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The Spread of Innovation around the
World: How Asia Now Rivals Silicon Valley
as New Home to Global Innovation Centers
2
88
Number of
new innovation
centers opened
globally
between
March-October
2016
An Ever Increasing Appetite for
Innovation Centers
Figure 1: The Accelerating Growth of Innovation Centers Globally
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
Have innovation centers become fashionable? In
our third installment that tracks the state of digital
innovation centers around the world, we observed
a significant jump in the number of new innovation
centers that launched across the globe. In just eight
months, 88 new centers opened between March
and October 2016, compared to 67 between July
2015 and February 2016 (see Figure 1). To better
understand this trend and its significance, we
July 2015 February 2016 October 2016
Total Innovation Centers
301
368
456
analyzed all new innovation center activity between
March to October 2016 (more on our research
methodology at the end of this paper). We set out
to explore the regions, sectors and subject matters
that are shaping global innovation. More so, we
examine the key factors driving innovation centers,
their purpose, the challenges they face, and what
defines success.
What are Innovation Centers?
Innovation centers represent enterprise investments in understanding new market dynamics, acquiring
new expertise and resources, and also aligning with entrepreneurs, startups, investors, academic
institutions, and related ecosystems driving new trends. Innovation centers assume many shapes, but
at their core, they are comprised of special teams of intrapreneurs inhouse or moved into dedicated
sites within relevant global tech hubs. They function outside of the traditional operational landscape
with the goal of accelerating digital innovation, rethinking customer experience, improving operational
efficiency and testing new business models. Current priorities shared among innovation centers focus
on digital technologies such as Big Data, the Internet of Things, Social Media, Mobile, Robotics,
Augmented Reality and 3D Printing.
3
Figure 2: Silicon Valley’s Innovation Leadership is Contested
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
July 2015 February 2016 October 2016
Silicon Valley's Share of Innovation Centers
18%
16%
14%
This paper is the third in our innovation center research program, following on from:
ƒƒ “The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers” in July
2015, and
ƒƒ “Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation Empires Worldwide” in May 2016
Silicon Valley Remains Capital of
Innovation but its Leadership is
Contested
Silicon Valley’s reign as the epicenter of innovation
continues. Today it hosts 65 innovation centers, up from
53 in July 2015 – a 23% increase in little over a year.
Despite its continued growth, Silicon Valley no longer
claims sole ownership of innovation. In each report, we
witnesstheinevitableerosionofitsdominance.Between
July 2015 and October 2016, its share in the world’s
total innovation centers has fallen from 18% to 14% (see
Figure 2). This is a result of increasing competition from
a diverse set of hubs across the world. In particular, as
Figure 3 shows, the top three cities in Asia – Singapore,
Bangalore and Tokyo – together added more innovation
centers (9) between March and October 2016 than the
Silicon Valley (7).
4
Figure 3: Innovation Center Index - Top 10 Locations for Innovation Centers,
Worldwide
Tokyo, Shanghai and Atlanta share the same rank. Tel Aviv and Toronto share the same rank
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
01
10
Top 10 Locations
In June 2015
Top 10 Locations
in February 2016
Top 10 Locations
In October 2016
Silicon Valley
London
Singapore
Tokyo
Shanghai
Berlin
Munich
Tel Aviv
Chicago
Paris
Silicon Valley
London
Paris
Singapore
Bangalore
Tokyo
Shanghai
Berlin
Munich
Boston
Silicon Valley
London
Singapore
Tokyo
Atlanta
Bangalore
Shanghai
Paris
2
Tel Aviv
Toronto
66888
11
1314
16
65
Silicon
Valley
London
July 2015 February 2016 October 2016
Singapore Paris Banglore Tokyo Shanghai Atlanta Tel Aviv Toronto
The Evolution of Innovation Centers in Top 10 Cities
(Number of innovation centers opened per duration and total)7
5
53
2
4
10
4
3 2
2
4
3
2 2
3
3
2
2
17 9 4 6 6 2 4 3
5
9
14
19222223242529
146US
UK India France Canada Germany China Japan Singapore
Australia
Cumulative Number of Innovation Centers - Top 10 Countries
2
3
3
3
3
4
5
7
9
33US
India
UK
China
Singapore
Canada
Indonesia
Israel
South Africa
France
Newly Opened Innovation Centers (March – October 2016) - Top 10 Countries
Evolution of Countries in the Share of Cumulative Innovation Centers
5%
7%
6%
5%
6% 6%
5%
4%
5% 5%
2%
3%3%
4%
3%
6%6%
5%
Up to Jul-15 (out of 301) Up to Feb-16 (out of 368) Up to Oct-16 (out of 456)
UK India France Germany China Singapore
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
6
35%
Growth in
the number
of innovation
centers in Asia
between March
and October 2016
– the highest
across all regions
Asia is Overtaking the US and
Europe
Is Asia the New Innovation Magnet?
Asia is increasingly offering stiff competition to Silicon
Valley. In our latest analysis, Asia (34) added more
innovation centers than any other region. In fact, the
number of innovation centers in Asia has taken a big
stride forward between March and October 2016,
making Asia host to 29% of all innovation centers
– overtaking Europe in terms of its share of total
innovation centers for the first time (see Figure 4).
The availability of talent is a key driver for growth. Of
the 14 new Fintech innovation centers established
globally between March and October 2016, 5 of
these were in Asia as organizations look to tap into
the region’s talent pool to meet changing customer
needs. For Manulife, one of Canada’s largest
insurers, which launched LOFT, its innovation
center in Singapore, the local start-up culture was
instrumental in the decision. Roy Gori, President
and CEO, Manulife Asia, said at the centers
launch: “Consumers in Asia are looking for tools
and services to make their lives easier. There are
tremendous rewards on offer for those businesses
that take up the challenge. That’s why we chose
to build a LOFT in Asia and Singapore, with its
thriving start-up culture, is the perfect home for that
investment.”1
Why Does Tracking Innovation Destinations Matter?
Since launching the industry’s first comprehensive research study on innovation centers in 2015,
we have identified many important shifts in cities and countries that attract corporate investments.
Keeping a keen eye on these dynamics helps companies identify potential locations for their
innovation centers and better leverage innovation ecosystems. Different hubs around the world
tend to unify specific expertise and technology trends, which align uniquely with outside industries.
This analysis serves as a barometer to firms that want to identify new growth opportunities, extend
existing brands and leverage digital technologies to transform customer experiences, operations
and business models.
We learned over the years in our research, that each
location tends to cultivate specialized expertise
and technology development. In Asia, artificial
intelligence (AI) is planting roots. Since our last
study, four out of the nine new AI focused innovation
centers in the March-October 2016 period were
opened in Asia. In the region, universities, such as
Nanyang Technological University in Singapore,
and Singapore’s Agency for Science, Technology
and Research (A*STAR) are promoting AI-focused
programs to develop innovative products and build
AI talent pool.
Earlier this year, China announced its plans to
boost the growth of AI innovation in a bid to be
“in line with the global AI technology and industry
by 2018”2
. According to a recent report released
by the US government, China appears to be
overtaking the US in terms of publishing research
in a fast growing subfield of artificial intelligence
known as “deep learning”3
.
The rise of Asia as an innovation superpower lies
in the impressive growth witnessed by its key
innovation hubs – Singapore, Bangalore, Shanghai,
Tokyo and Tel Aviv – five cities in our global top 10
rankings that together account for 36% of all Asian
innovation centers. These cities, vying to attract
investment and digital talent, are among the most
promising locations in their respective countries.
ƒƒ Singapore: The city-state reputed for its
business-friendly environment has been
positioning itself as the digital innovation test-
bed. It recently opened the world’s largest
Fintech hub4
and also started trials of the
world’s first self-driving taxis5
.
7
Figure 4: Asia Attracted the Most New Innovation Centers and Grew the Fastest
Across all Geographies
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
Asia
US
Europe
RoW
Number of New Innovation Centers
(March-October 2016)
Region-wise Growth in Innovation Centers
(March-October 2016)
34
33
13
8
35%
29%
12%
16%
Asia has Overtaken Europe in its Share of Total Innovation Centers Across Key Regions
15% 13%
13%
30%
29%
26%
30% 31% 32%
25%
27%
29%
Jul-15 Feb-16 Oct-16
Rest of the World
Europe
US
Asia
Asia has Overtaken Europe in its Share of Total Innovation Centers Across Key Regions
ƒƒ Bangalore: Often dubbed as the ‘Silicon Valley
of India’, employing over a million employees
in the local tech sector, Bangalore rose
sharply in rankings in the previous edition of
this research. By adding three new innovation
centers in the latest update, it maintains its
fifth position. Among notable developments,
Apple announced its plans to open a startup
accelerator in Bangalore in May this year6
.
ƒƒ Israel: Long known as the hub of cybersecurity
talent, Israel has capitalized on this and
reinvented itself as a Fintech hub. Recent
estimates suggest that Israel has more
than 430 Fintech firms, 60 of which raised
approximately $370 million as of 20147
. Israel
ranks second in terms of innovation and third
in terms of the quality of research institutions
according to the World Economic Forum’s
Global Competitiveness Report 2016-20178
.
