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subhashis.basuOffline
Reacher
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Post  Posted: Mar 10, 2006 - 02:47 PM  Reply with quote  Back to top
Post subject: Well, the most innovative co is...guess who?

Well, the most innovative co is...guess who?




Each year, Bill Gates escapes to a hideaway on Washington State’s Hood Canal to ponder Microsoft’s next leap forward. Any Microsoft employee can submit a written proposal for a new product or service for him to consider during the days he is there. He promises to read them all.

Gates’ ritual is part of his push to ensure that Microsoft remains at the forefront of innovation in the software industry. If Gates likes an idea, he’ll return to the company’s headquarters and launch a new initiative around it.

Few bosses devote that kind of energy to innovation. But for Microsoft, Gates’ attention to it has paid off. Though Microsoft is a giant with a market capitalization of nearly $300 billion, its executives say it retains the agility of a startup when it comes to introducing new products and improving old ones. It was named the world’s third most innovative company, behind Apple and 3M , in a poll conducted last year by Boston Consulting Group (BCG)
and Knowledge@Wharton, which subsequently teamed up teamed up to host the Ben Franklin Forum on Innovation at Wharton.

Attending were representatives of many of the companies that senior executives around the world identified as the 20 most innovative in the world. The goal of the meeting was to examine innovation from every angle — what it means, why some firms do it better than others, and how even established giants can jumpstart their ability to innovate.

The companies identified as the most innovative by the survey were: Apple, 3M, Microsoft, GE, Sony, Dell, IBM, Google, Procter & Gamble, Nokia, Virgin, Samsung, Wal-Mart, Toyota, eBay, Intel, Amazon, Ideo, Starbucks and BMW. Many of these organizations sent their representatives to the event to share ideas about innovation as well as to be recognized for their achievements. In addition, winners of the Wharton Infosys Business Transformation Awards also participated in the Forum.

Innovation, of course, has become a corporate buzzword. It’s as much a part of today’s jargon as “total quality management” was in an earlier era. You can hardly skim the chairman’s letter in an annual report without coming across hosannas to it. But swearing fealty to an idea is very different from practicing it. One is about hope; the other, action. Innovators act.

Many companies spend a great deal of time and effort on measuring innovation, says Jim Andrew, senior vice president and head of innovation at BCG: “While none of these measures individually may be perfect, a suite of measures allows you to get your arms around measuring the progress of innovation. It allows you to learn and change as it becomes necessary. Companies sometimes fail to measure and manage innovation, but that is a mistake that can be avoided.”

How, then, should companies measure innovation? According to Andrew, companies should measure three main things. “First, you should track the outputs of the innovation process. Next, you need a set of measures to track the inputs. This is where innovation can be most precisely measured. People track the amount of money they spend on
research, and they also track specific people. In our experience, human capital is in much shorter supply than financial capital. The scarce resource is always your best people. The third area is the effectiveness of your process. To sum up, you’ve got to measure inputs, outputs, and process performance.”
Companies that measure and manage innovation will find that this helps prevent their businesses from becoming commoditised. “It’s all about finding new ways to create customer value,” says Hal Sirkin, senior vice president at BCG. “If you are selling widgets and if you can make a widget that is inherently better for the customer, you can charge more for it. And by charging more, you end up creating more value.”

Sirkin Says companies with innovative cultures retain their people better: “They create more opportunities for people because of the growth and the environment that inherently comes with innovation. It’s not a boring job. It’s exciting because you keep thinking of new ways to meet customer needs. Everybody wants to help their customers do better. It’s just part of who we are as human beings. And so by doing that, you create more value for your people too.”

To understand innovation, you first have to distinguish it from invention. Too many people confuse them, says Linda Sanford, senior vice president at IBM. A company’s portfolio of patents reveals its record as an inventor. IBM, for example, remains formidable in this regard, with a record number of patents. But patents aren’t enough. The technology has to find its way into products.

Not all innovations are created equal. Wharton’s Paul Schoemaker points out that many people cite only of “hits” like the Blackberry or Starbucks coffee shops when talking about innovation. “But some companies don’t play that game,” he said. “They play a percentage game of incremental innovation, like Toyota. And some companies aren’t really innovators at all. They play a loss-avoidance game. Think about the airlines.”
Tom Kelley, general manager of IDEO, a design and innovation consultancy, parsed the problem differently. He argued that many firms strive to deliver hits and incremental innovations — or at least they should. “Customers demand the incremental stuff, so you’re compelled do it,” he says. “Meanwhile, you have to do the leaps yourself. Breakthroughs are important but not urgent.”

