SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 26
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century

Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century

Pravin Asar
Florida Institute of Technology

Dr. F.D. Christopian
BUS5480/MGT5018: Strategic Management
2December 2013

Pravin Asar

Page 1
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Abstract
There are different Strategic Innovation methodologies, frameworks and models that
aid organizations, particularly with technology driven, production companies. Most companies
must innovate and continually improve to maintain a competitive advantage, but how they
accomplish these process improvements differs significantly from Strategic Innovation.
Traditional strategies rely on process improvements and product development through lessons
learned, adoption of internal and external best practices, and improvements that are
incremental and nature that are often found in Total Quality Management programs. Strategic
Innovation requires a culture that can create breakthroughs within a company’s current
market, and potentially enter a new market or segment. Strategic Innovation, and the
implementation models that follow, are not for every organization, and a review of traditional
strategies and risks associated with Strategic Innovation will be covered.
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century

Table of Contents
Strategic Innovation Introduction ................................................................................................................. 2
The Traditional Strategic Approach .............................................................................................................. 3
Serendipitous Strategy .................................................................................................................................. 4
Concept of Strategic Innovation ................................................................................................................... 5
Strategic Innovation in New Markets ........................................................................................................... 7
Strategic Innovation Models ......................................................................................................................... 7
Strategic Innovation – 7 Dimensions ............................................................................................................ 8
Strategic Innovation Framework Dimensions Explained .............................................................................. 9
5 Phase Strategic Innovation Life Cycle Model ........................................................................................... 11
Disruptive Strategic Innovation .................................................................................................................. 13
Applied Examples of Strategic Innovation .................................................................................................. 14
Risks of the Strategic Innovation Model ..................................................................................................... 17
Conclusion ................................................................................................................................................... 20
References .................................................................................................................................................. 23
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Strategic Innovation Introduction
Albert Einstein is quoted as saying, “No problem can be solved from the same level of
consciousness that created it.” This statement is no truer than in relation to the way many
organizations approach strategic innovation. While the words, “strategy” and “strategic” have
become Buzzword Bingo fodder for employees; strategic leadership and initiatives in many
organizations fail to produce intended outcomes. Porter’s Five forces model, SWOT, PEST
(Political, Economic, Social and Technological analysis), PESTLE (Political, Economic, Social,
Technological, Legal and Environmental) analysis models have been traditionally been used
successfully by business to stayahead of the curve.But in today’s globally connected economy,
the way corporate cultures view the nature of innovation has had to change.Traditionally,
innovation was associated with products, many times viewed as the result of leveraged
technology and customer needs. However, researchers and practitioners have broadened the
traditional approach to include types of innovation, management of innovation and business
models designed to enhance innovation (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012).
The reason these cultures fail strategically is often because they do not differentiate
between the organization’s purpose (what the organization exists to do) and the organization’s
constraints (what the organization must do to survive). Corporate objectives become
intertwined with strategy and implementation. This makes it difficult to know where to begin.
Compounding the problem in these situations is the presumption that planning processes lead
to new and improved strategies. The fact is, the insight needed to create value seldom comes
from planning meetings. Instead, it is usually derived from many different sources. All of this
ultimately leads to directionless strategies, confusing processes and “flat-footed” plans. This
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
confusing and short-sighted, strategic focus ultimately leads to less than effective
organizational innovation. (Campbell & Alexander, 1997)