$370
million
Capital raised
by Israel’s 60
Fintech firms in
2014
8
This is due in part to government and other public
sector initiatives that seek to establish India as a
digitally empowered society and nurture innovation.
As well as India’s traditional tier-1 cities, tier-2 and 3
cities are becoming attractive investment destinations.
Jaipur, Pune, and Hyderabad each welcomed two
new centers in this period involving partnerships with
government. A 2016 study found that the number
of active incubators in India increased by 40% to
140, with tier-2 and 3 cities adding 66% of these
new incubators13
. Cisco, along with Qualcomm
Technologies, General Electric, and 3M India, working
with the local government, established an innovation
center in Jaipur. Similarly, Hypercat, a London-based
consortiumofInternetofThings(IoT)companies,joined
with the city of Hyderabad to launch an accelerator
and incubator to drive IoT and smart cities solutions14
.
Asia is Attracting Non-Asian Companies
Asiancompaniesarenottheonlycompaniesinvesting
in Asian innovation centers. In our previous update,
41% of innovation centers opened or announced
in Asia were founded by Asian companies. In the
current research, this drops to 29%. We also see
a significant increase in the number of American
companies investing in Asian innovation centers,
from 32% previously to 53% now. For instance,
JCPenny, a US-based department store chain,
opened its innovation center in Bangalore. Therace
Risch, EVP and chief information officer of JCPenny,
says, “We aim to leverage a highly qualified talent
pool and drive innovation in one of the fastest
growing technology hubs in the world”15
.
Asia’s growing prowess in monetizing innovation
has been another key factor behind the rise of
innovation centers. The latest data released by the
World Intellectual Property Organization, a Geneva
based UN special agency, states that Asia has more
than doubled its share of patent applications filed
under the UN’s Patent Cooperation Treaty since
20059
and Asia accounted for 43 percent of last
year’s global total. Asia has also amassed over
56% of the world’s total patent grants – the highest
among all geographies, up from 45% in 2005. While
during the same period (2005-15) Europe’s share of
global patent grants has fallen from 24% to 13%.
Samsung recently opened an innovation center in Tel
Aviv, with David Eun, President of Samsung Global
Innovation Center (GIC), saying: “The decision to
open our Israeli office is rooted in the region’s strong
startup ecosystem and world class talent. The
country also has a proven track record of software
and services innovation and a deep expertise in areas
that are particularly interesting to us.”10
Samsung
made its intentions to focus on artificial intelligence
very clear in an Innovation Summit held in Tel Aviv in
July 2016, where Samsung’s Chief Strategy Officer
Young Sohn said, “As our world turns toward smart
cars, robots and drones, this becomes crucial”11
.
Indian Government’s Digital Push Is Key
India’s rapid progress as an innovation destination of
choice was captured in our previous research, and
the country has since further strengthened its position
(see “Asia Overtakes Europe; Gives the US a Tough
Competition”)12
. A total of nine new innovation centers
opened their doors in India in the March-October 2016
period, securing its number 2 status in the world for
newly opened innovation centers (see Figure 2).
140
Total number
of active
incubators and
accelerators in
India
53%
Share of Asia’s
innovation
centers invested
in by American
companies
9
Asia Overtakes Europe and Gives US a Tough Competition
Total of 132
innovation
centers - up
by 35%
4 out of top ten
countries are from Asia
The Internet of Things Policy
for 2016-2020
The Startup India Initiative,
launched January 2016
2nd most preferred
destination among new
innovation centers, globally
Most favoured
destination in
Asia
Accounts for 27%
of Asia’s new innovation
centers
Harbours one in
every ten new global
innovation centers
4 out of 9 global AI
innovation centers set up in Asia
Hosts 29%of all
innovation centers
56% of world’s
total patent grants
Half of top ten
cities based in Asia
5 out of 14 new global
Fintech innovation
centers set up in Asia
India leads the Asian economies
Steps taken by regional entities
Spurred by multiple government initiatives, Indian tier-2 cities
rapidly expand innovation center footprint in India
New Innovation Centers Opened in India
(March-October 2016)
Bangalore (3)
Hyderabad (2)
Pune (2)
Jaipur (2)
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
10
Figure 5: New Innovation Centers are Emerging Globally but Asia Takes the Lead
321 4No. of Centers 5 6 7
Legend
*Maps not to scale
Asia
Bangalore (3)
Abu Dhabi (1)
Dubai (1)
Hyderabad (2)
Nanjing (1)
Busan (1)
Shanghai (2)
Tokyo (2)
Hung Hom (1)
Makati (1)
Singapore (4)
Tel Aviv (2)
Pune (2)
Jaipur (2)
North America
Toronto (2)
Waterloo (1) Philadelphia (2)
Cinnaminson (1)
Baltimore (1)
New Jersey (1)
Pittsburgh (1)
Atlanta (3)
Melbourne, Florida(1)
Orlando(1)
Silicon Valley (7)
Ione (1)
Salt Lake City, Utah (1)
Australia
Melbourne (1)
Johannesburg (2)
Cape Town (1)
Lagos (1)
AfricaWestern Europe
Paris (2)
Kemptthal (1)
Wetzlar (1)
London (2)
Kettering (1)
Surrey (1)
Telford (1)
Manchester (1)
Spread across Trondheim,
Ålesund and Gjøvik (1)
Greenfield (1)
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter
Key locations with new innovation centers opened/announced between March and October 2016
11
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter
July 2015
February 2016
October 2016
Europe - % of Total
Innovation Centers
Rest of the World Europe
Major European Countries - % of
European Innovation Centers
211 15 20 1990
262 22 22 21106
337 29 24 22
17% 22% 21%
21% 21% 20%
24% 20% 18%
26%
29%
30%
119
36
41
44
Europe continues to fall as a % of total innovation
centers even as the number of centers rise
Despite Brexit, UK is growing its fraction of
the European centers
Rest of Europe UK France Germany
Acceleration in Europe is Slowing
Europe has witnessed a sharp fall (-19%) in the
number of new innovation centers opened between
March and October 2016. Europe’s share of total
innovation centers has also fallen significantly versus
the previous report (see Figure 6). An uncertain
economic environment, as well as regulatory and
tax related challenges, could be behind this trend.
Perhaps surprisingly, the UK’s share of Europe’s
innovation centers has consistently risen since July
2015, avoiding any negative Brexit impact, at least
for the time being. Although UK startups seem to
have started looking elsewhere16
, it may take a while
for corporations to assess and react to the post-
Brexit scenario.
Figure 6: Europe seems to be Falling Behind in the Digital Innovation Race
12
Specialized Function/Technology-
Focused Innovation Centers are in
Vogue
The number of new centers focused on
Artificial Intelligence is up by a factor of 9
The number of innovation centers focused on
AI grew from 1 in our previous update to 9 as
organizations explore this technology and its likely
applications. In 2015, the tech giants - Google,
Facebook, Microsoft, Baidu - spent $8.5 billion on AI
deals, a 4x increase since 201017
. Interest is coming
from a variety of industries, including banking,
financial services, and automotive, among others.
For automotive companies, the pressure that Google
and others are exerting in the driverless car space is
a key driver. For instance, Honda has opened an AI
innovation center in Tokyo to tap into the expertise
needed to help them commercialize self-driving
cars18
. UCB, a global biopharmaceutical company,
opened an innovation center in partnership with
Georgia Tech to explore how machine learning (a
subfield of AI) and advanced analytics can improve
patient experience and care19
.
Figure 7: Which Sectors Are Investing in Innovation Centers?
Organizations are focusing innovation on
customer experience
Organizations are entrusting innovation centers
with focused innovation programs. For instance,
Panasonic opened cloud9, a dedicated innovation
center to provide immersive product and technology
experiences in collaboration with its partners.
Its mission is to provide customers with “perfect
happiness”, focusing on smart factory solutions
and IoT manufacturing connectivity. Rather than
brainstorming on new product creation or operate
a traditional R&D lab, cloud9 functions as an area
to demonstrate products to manufacturers and
interact with them in a positive way. As a Panasonic
product manager explains, “cloud9 truly allows any
customer to dive deep into specific applications or
see everything Panasonic brings to the table at the
innovation center.”20
Total Innovation Centers and Growth - Major SectorsSector-Wise Distribution of New
Innovation Centers
Others Manufacturing
Financial Services Electronics and IT
Pharmaceuticals Consumer Products & Retail
Growth rate for the period March 2016 – October 2016 (Total)
Automotive Telecom
Chemicals Aviation
17%
16%
6%
5%
5%
5%
2%
1%
24%
20%
180
88
64
31 28 28
Manufacturing Telecom Financial
Services
Automotive Electronics
and IT
Consumer
Products and
Retail
11%
5%
31%
15%
100% 17%
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter
13
With more and more companies joining the
innovation center movement, and the volume and
speed of openings accelerating, the pressure on
established innovation centers increases. They
need to quickly deliver results or risk losing further
investments to newer locations. Similarly, for the
newly established centers, the expected time to go
from idea to innovation is reducing. Understanding
best practices for innovation center success
therefore becomes critical. What causes some
Identify the Problem, and Equally,
Identify the Opportunity
Don’t mistake a symptom for a problem.