Just as critical as defining innovation is figuring out what distinguishes innovative ideas from humdrum ones. To Steven Berlin Johnson, author of Everything Bad is Good for You, three of the best innovations in recent years — the web, Google and the iPod — share three qualities. They have simple user interfaces. They reuse existing information. And they were created by small groups of people, not cumbersome committees. “With the web, the powerful insight was the ability to click on a blue word and go somewhere — the linking,” he said. “Networking theorists thought you had to have two-way communication, multiple link levels and more authoring built in. Those are all good ideas, but the beauty of the web is that you just click on a blue word.” Even the most computer-phobic person can point and click.

Google is nearly as easy to use. When it began, competing search engines often employed busy graphics and organized their results in opaque ways. Google presented only its memorable moniker, a mostly white screen and a text-input field. Likewise, the genius of the iPod is its scroll wheel, which allows a user to rapidly spin through thousands of songs. These three innovations make existing information easier to find and organize and allow a person to recombine text, photographs and music in ways uniquely useful to him. “The iPod is a tool for taking information — digital music files — and creating your own media experience,” says Johnson. But none of them is a philosopher’s stone, turning lead into gold. Rather, each recycles. That even applies to the web, which has revolutionized communications. It merely lets users share knowledge in new ways.
A visionary CEO goes a long way to ensuring that an organization will innovate and no one embodies this notion better than Steve Jobs. But according to Intel director PK Gupta, a CEO who looms as large in a company’s innovative ability, as Jobs does in Apple, can present problems. A cult of personality arises around the boss, with employees assuming that all great ideas flow from him. “What happens when he’s gone?” asks Gupta. Apple’s history in this regard isn’t encouraging. Jobs left in the mid-1980s after a power struggle with a CEO who he had recruited. Without its founder, the firm floundered and didn’t regain its innovative edge until he returned in 1997.

An antidote to dependence on a visionary boss is building a company-wide culture of innovation. That requires both tangible steps like creating the right teams, procedures and rewards but also intangible ones like giving employees room to be creative.

After becoming boss of Xerox in 2001, Anne Mulcahy wanted to pump up the company’s innovative abilities even as she pared away costs. She sought out the advice of one Xerox researcher with lots of patents. “He said that most innovation happens by accident and experiment not design,” she recalls. “It’s allowing people to push barriers.”
That doesn’t mean that companies should allow workers to wander around like wannabe Franklins, waiting for eureka moments. They must provide structures that ensure that work gets done but let innovation flourish. And they must create channels through which promising ideas become profit-making products.

Microsoft, for its part, employs a variety of means to make sure that these things happen. It has seven research labs worldwide, including ones in Redmond, San Francisco, Beijing and Bangalore, India. Each lab has carved out a specialty. “Bangalore is focused on emerging markets and low-cost computing,” says Ian Sands, a director at Microsoft. “Beijing brings the same sort of local strength in speech and character recognition.”
The company also employs three chief technology officers, each with an area of expertise and an incubator for cultivating pet technologies. The highest profile member of this trio is famed software entrepreneur Ray Ozzie, creator of the Lotus Notes program, who joined Microsoft when it acquired his Groove Networks. He’s already shown why folks in the software business revere him. In October, he penned a manifesto, widely circulated on the web, about Microsoft’s future as a provider of advertising and subscription based software services.

Sands, who manages Microsoft’s industry innovations group, leads a team that is part incubator and part internal venture capitalist. He seeks out new ways in which cutting-edge Microsoft technology can be deployed. “We’re thinking about how R&D can apply to the pain points in a variety of industries as well as in the mixing of industries,” he says. “We’re finding new white space between industries.” His group has teamed up with Umpqua Bank in Portland, to enable the bank’s customers to use their cell phones and personal digital assistants to execute transactions.

Sands emphasized that old-fashioned methods, delivered in newfangled ways, can spur innovation. Microsoft has a virtual suggestion box into which anyone affiliated with the company — an employee, contractor, vendor or customer — can submit an idea for a new product or service. “There’ve been some complaints that it’s a black hole,” he says. “But in response we say, ‘Here are the things that have come from it.’”

Many big, successful companies were, at one point their evolution, innovators — they wouldn’t have grown big if they weren’t. Ford, which like GM is struggling today, invented modern automotive manufacturing. “Winners become losers,” says Schoemaker. “Look at what happened to Sears and AT&T. The prediction would be that Microsoft won’t be on top of the world in 20 years. Maybe the attempt to be rational squeezes out the ability to be innovative.”
Sands conceded that all of these tendencies exist, even at Microsoft, but added that his company is fighting to build a culture that resists them. “It’s an ongoing struggle, but we know to be competitive that we have to be innovative.”

