It seems to me that TRIZ is trying to create an equation for innovation,' says Harry West, the company's vice-president of strategy & innovation. 'I think it's a great aspiration. But if there's an equation for innovation out there, your competitor can do the same -- which means the competitive challenge can easily be lost.' "

As usual in these kinds of stories that sum up something complicated by offering quotes from opposing views, the real truth is somewhere in the middle. TRIZ is a great tool for making connections in a structured way that allows you to leave no stone unturned. It will not come up with ideas for you, but it will help you come up with ideas. It won't help you evaluate them, or design a process for developing them into products, services, etc.

And since you must supply the input -- the basic challenge and the "Ideal Final Result" -- it will ikely be different from anyone else's, which will result in different answers. In fact, if you define the Ideal Final Result to the degree of rigor that I've been told you have to do, it will be extremely idiosyncratic to you and the problelm that you and only you are trying to solve. Thus the objection that TRIZ is an "equation for innovation" is somewhat spurious.

I do like the "last word" quote, again from David Silverstein: " 'Look, TRIZ is not the answer to everything. It's just one approach to innovation.' "

If there's anything that will keep TRIZ from wide aoption, it's that it's fairly complicated and rigorous. But that just means there are people out there like David Silverstein, Ideation International, and Jack Hipple, who'll help you learn it and apply it. If they find TRIZ valuable enough, businesses will pay for the service of being guided through the forest of TRIZ.

Comments (7) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Idea Generation

Sorry for the long absence!

Email This Entry

Posted by Renee Hopkins Callahan

My apologies for the weeks of quiet here, and also over on the Innovation Hub, where the network feed has been humming along but the editorial blog has been mostly silent. The short version of what happened is that events conspired to overtake me.

And.the long version is longer than you probably have time to hear,so I'll skip straight to the result: There have been and will continue to be a number of changes in my life. Some are happy -- my youngest daughter graduated form high school last weekend, freeing me from a total of 15 years of parent-bondage to the Arlington (TX) Independent School District and allowing me to remove the high school's attendance office phone number from my cell phone address book!

Other changes are bittersweet -- at the end of this month I will be leaving Decision Analyst after 6 years, putting me in the enviable yet at the same time slightly scary position of figuring out What To Do Next, since for the last several months, this job has been far too all-consuming for me to give any thought to that.

First up on the agenda: Update this blog and the Innovation Hub blog! Then, next week I will be taking part in Corante's Innovative Marketing Conference in New York, co-sponsored by the Center on Global Brand Leadership at Columbia Business School.

After that, I am planning to relocate to Austin, Texas, the fulfillment of a dream I have had for many years. I'm very happy it's finally happening, and excited about what sort of innovative things I might find to get into in Austin. I'll keep you posted!

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: IdeaFlow