Organizations need to learn to differentiate a
symptom of something that’s broken—be it a flawed
growth strategy, talent problem, or technology gap –
with a problem. They need to ensure the innovation
center is designed to solve a core problem or it
will fall victim to the same issues that bog down
Innovation Centers Require a
Methodical and Dedicated Approach
to Break Free of “Business as Usual”
innovation centers to fail? What is the recipe for a
successful innovation center? And what steps do
organizations need to take to make their innovation
centers click?
Drawing on our experience of working with large,
Fortune 500 organizations across major industries,
we have defined a set of fundamentals to focus on
to ensure innovation centers succeed and deliver
(see Figure 8).
Figure 8: Making Innovation Centers Work
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter
Making Innovation
Centers Work
Identify the
Problem
Bring the Right
Extermal Partner
Define the
Metrics
Organize for
Value
Socialize, but
Prioritize
Manage
the Talent
other innovation efforts that came before. In many
cases, work in innovation doesn’t have to solve a
problem, striving to unlock new opportunities is
also important. Identify ways to improve existing
products, processes, etc., or discover ways to
create new value. Some of these goals could include
building key skills in a specific digital technology,
identify startups to collaborate with for the future,
attract talent with specific skills, among others.
CANVAS
Marriott’s
innovation
incubator to
make its food
and beverage
offerings more
dynamic and
appealing to
millennials
14
Define the Goals and Measures
for Growth
What’s measured matters. Measuring ROI is critical
in any endeavor. In innovation, companies must
identify the “R” or the return that will accelerate
innovation. Define the goals. Measure the KPIs and
ultimate metrics that track progress to growth and
innovation. Is the primary focus of the lab on driving
strategy, revenue, adding capability, or attracting
talent? Organizations need to ensure there is
clarity on the goals and metrics for what the lab will
measure will be judged against. The innovation lead
at a manufacturing major told us, “We measure the
outputs that we are delivering to our corporation, as
that is what they are interested in. But internally, we
also take into account what we are taking as inputs
and also what we are doing as processes.”21
Socialize, but Prioritize
One of the challenges we heard in previous
reports is that innovation succeeds outside of
day-to-day operations but also has difficulty
permeating work and culture within the overall
enterprise. Working in isolation can reduce the
odds of incubated ideas successfully re-entering
the business. Successful labs make smart choices
about when to socialize, what to socialize, with
whom, and how often. Marriott, one of the
world’s largest hotel companies, launched its
global innovation incubator CANVAS with an aim
to make its food and beverage (F&B) offerings
more dynamic and appealing to a millennial
demographic22
. The incubators, now launched in
multiple locations across the globe, make use of
Marriott’s properties to attract young chefs and
bartenders to incubate local and authentic food
and drink ideas. Besides improving its millennial
appeal, this approach has helped Marriott
significantly shift how it sources F&B concepts
around the globe, making the process more
efficient, less costly and more nimble.
Attract and Nurture Talent
Intrapreneurs aretheentrepreneursoftheenterprise.
They operate differently than traditional workforces.
Their entire work is based on taking risks whereas
common corporate cultures are largely risk averse.
It’s important to foster intrapraneurship to attract
the best, most capable talent and expertise to drive
innovation.
Designing careers paths for the top talents in
the lab is as important as effective operational
processes, because without world-class talent, it is
impossible to have a world-class lab. A key piece of
this is defining performance metrics and incentive
schemes for lab staff. The incentive scheme must
encourage entrepreneurial behavior to ensure the
right culture takes root within the lab.
Organize for Value
When it comes to innovation, ideas are a commodity.
And innovating for the sake of innovation is. As any
startup will share, often it is the pursuit of several ideas
and the pivoting of them that accelerate and scale
commercial viability. The rush to start prototyping can
divert attention away from big, unanswered questions
around the strategic and commercial value of an idea.
At the same time, innovation centers must prioritize
and productize pilots but also incubate ideas that take
time to cultivate. Organizations need to ensure that
they understand how the idea will meet immediate
customer demands that align with business impact
while also supporting ideas that map against longer
term trends. Understanding commercial value is
also about having a long-term view, as Samsung
demonstrates with its collaboration with a portfolio
mapping company. Kai Bond, MD of Samsung
Accelerator, a division of the Samsung Global
Innovation Center, states, “He came to Samsung
because he knows building a mapping platform is
a 5-7 year venture. Samsung NEXT won’t force his
hand into a sale like a typical VC.”23
Bring the Right External Partners
Great labs run lean. They may not need a certain
skillset full-time, but knowing when to bring in
specialized help in key moments will ensure more
effective problem solving while containing the head
count in the lab. The skill sets of external partners are
widely varied, so when outside expertise is needed,
organizations need to ensure that they are clear on
where they are in the journey and which capabilities
are best suited to that stage. For instance, Aviva,
one of the largest insurance companies, recently
partnered with a Silicon Valley based startup
accelerator Plug and Play to select startup partners
with insurance based digital innovation ideas24
.
15
Innovation Centers Must be a Part of,Not‘The’,Innovation Strategy
In the hurry to launch innovation centers, many treat the innovation job as ‘done’ once they’ve launched an innovation
center. However, the reality is more complex. In particular, while innovation centers are an influential node in an organization’s
innovation strategy, they cannot be the sum of the innovation strategy. They are just a part of it. In Figure 9, we highlight
the key goals, and pitfalls, that govern the success of an innovation center.
Figure 9: What Should an Innovation Center Be and Not Be?
Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter
A node and enabler in the innovation strategy
After 4 years of operations, Nordstrom’s Innovation Lab is moving
a number of employees from the lab to its Customer Experience
Center (CEC). A spokesperson for the organization said, “To
utilize the CEC to its full potential and widen the impact of
innovation, we are moving parts of the original Innovation Lab into
tech/biz teams while continuing to run a core Innovation Lab
focused on solving specific customer opportunities, in addition to
continuing to foster the innovation practice where needed.25
”
Ecosystem collaborators
BNY Mellon, through its seven innovation centers across the world,
has been collaborating with over 300 Fintech companies27
.
Built for scalability from the start
Practical questions need to be asked to evaluate scale potential,
such as “How will it fit into the current technology architecture?”
or “How will we manage this technology in our retail stores?”
These hard questions can strengthen a good idea and kill ideas
that do not have longevity, avoiding wasted effort.
Bottomless pits for investment
While measuring ROI for innovation efforts is a challenge, it is
important to maintain an ROI focus to ensure that the center
doesn’t lose its focus on achieving the original objectives. An
ex-CIO says, "They see this cool new lab, free from traditional
corporate constraints, which is being paid for by the core business
that they're helping to run. If CIOs are not careful, the lab actually
creates schisms. The result can be the type of misalignment that
the management team has tried hard to avoid”.26
Silos
Although innovation efforts tend to “bunker in” so they can
operate under different rules, this doesn’t mean disconnecting
them from the rest of the business. This is a fast path to smart
ideas that struggle to gain traction and scale.
Looking inwards only in their sector
Lear Corp., a Fortune 500 automotive seating manufacturer
based in the US, opened its innovation center in Detroit to
experiment with automotive as well as non-automotive product
offerings. It involves collaboration with the city’s creative and
tech talent to innovate on next-generation interiors, connected
cars and alternative-energy vehicles28
.
What Innovation Centers Shouldn’t Be?What Innovation Centers Should Be?
16
Research Methodology
We conducted an in-depth research of all innovation center launches and announcements
between March and October 2016, across all major industry sectors. Major sources, among
others, were:
ƒƒ Media reports and press releases
ƒƒ Annual reports of public companies
ƒƒ Executive interviews, conference speeches
ƒƒ Web and social media updates such as blog posts
The research explored innovation centers along multiple dimensions:
ƒƒ Mission behind the centers (e.g. increase innovation output, form relationships with
ecosystem partners)
ƒƒ Focus areas for the centers (e.g. mobility, Internet of Things, Big Data)
ƒƒ Collaborative relationships forged (e.g. with large companies, startups, universities)
ƒƒ Governance models adopted (e.g. centralized, decentralized, autonomous)
ƒƒ Challenges faced
ƒƒ Results delivered
Fahrenheit 212
Fahrenheit 212 is a global innovation strategy and design firm, acquired by Capgemini
Consulting in 2016. Fahrenheit has worked with a number of Fortune 500 companies across
a variety of sectors to make innovation a predictable driver of profitable growth, from crafting
robust innovation strategies, to building new product pipelines, to elevating the performance of
innovation centers, among other innovation disciplines.
CONCLUSION
The innovation centers that are successful are the ones that are able to tie their effort to larger organizational
motives. It’s those that operate with purpose that provide a bridge between the organization and the creative
marketplace, drive an innovation culture throughout the system, or build transformational models that disrupt
a sector. But, it would be wishful thinking to believe that setting up an innovation center is all that is required
for success. The true super-powers in the innovation space will be those who make innovation centers an
influential part of a bolder vision and a wider strategy.