Big, established firms with staid cultures can change. Consider Procter & Gamble. “In the old days, things were pretty much top-down at P&G,” says. “Now there’s a new CEO and he’s turned the big battleship in three or four years.’”

IBM exemplifies the same sort of trajectory. In its early years it was the leading innovator in the computer industry. Then in middle age, the company slumped, as computing moved away from mainframes to PCs and the internet. But in the 1990s, former chief Lou Gerstner brought the firm back from also-ran to innovator. At both P&G and IBM, the culture had to be shocked into changing. At the IBM, the threat was real — the company was losing market share to more nimble competitors and bleeding money.

P&G, in contrast, seemed to be thriving when Lafley took over in 2000, says Jeff Weedman, P&G’s vice president for external business development. Even so, the new boss set ambitious goals. “At P&G, for many years, you could get by not making any mistakes,” Weedman explained. “But Lafley came in and said, ‘I want innovation across the spectrum — in how we market, manufacture and distribute.’

“He was quoted as saying that he wanted 50% of our revenues to come from new products. Later he was asked, ‘How’d you get to that number?’ and he said, ‘I made it up.’ Fifty-fifty is a philosophical approach. The actual number will be demonstrated by good ideas winning in the market.” Prophets don’t always have time to check facts.

Despite P&G’s commitment to innovation, it refuses to pay bonuses for patents filed by its researchers, Weedman said. A study suggests that doing so is counterproductive. “Someone at Rockwell found that October was their most innovative month of the year in terms of patent filings,” he says. “It takes about 90 days to get a patent. So people were paying their bills from the holidays with their patent bonuses.” Plus, as IBM’s Sanford pointed out, patents don’t necessarily translate into innovations.

A business adage says you can’t manage what you can’t measure. But measuring innovation is trickier than toting up sales or counting costs savings. What’s the best metric? Participants at the conference couldn’t agree, but argued that a measurement would emerge, even if it’s evolving.

“If innovation means profit, you can always measure it,” says Ashwani Rishi, president and chief executive of ITC-Infotech USA. ITC is an Indian conglomerate, with investments in cigarette making, hotels and technology, and began its life as Imperial Tobacco Co. Rishi proposed a metric that he called “intellectual horsepower.” It would take into account such factors as total number of new ideas, the number of those that are implemented and the number of implementations that yield profitable products.
Microsoft’s Sands likewise argues that profits are the acid test: “Show me the money is what it comes down to,” he says. Yet a company typically needs more than a year to develop and roll out an innovation. So profits aren’t useful as a shorter-term measure. That’s why Microsoft Research tracks the sorts of stuff that Rishi would incorporate in his metric: the number of ideas that find their way into products and the number products shipped with those features.

P&G’s Weedman, who oversees new business development, says he looks at whether his company’s divisions are allocating time and money on the new ideas that he brings to them. “Is it good enough that they’re spending scarce resources on it? Are they staffing the project? Talk’s cheap.” In the end, though, he agrees that innovation means nothing if it doesn’t yield profitable offerings. “In the market, the consumer is the boss, and every day is election day.” His boss, Lafley, put the same idea slightly differently in a recent interview: “All of the scientists — and we employ a lot of them — understand that innovation is in the consumer’s eyes. Innovation has to be good value. It’s not innovation at any price or cost.”
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Reacher
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Post  Posted: Mar 11, 2006 - 04:13 PM  Reply with quote  Back to top

Microsoft as a leader in innovation?????? Get real!!!!

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"China is a sleeping giant. Let her sleep, for when she wakes she will shake the world." ~ Napoleon Bonaparte
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Henry_Chinaski
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Post  Posted: Mar 12, 2006 - 01:29 PM  Reply with quote  Back to top

Excellent article Subhashis.

Pretty much in line with some findings of a great book from Paul Friedman called The World is Flat.

This book covers the healthy competition between the research centers of Microsoft in Beijing, Bangalore and Redmond and the impact that competition has in inovation.

One thing I am wondering: how long will it take for the first Chinese company to appear in this list? And which company would it be? Hisense? Haier? Aigo? Will be interesting to watch.

CFM: hate it or love it Microsoft delivers thousands of patent requests every year. They do have tremendously good products and they have not so good products. But overall they do deliver a lot of good stuff (specially language platforms, hand held devices accessibility apps and so forth). They do have a bad track in security but I think everybody realizes that when Bill Gates sets his mind in something, he usually gets it done.
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