17
1	 Manulife, “Manulife Launches New Lab of Forward Thinking Location in Singapore”, September 2016
2	 Xinhua, “China rolls out three-year program for AI growth”, May 2016
3	 National Science and Technology Council, “The National Artificial Intelligence Research and Development Strategic Plan”,
October 2016
4	 Singapore Business Review, “World’s largest fintech hub opens in Singapore”, November 2016
5	 Telegraph, “Singapore starts trial of world’s first self-driving taxis”, August 2016
6	 The Verge, “Apple announces app development accelerator in Bangalore, India”, May 2016
7	 PYMNTS.com, “Tel Aviv Fuels Israel’s ‘Startup Nation’ Reputation”, May 2016
8	 World Economic Forum, “The Global Competitiveness Report 2016–2017”, September 2016
9	 WIPO, “World Intellectual Property Indicators 2016”, October 2016; Financial Times, “Asia takes lead in rush to monetise
innovations”, June 2016
10	 Geektime, “Samsung NEXT opens in Tel Aviv to provide startups early access to company’s technology”, September 2016
11	 Times of Israel, “Samsung sees ramping up of Israeli investments”, July 2016
12	 Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter, “Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation Empires Worldwide”, June 2016
13	 Forbes, “India named world’s third-largest startup base behind US and UK”, October 2016
14	 Geektime, “New IoT accelerator could make Hyderabad one of India’s first smart cities”, Accessed November 2016
15	 Enterprise Innovation, “JCPenney opens global in-house center in Bangalore”, August 2016
16	 The Wall Street Journal, “Europe’s Startups Reassess Britain After ‘Brexit’”, June 2016
17	 Economist, “Million-dollar babies”, April 2016
18	 The Asahi Shimbun, “Honda steps up in race to win the best AI talent for driver-less cars”, June 2016
19	 Georgia Tech, “UCB Opens Innovation Center in Tech Square”, September 2016
20	 Panasonic, “Panasonic Opens “cloud9 Innovation Center”, a State-of-the-art Showroom in the United States”, August 2016
21	 Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter, “The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers”,
July 2015
22	 Fahrenheit 212, “Marriott CANVAS Building an innovation lab for Marriott to deliver authentic food and beverage experiences
for Millennials”, Accessed December 2016
23	 Geektime, “Samsung NEXT opens in Tel Aviv to provide startups early access to company’s technology”, September 2016
24	 Computer Weekly, “Aviva partners with Silicon Valley accelerator to kick-start innovation”, August 2016
25	 GeekWire, “Nordstrom shrinks Innovation Lab, reassigns employees in shakeup of tech initiatives”, February 2015
26	 ZDNET, “Why innovation labs fail and how to make them succeed”, May 2016
27	 Nikkei Asian Review, “Asian fintechs are in infancy with much potential, says BNY Mellon CIO”, November 2016
28	 Wards Auto, “Lear Innovation Center Targets More than Automotive”, October 2016
References
18
Discover more about our recent research on digital transformation
Disney: Making Magic
Through Digital Innovation
Disney: Making Magic
Through Digital Innovation
The Innovation Game: Why and How
Businesses are Investing in Innovation
Centers
The Innovation Game:
Why and How Businesses
are Investing in Innovation
Centers
N° 08 OCTOBER 2015
The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age:
Faster, Cheaper and Open
#DTR7
N° 08 OCTOBER 2015
The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age:
Faster, Cheaper and Open
#DTR8DIGITALTRANSFORMATION
INSTITUTE
Digital Transformation
Review 8: The New
Innovation Paradigm for
the Digital Age
Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation
Empires Worldwide
Update on Original Research “The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses
are Investing in Innovation Centers”
Digital Dynasties:
The Rise of Innovation
Empires Worldwide
When Digital Disruption Strikes:
How Can Incumbents Respond?
When Digital Disruption
Strikes: How Can
Incumbents Respond?
Digital Leadership
Interview: Mark Jamison,
Global Head of New
Product Development at
Visa Inc.
Digital Leadership:
mure-D: Inside Out
Entrepreneurship
#DTR9
The Digital Strategy Imperative:
Steady Long-Term Vision, Nimble Execution
N°09SUMMER2016
Digital Transformation
Review 9: The Digital
Strategy Imperative
Digital Leadership
Interview: James
Patterson, MVP and Head
of Capital One Labs
19
About the Authors
Jerome is head of Capgemini’s Digital Transformation Institute. He works closely with industry leaders and
academics to help organizations understand the nature and impact of digital disruptions.
Jerome Buvat
Head, Digital Transformation Institute, Capgemini
jerome.buvat@capgemini.com
@jeromebuvat
The authors would like to thank Jimmy Dotiwala, CFA from Capgemini Consulting India, Ramya Krishna Puttur and
Caroline Runge from the Digital Transformation Institute, Olivier Hervé from Capgemini Consulting Germany, Vincent
Joset from Capgemini France, Sam Hunt from Capgemini UK, and Hilda Carmichael and Saugata Ghosh from Capgemini
Australia for their contribution to this research
Amol is a senior consultant at the Digital Transformation Institute. He keenly follows the role played by mobile,
software and data science in digitally transforming organizations.
Eric is responsible for driving the growth of Fahrenheit 212’s portfolio of clients and service offerings across a broad spectrum
of industries and disciplines, pairing Fahrenheit’s innovation capabilities with companies seeking sustainable, profitable
growth. Prior to joining Fahrenheit 212, Eric was a practice co-founder and engagement leader at Ruder Finn Inc., with a
focus on corporate and product positioning, integrated communications and digital strategy. He has led award-winning global
engagements centered around innovation for FORTUNE 500 companies across financial services, CPG, healthcare, and
technology sectors. Eric studied Philosophy, Neuroscience, and Psychology for his BA at Washington University in St. Louis.
Amol Khadikar
Senior Consultant, Digital Transformation Institute, Capgemini
amol.khadikar@capgemini.com
@amolkhadikar
Eric Turkington
Director, Fahrenheit 212
eturkington@fahrenheit-212.com
Digital Transformation Institute
Dr. Ben Gilchriest is a Principal and innovation lead for Capgemini’s global Digital Services practice. Ben is focused on helping
businesses apply emerging technologies to enable new customer experiences and business models. He has founded and led
multiple new ventures and startups in Europe, Australia, SE Asia and North America. He is based in Los Angeles.
Ben Gilchriest
Principal, Capgemini
ben.gilchriest@capgemini.com
Digital Transformation Institute – The Digital Transformation Institute is Capgemini’s
research center on all things digital.
dti.in@capgemini.comDIGITALTRANSFORMATION
INSTITUTE
Subrahmanyam is a senior manager at the Digital Transformation Institute. He loves exploring the impact of
technology on business and consumer behavior across industries in a world being eaten by software.
Subrahmanyam KVJ
Senior Manager, Digital Transformation Institute, Capgemini
subrahmanyam.kvj@capgemini.com
@Sub8u
Brian Solis is a principal analyst at Altimeter Group, a Prophet company. He is also an award-winning author,
prominent blogger/writer, and keynote speaker. A digital analyst, anthropologist, and futurist, Solis has studied
and influenced the effects of emerging technology on business and society.
Brian Solis
Altimeter Group
brian@altimetergroup.com
@briansolis
Rightshore®
is a trademark belonging to Capgemini
Capgemini Consulting is the global strategy and transformation
consulting organization of the Capgemini Group, specializing in
advising and supporting enterprises in significant transformation,
from innovative strategy to execution and with an unstinting focus
on results. With the new digital economy creating significant
disruptions and opportunities, the global team of over 3,000
talented individuals work with leading companies and governments
tomasterDigitalTransformation,drawingontheirunderstandingof
the digital economy and leadership in business transformation and
organizational change.
Find out more at: www.capgemini-consulting.com
With more than 180,000 people in over 40 countries, Capgemini is
oneoftheworld’sforemostprovidersofconsulting,technologyand
outsourcing services. The Group reported 2015 global revenues of
EUR 11.9 billion. Together with its clients, Capgemini creates and
delivers business, technology and digital solutions that fit their
needs, enabling them to achieve innovation and competitiveness.
A deeply multicultural organization, Capgemini has developed its
own way of working, the Collaborative Business ExperienceTM,
and draws on Rightshore®
, its worldwide delivery model.
Learn more about us at www.capgemini.com.
About Capgemini and the
Collaborative Business Experience
Capgemini Consulting is the strategy and transformation consulting brand of Capgemini Group. The information contained in this document is proprietary.
© 2016 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
For more information, please contact:
Altimeter, a Prophet Company, is a research and strategy consulting firm that helps companies understand and take advantage of digital
disruption. In 2015, Prophet acquired Altimeter Group to bring forward-thinking digital research and strategy consulting together under one
umbrella, as well as to help clients unlock the power of digital transformation. Altimeter, founded in 2008 by best-selling author Charlene
Li, focuses on research in digital transformation, social business and governance, customer experience, Big Data, and content strategy.
Fahrenheit 212 is a global innovation strategy and design firm that joined the Capgemini Group in 2016. Based in New York and London,
Fahrenheit 212 defines innovation strategies and develops new products, services and experiences for some of the world’s leading
companies, such as Coca-Cola, Marriott and Citi. The global team of innovation practitioners work across a wide range of industries and
geographies. Team members bring together diverse capabilities of strategy, idea development, digital, research, branding and design. Find
out more at: http://www.fahrenheit-212.com
Capgemini Consulting Contacts
Altimeter Contact Fahrenheit Contact
Brian Solis
Principal Analyst, Altimeter Group
brian@altimetergroup.com
Eric Turkington
Director, Fahrenheit 212
eturkington@fahrenheit-212.com
United Kingdom
Didier Bonnet
didier.bonnet@capgemini.com
France
Stephane Regnier
stephane.regnier@capgemini.com
Norway
Elin Skauge
elin.skauge@capgemini.com
United States
Todd Rovak
todd.rovak@capgemini.com
Germany
Thomas Friedrich
thomas.friedrich@capgemini.com
Sweden/ Finland
Ulf Holmgren
ulf.holmgren@capgemini.com
Netherlands
Marc Burger
marc.jc.burger@capgemini.com
China
Julien Bourdinière
julien.bourdiniere@capgemini.com

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Innovation Growth

  • 1. The Spread of Innovation around the World: How Asia Now Rivals Silicon Valley as New Home to Global Innovation Centers
  • 2. 2 88 Number of new innovation centers opened globally between March-October 2016 An Ever Increasing Appetite for Innovation Centers Figure 1: The Accelerating Growth of Innovation Centers Globally Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis Have innovation centers become fashionable? In our third installment that tracks the state of digital innovation centers around the world, we observed a significant jump in the number of new innovation centers that launched across the globe. In just eight months, 88 new centers opened between March and October 2016, compared to 67 between July 2015 and February 2016 (see Figure 1). To better understand this trend and its significance, we July 2015 February 2016 October 2016 Total Innovation Centers 301 368 456 analyzed all new innovation center activity between March to October 2016 (more on our research methodology at the end of this paper). We set out to explore the regions, sectors and subject matters that are shaping global innovation. More so, we examine the key factors driving innovation centers, their purpose, the challenges they face, and what defines success. What are Innovation Centers? Innovation centers represent enterprise investments in understanding new market dynamics, acquiring new expertise and resources, and also aligning with entrepreneurs, startups, investors, academic institutions, and related ecosystems driving new trends. Innovation centers assume many shapes, but at their core, they are comprised of special teams of intrapreneurs inhouse or moved into dedicated sites within relevant global tech hubs. They function outside of the traditional operational landscape with the goal of accelerating digital innovation, rethinking customer experience, improving operational efficiency and testing new business models. Current priorities shared among innovation centers focus on digital technologies such as Big Data, the Internet of Things, Social Media, Mobile, Robotics, Augmented Reality and 3D Printing.
  • 3. 3 Figure 2: Silicon Valley’s Innovation Leadership is Contested Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis July 2015 February 2016 October 2016 Silicon Valley's Share of Innovation Centers 18% 16% 14% This paper is the third in our innovation center research program, following on from: ƒƒ “The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers” in July 2015, and ƒƒ “Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation Empires Worldwide” in May 2016 Silicon Valley Remains Capital of Innovation but its Leadership is Contested Silicon Valley’s reign as the epicenter of innovation continues. Today it hosts 65 innovation centers, up from 53 in July 2015 – a 23% increase in little over a year. Despite its continued growth, Silicon Valley no longer claims sole ownership of innovation. In each report, we witnesstheinevitableerosionofitsdominance.Between July 2015 and October 2016, its share in the world’s total innovation centers has fallen from 18% to 14% (see Figure 2). This is a result of increasing competition from a diverse set of hubs across the world. In particular, as Figure 3 shows, the top three cities in Asia – Singapore, Bangalore and Tokyo – together added more innovation centers (9) between March and October 2016 than the Silicon Valley (7).
  • 4. 4 Figure 3: Innovation Center Index - Top 10 Locations for Innovation Centers, Worldwide Tokyo, Shanghai and Atlanta share the same rank. Tel Aviv and Toronto share the same rank 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 01 10 Top 10 Locations In June 2015 Top 10 Locations in February 2016 Top 10 Locations In October 2016 Silicon Valley London Singapore Tokyo Shanghai Berlin Munich Tel Aviv Chicago Paris Silicon Valley London Paris Singapore Bangalore Tokyo Shanghai Berlin Munich Boston Silicon Valley London Singapore Tokyo Atlanta Bangalore Shanghai Paris 2 Tel Aviv Toronto 66888 11 1314 16 65 Silicon Valley London July 2015 February 2016 October 2016 Singapore Paris Banglore Tokyo Shanghai Atlanta Tel Aviv Toronto The Evolution of Innovation Centers in Top 10 Cities (Number of innovation centers opened per duration and total)7 5 53 2 4 10 4 3 2 2 4 3 2 2 3 3 2 2 17 9 4 6 6 2 4 3
  • 5. 5 9 14 19222223242529 146US UK India France Canada Germany China Japan Singapore Australia Cumulative Number of Innovation Centers - Top 10 Countries 2 3 3 3 3 4 5 7 9 33US India UK China Singapore Canada Indonesia Israel South Africa France Newly Opened Innovation Centers (March – October 2016) - Top 10 Countries Evolution of Countries in the Share of Cumulative Innovation Centers 5% 7% 6% 5% 6% 6% 5% 4% 5% 5% 2% 3%3% 4% 3% 6%6% 5% Up to Jul-15 (out of 301) Up to Feb-16 (out of 368) Up to Oct-16 (out of 456) UK India France Germany China Singapore Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
  • 6. 6 35% Growth in the number of innovation centers in Asia between March and October 2016 – the highest across all regions Asia is Overtaking the US and Europe Is Asia the New Innovation Magnet? Asia is increasingly offering stiff competition to Silicon Valley. In our latest analysis, Asia (34) added more innovation centers than any other region. In fact, the number of innovation centers in Asia has taken a big stride forward between March and October 2016, making Asia host to 29% of all innovation centers – overtaking Europe in terms of its share of total innovation centers for the first time (see Figure 4). The availability of talent is a key driver for growth. Of the 14 new Fintech innovation centers established globally between March and October 2016, 5 of these were in Asia as organizations look to tap into the region’s talent pool to meet changing customer needs. For Manulife, one of Canada’s largest insurers, which launched LOFT, its innovation center in Singapore, the local start-up culture was instrumental in the decision. Roy Gori, President and CEO, Manulife Asia, said at the centers launch: “Consumers in Asia are looking for tools and services to make their lives easier. There are tremendous rewards on offer for those businesses that take up the challenge. That’s why we chose to build a LOFT in Asia and Singapore, with its thriving start-up culture, is the perfect home for that investment.”1 Why Does Tracking Innovation Destinations Matter? Since launching the industry’s first comprehensive research study on innovation centers in 2015, we have identified many important shifts in cities and countries that attract corporate investments. Keeping a keen eye on these dynamics helps companies identify potential locations for their innovation centers and better leverage innovation ecosystems. Different hubs around the world tend to unify specific expertise and technology trends, which align uniquely with outside industries. This analysis serves as a barometer to firms that want to identify new growth opportunities, extend existing brands and leverage digital technologies to transform customer experiences, operations and business models. We learned over the years in our research, that each location tends to cultivate specialized expertise and technology development. In Asia, artificial intelligence (AI) is planting roots. Since our last study, four out of the nine new AI focused innovation centers in the March-October 2016 period were opened in Asia. In the region, universities, such as Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, and Singapore’s Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) are promoting AI-focused programs to develop innovative products and build AI talent pool. Earlier this year, China announced its plans to boost the growth of AI innovation in a bid to be “in line with the global AI technology and industry by 2018”2 . According to a recent report released by the US government, China appears to be overtaking the US in terms of publishing research in a fast growing subfield of artificial intelligence known as “deep learning”3 . The rise of Asia as an innovation superpower lies in the impressive growth witnessed by its key innovation hubs – Singapore, Bangalore, Shanghai, Tokyo and Tel Aviv – five cities in our global top 10 rankings that together account for 36% of all Asian innovation centers. These cities, vying to attract investment and digital talent, are among the most promising locations in their respective countries. ƒƒ Singapore: The city-state reputed for its business-friendly environment has been positioning itself as the digital innovation test- bed. It recently opened the world’s largest Fintech hub4 and also started trials of the world’s first self-driving taxis5 .
  • 7. 7 Figure 4: Asia Attracted the Most New Innovation Centers and Grew the Fastest Across all Geographies Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis Asia US Europe RoW Number of New Innovation Centers (March-October 2016) Region-wise Growth in Innovation Centers (March-October 2016) 34 33 13 8 35% 29% 12% 16% Asia has Overtaken Europe in its Share of Total Innovation Centers Across Key Regions 15% 13% 13% 30% 29% 26% 30% 31% 32% 25% 27% 29% Jul-15 Feb-16 Oct-16 Rest of the World Europe US Asia Asia has Overtaken Europe in its Share of Total Innovation Centers Across Key Regions ƒƒ Bangalore: Often dubbed as the ‘Silicon Valley of India’, employing over a million employees in the local tech sector, Bangalore rose sharply in rankings in the previous edition of this research. By adding three new innovation centers in the latest update, it maintains its fifth position. Among notable developments, Apple announced its plans to open a startup accelerator in Bangalore in May this year6 . ƒƒ Israel: Long known as the hub of cybersecurity talent, Israel has capitalized on this and reinvented itself as a Fintech hub. Recent estimates suggest that Israel has more than 430 Fintech firms, 60 of which raised approximately $370 million as of 20147 . Israel ranks second in terms of innovation and third in terms of the quality of research institutions according to the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report 2016-20178 . $370 million Capital raised by Israel’s 60 Fintech firms in 2014
  • 8. 8 This is due in part to government and other public sector initiatives that seek to establish India as a digitally empowered society and nurture innovation. As well as India’s traditional tier-1 cities, tier-2 and 3 cities are becoming attractive investment destinations. Jaipur, Pune, and Hyderabad each welcomed two new centers in this period involving partnerships with government. A 2016 study found that the number of active incubators in India increased by 40% to 140, with tier-2 and 3 cities adding 66% of these new incubators13 . Cisco, along with Qualcomm Technologies, General Electric, and 3M India, working with the local government, established an innovation center in Jaipur. Similarly, Hypercat, a London-based consortiumofInternetofThings(IoT)companies,joined with the city of Hyderabad to launch an accelerator and incubator to drive IoT and smart cities solutions14 . Asia is Attracting Non-Asian Companies Asiancompaniesarenottheonlycompaniesinvesting in Asian innovation centers. In our previous update, 41% of innovation centers opened or announced in Asia were founded by Asian companies. In the current research, this drops to 29%. We also see a significant increase in the number of American companies investing in Asian innovation centers, from 32% previously to 53% now. For instance, JCPenny, a US-based department store chain, opened its innovation center in Bangalore. Therace Risch, EVP and chief information officer of JCPenny, says, “We aim to leverage a highly qualified talent pool and drive innovation in one of the fastest growing technology hubs in the world”15 . Asia’s growing prowess in monetizing innovation has been another key factor behind the rise of innovation centers. The latest data released by the World Intellectual Property Organization, a Geneva based UN special agency, states that Asia has more than doubled its share of patent applications filed under the UN’s Patent Cooperation Treaty since 20059 and Asia accounted for 43 percent of last year’s global total. Asia has also amassed over 56% of the world’s total patent grants – the highest among all geographies, up from 45% in 2005. While during the same period (2005-15) Europe’s share of global patent grants has fallen from 24% to 13%. Samsung recently opened an innovation center in Tel Aviv, with David Eun, President of Samsung Global Innovation Center (GIC), saying: “The decision to open our Israeli office is rooted in the region’s strong startup ecosystem and world class talent. The country also has a proven track record of software and services innovation and a deep expertise in areas that are particularly interesting to us.”10 Samsung made its intentions to focus on artificial intelligence very clear in an Innovation Summit held in Tel Aviv in July 2016, where Samsung’s Chief Strategy Officer Young Sohn said, “As our world turns toward smart cars, robots and drones, this becomes crucial”11 . Indian Government’s Digital Push Is Key India’s rapid progress as an innovation destination of choice was captured in our previous research, and the country has since further strengthened its position (see “Asia Overtakes Europe; Gives the US a Tough Competition”)12 . A total of nine new innovation centers opened their doors in India in the March-October 2016 period, securing its number 2 status in the world for newly opened innovation centers (see Figure 2). 140 Total number of active incubators and accelerators in India 53% Share of Asia’s innovation centers invested in by American companies
  • 9. 9 Asia Overtakes Europe and Gives US a Tough Competition Total of 132 innovation centers - up by 35% 4 out of top ten countries are from Asia The Internet of Things Policy for 2016-2020 The Startup India Initiative, launched January 2016 2nd most preferred destination among new innovation centers, globally Most favoured destination in Asia Accounts for 27% of Asia’s new innovation centers Harbours one in every ten new global innovation centers 4 out of 9 global AI innovation centers set up in Asia Hosts 29%of all innovation centers 56% of world’s total patent grants Half of top ten cities based in Asia 5 out of 14 new global Fintech innovation centers set up in Asia India leads the Asian economies Steps taken by regional entities Spurred by multiple government initiatives, Indian tier-2 cities rapidly expand innovation center footprint in India New Innovation Centers Opened in India (March-October 2016) Bangalore (3) Hyderabad (2) Pune (2) Jaipur (2) Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Analysis
  • 10. 10 Figure 5: New Innovation Centers are Emerging Globally but Asia Takes the Lead 321 4No. of Centers 5 6 7 Legend *Maps not to scale Asia Bangalore (3) Abu Dhabi (1) Dubai (1) Hyderabad (2) Nanjing (1) Busan (1) Shanghai (2) Tokyo (2) Hung Hom (1) Makati (1) Singapore (4) Tel Aviv (2) Pune (2) Jaipur (2) North America Toronto (2) Waterloo (1) Philadelphia (2) Cinnaminson (1) Baltimore (1) New Jersey (1) Pittsburgh (1) Atlanta (3) Melbourne, Florida(1) Orlando(1) Silicon Valley (7) Ione (1) Salt Lake City, Utah (1) Australia Melbourne (1) Johannesburg (2) Cape Town (1) Lagos (1) AfricaWestern Europe Paris (2) Kemptthal (1) Wetzlar (1) London (2) Kettering (1) Surrey (1) Telford (1) Manchester (1) Spread across Trondheim, Ålesund and Gjøvik (1) Greenfield (1) Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Key locations with new innovation centers opened/announced between March and October 2016
  • 11. 11 Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter July 2015 February 2016 October 2016 Europe - % of Total Innovation Centers Rest of the World Europe Major European Countries - % of European Innovation Centers 211 15 20 1990 262 22 22 21106 337 29 24 22 17% 22% 21% 21% 21% 20% 24% 20% 18% 26% 29% 30% 119 36 41 44 Europe continues to fall as a % of total innovation centers even as the number of centers rise Despite Brexit, UK is growing its fraction of the European centers Rest of Europe UK France Germany Acceleration in Europe is Slowing Europe has witnessed a sharp fall (-19%) in the number of new innovation centers opened between March and October 2016. Europe’s share of total innovation centers has also fallen significantly versus the previous report (see Figure 6). An uncertain economic environment, as well as regulatory and tax related challenges, could be behind this trend. Perhaps surprisingly, the UK’s share of Europe’s innovation centers has consistently risen since July 2015, avoiding any negative Brexit impact, at least for the time being. Although UK startups seem to have started looking elsewhere16 , it may take a while for corporations to assess and react to the post- Brexit scenario. Figure 6: Europe seems to be Falling Behind in the Digital Innovation Race
  • 12. 12 Specialized Function/Technology- Focused Innovation Centers are in Vogue The number of new centers focused on Artificial Intelligence is up by a factor of 9 The number of innovation centers focused on AI grew from 1 in our previous update to 9 as organizations explore this technology and its likely applications. In 2015, the tech giants - Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Baidu - spent $8.5 billion on AI deals, a 4x increase since 201017 . Interest is coming from a variety of industries, including banking, financial services, and automotive, among others. For automotive companies, the pressure that Google and others are exerting in the driverless car space is a key driver. For instance, Honda has opened an AI innovation center in Tokyo to tap into the expertise needed to help them commercialize self-driving cars18 . UCB, a global biopharmaceutical company, opened an innovation center in partnership with Georgia Tech to explore how machine learning (a subfield of AI) and advanced analytics can improve patient experience and care19 . Figure 7: Which Sectors Are Investing in Innovation Centers? Organizations are focusing innovation on customer experience Organizations are entrusting innovation centers with focused innovation programs. For instance, Panasonic opened cloud9, a dedicated innovation center to provide immersive product and technology experiences in collaboration with its partners. Its mission is to provide customers with “perfect happiness”, focusing on smart factory solutions and IoT manufacturing connectivity. Rather than brainstorming on new product creation or operate a traditional R&D lab, cloud9 functions as an area to demonstrate products to manufacturers and interact with them in a positive way. As a Panasonic product manager explains, “cloud9 truly allows any customer to dive deep into specific applications or see everything Panasonic brings to the table at the innovation center.”20 Total Innovation Centers and Growth - Major SectorsSector-Wise Distribution of New Innovation Centers Others Manufacturing Financial Services Electronics and IT Pharmaceuticals Consumer Products & Retail Growth rate for the period March 2016 – October 2016 (Total) Automotive Telecom Chemicals Aviation 17% 16% 6% 5% 5% 5% 2% 1% 24% 20% 180 88 64 31 28 28 Manufacturing Telecom Financial Services Automotive Electronics and IT Consumer Products and Retail 11% 5% 31% 15% 100% 17% Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter
  • 13. 13 With more and more companies joining the innovation center movement, and the volume and speed of openings accelerating, the pressure on established innovation centers increases. They need to quickly deliver results or risk losing further investments to newer locations. Similarly, for the newly established centers, the expected time to go from idea to innovation is reducing. Understanding best practices for innovation center success therefore becomes critical. What causes some Identify the Problem, and Equally, Identify the Opportunity Don’t mistake a symptom for a problem. Organizations need to learn to differentiate a symptom of something that’s broken—be it a flawed growth strategy, talent problem, or technology gap – with a problem. They need to ensure the innovation center is designed to solve a core problem or it will fall victim to the same issues that bog down Innovation Centers Require a Methodical and Dedicated Approach to Break Free of “Business as Usual” innovation centers to fail? What is the recipe for a successful innovation center? And what steps do organizations need to take to make their innovation centers click? Drawing on our experience of working with large, Fortune 500 organizations across major industries, we have defined a set of fundamentals to focus on to ensure innovation centers succeed and deliver (see Figure 8). Figure 8: Making Innovation Centers Work Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter Making Innovation Centers Work Identify the Problem Bring the Right Extermal Partner Define the Metrics Organize for Value Socialize, but Prioritize Manage the Talent other innovation efforts that came before. In many cases, work in innovation doesn’t have to solve a problem, striving to unlock new opportunities is also important. Identify ways to improve existing products, processes, etc., or discover ways to create new value. Some of these goals could include building key skills in a specific digital technology, identify startups to collaborate with for the future, attract talent with specific skills, among others. CANVAS Marriott’s innovation incubator to make its food and beverage offerings more dynamic and appealing to millennials
  • 14. 14 Define the Goals and Measures for Growth What’s measured matters. Measuring ROI is critical in any endeavor. In innovation, companies must identify the “R” or the return that will accelerate innovation. Define the goals. Measure the KPIs and ultimate metrics that track progress to growth and innovation. Is the primary focus of the lab on driving strategy, revenue, adding capability, or attracting talent? Organizations need to ensure there is clarity on the goals and metrics for what the lab will measure will be judged against. The innovation lead at a manufacturing major told us, “We measure the outputs that we are delivering to our corporation, as that is what they are interested in. But internally, we also take into account what we are taking as inputs and also what we are doing as processes.”21 Socialize, but Prioritize One of the challenges we heard in previous reports is that innovation succeeds outside of day-to-day operations but also has difficulty permeating work and culture within the overall enterprise. Working in isolation can reduce the odds of incubated ideas successfully re-entering the business. Successful labs make smart choices about when to socialize, what to socialize, with whom, and how often. Marriott, one of the world’s largest hotel companies, launched its global innovation incubator CANVAS with an aim to make its food and beverage (F&B) offerings more dynamic and appealing to a millennial demographic22 . The incubators, now launched in multiple locations across the globe, make use of Marriott’s properties to attract young chefs and bartenders to incubate local and authentic food and drink ideas. Besides improving its millennial appeal, this approach has helped Marriott significantly shift how it sources F&B concepts around the globe, making the process more efficient, less costly and more nimble. Attract and Nurture Talent Intrapreneurs aretheentrepreneursoftheenterprise. They operate differently than traditional workforces. Their entire work is based on taking risks whereas common corporate cultures are largely risk averse. It’s important to foster intrapraneurship to attract the best, most capable talent and expertise to drive innovation. Designing careers paths for the top talents in the lab is as important as effective operational processes, because without world-class talent, it is impossible to have a world-class lab. A key piece of this is defining performance metrics and incentive schemes for lab staff. The incentive scheme must encourage entrepreneurial behavior to ensure the right culture takes root within the lab. Organize for Value When it comes to innovation, ideas are a commodity. And innovating for the sake of innovation is. As any startup will share, often it is the pursuit of several ideas and the pivoting of them that accelerate and scale commercial viability. The rush to start prototyping can divert attention away from big, unanswered questions around the strategic and commercial value of an idea. At the same time, innovation centers must prioritize and productize pilots but also incubate ideas that take time to cultivate. Organizations need to ensure that they understand how the idea will meet immediate customer demands that align with business impact while also supporting ideas that map against longer term trends. Understanding commercial value is also about having a long-term view, as Samsung demonstrates with its collaboration with a portfolio mapping company. Kai Bond, MD of Samsung Accelerator, a division of the Samsung Global Innovation Center, states, “He came to Samsung because he knows building a mapping platform is a 5-7 year venture. Samsung NEXT won’t force his hand into a sale like a typical VC.”23 Bring the Right External Partners Great labs run lean. They may not need a certain skillset full-time, but knowing when to bring in specialized help in key moments will ensure more effective problem solving while containing the head count in the lab. The skill sets of external partners are widely varied, so when outside expertise is needed, organizations need to ensure that they are clear on where they are in the journey and which capabilities are best suited to that stage. For instance, Aviva, one of the largest insurance companies, recently partnered with a Silicon Valley based startup accelerator Plug and Play to select startup partners with insurance based digital innovation ideas24 .
  • 15. 15 Innovation Centers Must be a Part of,Not‘The’,Innovation Strategy In the hurry to launch innovation centers, many treat the innovation job as ‘done’ once they’ve launched an innovation center. However, the reality is more complex. In particular, while innovation centers are an influential node in an organization’s innovation strategy, they cannot be the sum of the innovation strategy. They are just a part of it. In Figure 9, we highlight the key goals, and pitfalls, that govern the success of an innovation center. Figure 9: What Should an Innovation Center Be and Not Be? Source: Capgemini Consulting, Fahrenheit 212 and Altimeter A node and enabler in the innovation strategy After 4 years of operations, Nordstrom’s Innovation Lab is moving a number of employees from the lab to its Customer Experience Center (CEC). A spokesperson for the organization said, “To utilize the CEC to its full potential and widen the impact of innovation, we are moving parts of the original Innovation Lab into tech/biz teams while continuing to run a core Innovation Lab focused on solving specific customer opportunities, in addition to continuing to foster the innovation practice where needed.25 ” Ecosystem collaborators BNY Mellon, through its seven innovation centers across the world, has been collaborating with over 300 Fintech companies27 . Built for scalability from the start Practical questions need to be asked to evaluate scale potential, such as “How will it fit into the current technology architecture?” or “How will we manage this technology in our retail stores?” These hard questions can strengthen a good idea and kill ideas that do not have longevity, avoiding wasted effort. Bottomless pits for investment While measuring ROI for innovation efforts is a challenge, it is important to maintain an ROI focus to ensure that the center doesn’t lose its focus on achieving the original objectives. An ex-CIO says, "They see this cool new lab, free from traditional corporate constraints, which is being paid for by the core business that they're helping to run. If CIOs are not careful, the lab actually creates schisms. The result can be the type of misalignment that the management team has tried hard to avoid”.26 Silos Although innovation efforts tend to “bunker in” so they can operate under different rules, this doesn’t mean disconnecting them from the rest of the business. This is a fast path to smart ideas that struggle to gain traction and scale. Looking inwards only in their sector Lear Corp., a Fortune 500 automotive seating manufacturer based in the US, opened its innovation center in Detroit to experiment with automotive as well as non-automotive product offerings. It involves collaboration with the city’s creative and tech talent to innovate on next-generation interiors, connected cars and alternative-energy vehicles28 . What Innovation Centers Shouldn’t Be?What Innovation Centers Should Be?
  • 16. 16 Research Methodology We conducted an in-depth research of all innovation center launches and announcements between March and October 2016, across all major industry sectors. Major sources, among others, were: ƒƒ Media reports and press releases ƒƒ Annual reports of public companies ƒƒ Executive interviews, conference speeches ƒƒ Web and social media updates such as blog posts The research explored innovation centers along multiple dimensions: ƒƒ Mission behind the centers (e.g. increase innovation output, form relationships with ecosystem partners) ƒƒ Focus areas for the centers (e.g. mobility, Internet of Things, Big Data) ƒƒ Collaborative relationships forged (e.g. with large companies, startups, universities) ƒƒ Governance models adopted (e.g. centralized, decentralized, autonomous) ƒƒ Challenges faced ƒƒ Results delivered Fahrenheit 212 Fahrenheit 212 is a global innovation strategy and design firm, acquired by Capgemini Consulting in 2016. Fahrenheit has worked with a number of Fortune 500 companies across a variety of sectors to make innovation a predictable driver of profitable growth, from crafting robust innovation strategies, to building new product pipelines, to elevating the performance of innovation centers, among other innovation disciplines. CONCLUSION The innovation centers that are successful are the ones that are able to tie their effort to larger organizational motives. It’s those that operate with purpose that provide a bridge between the organization and the creative marketplace, drive an innovation culture throughout the system, or build transformational models that disrupt a sector. But, it would be wishful thinking to believe that setting up an innovation center is all that is required for success. The true super-powers in the innovation space will be those who make innovation centers an influential part of a bolder vision and a wider strategy.
  • 17. 17 1 Manulife, “Manulife Launches New Lab of Forward Thinking Location in Singapore”, September 2016 2 Xinhua, “China rolls out three-year program for AI growth”, May 2016 3 National Science and Technology Council, “The National Artificial Intelligence Research and Development Strategic Plan”, October 2016 4 Singapore Business Review, “World’s largest fintech hub opens in Singapore”, November 2016 5 Telegraph, “Singapore starts trial of world’s first self-driving taxis”, August 2016 6 The Verge, “Apple announces app development accelerator in Bangalore, India”, May 2016 7 PYMNTS.com, “Tel Aviv Fuels Israel’s ‘Startup Nation’ Reputation”, May 2016 8 World Economic Forum, “The Global Competitiveness Report 2016–2017”, September 2016 9 WIPO, “World Intellectual Property Indicators 2016”, October 2016; Financial Times, “Asia takes lead in rush to monetise innovations”, June 2016 10 Geektime, “Samsung NEXT opens in Tel Aviv to provide startups early access to company’s technology”, September 2016 11 Times of Israel, “Samsung sees ramping up of Israeli investments”, July 2016 12 Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter, “Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation Empires Worldwide”, June 2016 13 Forbes, “India named world’s third-largest startup base behind US and UK”, October 2016 14 Geektime, “New IoT accelerator could make Hyderabad one of India’s first smart cities”, Accessed November 2016 15 Enterprise Innovation, “JCPenney opens global in-house center in Bangalore”, August 2016 16 The Wall Street Journal, “Europe’s Startups Reassess Britain After ‘Brexit’”, June 2016 17 Economist, “Million-dollar babies”, April 2016 18 The Asahi Shimbun, “Honda steps up in race to win the best AI talent for driver-less cars”, June 2016 19 Georgia Tech, “UCB Opens Innovation Center in Tech Square”, September 2016 20 Panasonic, “Panasonic Opens “cloud9 Innovation Center”, a State-of-the-art Showroom in the United States”, August 2016 21 Capgemini Consulting and Altimeter, “The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers”, July 2015 22 Fahrenheit 212, “Marriott CANVAS Building an innovation lab for Marriott to deliver authentic food and beverage experiences for Millennials”, Accessed December 2016 23 Geektime, “Samsung NEXT opens in Tel Aviv to provide startups early access to company’s technology”, September 2016 24 Computer Weekly, “Aviva partners with Silicon Valley accelerator to kick-start innovation”, August 2016 25 GeekWire, “Nordstrom shrinks Innovation Lab, reassigns employees in shakeup of tech initiatives”, February 2015 26 ZDNET, “Why innovation labs fail and how to make them succeed”, May 2016 27 Nikkei Asian Review, “Asian fintechs are in infancy with much potential, says BNY Mellon CIO”, November 2016 28 Wards Auto, “Lear Innovation Center Targets More than Automotive”, October 2016 References
  • 18. 18 Discover more about our recent research on digital transformation Disney: Making Magic Through Digital Innovation Disney: Making Magic Through Digital Innovation The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers N° 08 OCTOBER 2015 The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age: Faster, Cheaper and Open #DTR7 N° 08 OCTOBER 2015 The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age: Faster, Cheaper and Open #DTR8DIGITALTRANSFORMATION INSTITUTE Digital Transformation Review 8: The New Innovation Paradigm for the Digital Age Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation Empires Worldwide Update on Original Research “The Innovation Game: Why and How Businesses are Investing in Innovation Centers” Digital Dynasties: The Rise of Innovation Empires Worldwide When Digital Disruption Strikes: How Can Incumbents Respond? When Digital Disruption Strikes: How Can Incumbents Respond? Digital Leadership Interview: Mark Jamison, Global Head of New Product Development at Visa Inc. Digital Leadership: mure-D: Inside Out Entrepreneurship #DTR9 The Digital Strategy Imperative: Steady Long-Term Vision, Nimble Execution N°09SUMMER2016 Digital Transformation Review 9: The Digital Strategy Imperative Digital Leadership Interview: James Patterson, MVP and Head of Capital One Labs
  • 19. 19 About the Authors Jerome is head of Capgemini’s Digital Transformation Institute. He works closely with industry leaders and academics to help organizations understand the nature and impact of digital disruptions. Jerome Buvat Head, Digital Transformation Institute, Capgemini jerome.buvat@capgemini.com @jeromebuvat The authors would like to thank Jimmy Dotiwala, CFA from Capgemini Consulting India, Ramya Krishna Puttur and Caroline Runge from the Digital Transformation Institute, Olivier Hervé from Capgemini Consulting Germany, Vincent Joset from Capgemini France, Sam Hunt from Capgemini UK, and Hilda Carmichael and Saugata Ghosh from Capgemini Australia for their contribution to this research Amol is a senior consultant at the Digital Transformation Institute. He keenly follows the role played by mobile, software and data science in digitally transforming organizations. Eric is responsible for driving the growth of Fahrenheit 212’s portfolio of clients and service offerings across a broad spectrum of industries and disciplines, pairing Fahrenheit’s innovation capabilities with companies seeking sustainable, profitable growth. Prior to joining Fahrenheit 212, Eric was a practice co-founder and engagement leader at Ruder Finn Inc., with a focus on corporate and product positioning, integrated communications and digital strategy. He has led award-winning global engagements centered around innovation for FORTUNE 500 companies across financial services, CPG, healthcare, and technology sectors. Eric studied Philosophy, Neuroscience, and Psychology for his BA at Washington University in St. Louis. Amol Khadikar Senior Consultant, Digital Transformation Institute, Capgemini amol.khadikar@capgemini.com @amolkhadikar Eric Turkington Director, Fahrenheit 212 eturkington@fahrenheit-212.com Digital Transformation Institute Dr. Ben Gilchriest is a Principal and innovation lead for Capgemini’s global Digital Services practice. Ben is focused on helping businesses apply emerging technologies to enable new customer experiences and business models. He has founded and led multiple new ventures and startups in Europe, Australia, SE Asia and North America. He is based in Los Angeles. Ben Gilchriest Principal, Capgemini ben.gilchriest@capgemini.com Digital Transformation Institute – The Digital Transformation Institute is Capgemini’s research center on all things digital. dti.in@capgemini.comDIGITALTRANSFORMATION INSTITUTE Subrahmanyam is a senior manager at the Digital Transformation Institute. He loves exploring the impact of technology on business and consumer behavior across industries in a world being eaten by software. Subrahmanyam KVJ Senior Manager, Digital Transformation Institute, Capgemini subrahmanyam.kvj@capgemini.com @Sub8u Brian Solis is a principal analyst at Altimeter Group, a Prophet company. He is also an award-winning author, prominent blogger/writer, and keynote speaker. A digital analyst, anthropologist, and futurist, Solis has studied and influenced the effects of emerging technology on business and society. Brian Solis Altimeter Group brian@altimetergroup.com @briansolis
  • 20. Rightshore® is a trademark belonging to Capgemini Capgemini Consulting is the global strategy and transformation consulting organization of the Capgemini Group, specializing in advising and supporting enterprises in significant transformation, from innovative strategy to execution and with an unstinting focus on results. With the new digital economy creating significant disruptions and opportunities, the global team of over 3,000 talented individuals work with leading companies and governments tomasterDigitalTransformation,drawingontheirunderstandingof the digital economy and leadership in business transformation and organizational change. Find out more at: www.capgemini-consulting.com With more than 180,000 people in over 40 countries, Capgemini is oneoftheworld’sforemostprovidersofconsulting,technologyand outsourcing services. The Group reported 2015 global revenues of EUR 11.9 billion. Together with its clients, Capgemini creates and delivers business, technology and digital solutions that fit their needs, enabling them to achieve innovation and competitiveness. A deeply multicultural organization, Capgemini has developed its own way of working, the Collaborative Business ExperienceTM, and draws on Rightshore® , its worldwide delivery model. Learn more about us at www.capgemini.com. About Capgemini and the Collaborative Business Experience Capgemini Consulting is the strategy and transformation consulting brand of Capgemini Group. The information contained in this document is proprietary. © 2016 Capgemini. All rights reserved. For more information, please contact: Altimeter, a Prophet Company, is a research and strategy consulting firm that helps companies understand and take advantage of digital disruption. In 2015, Prophet acquired Altimeter Group to bring forward-thinking digital research and strategy consulting together under one umbrella, as well as to help clients unlock the power of digital transformation. Altimeter, founded in 2008 by best-selling author Charlene Li, focuses on research in digital transformation, social business and governance, customer experience, Big Data, and content strategy. Fahrenheit 212 is a global innovation strategy and design firm that joined the Capgemini Group in 2016. Based in New York and London, Fahrenheit 212 defines innovation strategies and develops new products, services and experiences for some of the world’s leading companies, such as Coca-Cola, Marriott and Citi. The global team of innovation practitioners work across a wide range of industries and geographies. Team members bring together diverse capabilities of strategy, idea development, digital, research, branding and design. Find out more at: http://www.fahrenheit-212.com Capgemini Consulting Contacts Altimeter Contact Fahrenheit Contact Brian Solis Principal Analyst, Altimeter Group brian@altimetergroup.com Eric Turkington Director, Fahrenheit 212 eturkington@fahrenheit-212.com United Kingdom Didier Bonnet didier.bonnet@capgemini.com France Stephane Regnier stephane.regnier@capgemini.com Norway Elin Skauge elin.skauge@capgemini.com United States Todd Rovak todd.rovak@capgemini.com Germany Thomas Friedrich thomas.friedrich@capgemini.com Sweden/ Finland Ulf Holmgren ulf.holmgren@capgemini.com Netherlands Marc Burger marc.jc.burger@capgemini.com China Julien Bourdinière julien.bourdiniere@capgemini.com