The Traditional Strategic Approach
Any company using a traditional strategic approach, other than innovative or
serendipitous, is using a traditional strategy. Traditional strategy development results from the
continuous application and interaction of three fundamental thinking skills: identification of
elements and scope, analysis, and synthesis. The basic elements of a strategy for an enterprise
are: the market (comprised of customers, competitors and technology embedded in a milieu of
social, political, economic, demographic and scientific driving forces for change), stakeholders,
enterprise capability and enterprise capacity. The enterprise capability and capacity are defined
by it projects, resources and culture.
Traditional strategy takes into account today as a starting point. It has present to future
orientation. Second, using traditional strategy requires a rule-maker posture. This inhibits outof-the-box thinking. The traditional strategy accepts established boundaries and product
categories. This strategy does incorporate some level of innovation incrementally. The
traditional strategy primarily follows linear business planning models. It is aimed directly at
gaining strength through input from traditional sources and articulated consumer needs.
Traditional strategy is driven by technology and may have a one-size-fits-all organizational
model approach. (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Serendipitous Strategy
Serendipity is having an aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident.Many
organizations rely on serendipitous acts of creativity to foster innovation. Others take an
unplanned, often unstructured approach, which results in only incremental improvements with
poor implementation that can lack sponsorship. A classic example of serendipitous strategy is
the story of 3M Post-it notes. In 1974, Stephen Silver at 3M research laboratories was trying to
develop a strong adhesive and instead created a new adhesive that was not too strong, could
stick on all surfaces and be removed easily without causing damage or leaving residue. Not
knowing what to make of this, it was four years later that his colleague Art Fry came up with
the idea to use this low tack adhesive to attach a bookmark to his hymnal. He further
developed the concept and 3M launched what became known as Post-it notes nationwide
(Bands, 2012).
A recent critique of business strategy argues that the role of serendipity has been largely
excluded from formal strategy theory. Further, it showed that there is an element of
serendipity in the fabric of all organizations and that the neo-classical model of corporate
strategy cannot accommodate this reality. In today’s increasingly complex, dynamic and
interconnected business world, business strategy cannot be perfectly planned in advance as
traditional theories of strategy would suggest, but has to evolve in response to continually
changing circumstances. This alternative and contemporary approach to business strategy
argues that the challenge for executives is to build an organization which is capable of
executing strategy in a fast changing environment by balancing both high alignment and high
autonomy (Loosemore, September).
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
It is important to note the difference between serendipitous strategy and synchronized
strategy. The distinction between serendipity and synchronicity is a matter of time. With
synchronicity there is an immediate recognition of the meaningful coincidence of two events
happening close in time. Serendipity, however, cannot be assessed until later when the
consequences of events are evaluated (Lawley & Tompkins, 2008). Synchronicity can become
serendipity if the effects of the coincidental events have large positive significance over time.
However serendipity can also arise out of events that are not synchronous.
Serendipitous learning will always be there and provide great anecdotal evidence for
informal learning, but serendipity is not a strategy for building a high impact, learningperforming organization. Strategic innovation is a holistic, systematic approach focused on
generating beyond, incremental, or discontinuous innovations. Strategic innovation focuses on
obtaining meaningful breakthroughs. Innovation becomes strategic when it is an intentional,
repeatable process that creates a significant difference in the value delivered to consumers,
customers, partners and the corporation. A strategic innovation initiative generates a portfolio
of breakthrough business growth opportunities using a disciplined yet creative process (Palmer
& Kaplan, n.d.).

Concept of Strategic Innovation
What is strategic innovation and why is embracing it so critical to organizational success
in today’s global market? According to authors, Derrick Palmer and Soren Kaplan, strategic
innovation is the, “…creation of growth strategies, new product categories, services or business
models that change the game and generate significant new value for consumers, customers and
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
the corporation”(Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.).Traditional strategic approaches focus on best
practices, operational effectiveness and incremental improvements in cost and equity.
Leadership tends to focus on imitating competitor’s actions and hyper-focus on strategic
positioning. The organizational culture often mistakes operational effectiveness with strategy.
(Sniukas, 2009)
Further, organizations tend to approach strategy using today as the starting point,
accept established industry and product positioning and categories. Leadership may also try to
use a “one-size-fits-all” organizational model. Unlike companies that embrace traditional
strategy, companies that commit to strategic innovation do not rely on serendipitous creative
acts, ad hoc, unstructured approaches to foster innovation. Instead they look for holistic,
systematic approaches; ones that generate breakthrough or discontinuous innovations. The
culture “starts with the end in mind” by identifying long-term opportunities, assume a rulebreaker mentality and seeks breakthrough, disruptive innovation. Leadership looks to create
new competitive space and may experiment with entrepreneurial or different structures to
accomplish innovation and growth. A culture that internalizes strategic innovation tends to seek
inspiration from unconventional sources. (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)
In this new, and ever-changing, global market, organizations that fail to heed Einstein’s
warning, will continue to institutionalize traditional strategy and fail to differentiate between
purpose and constraint. They will invest in directionless strategies and focus on short-sighted,
strategic initiatives that will make them less effective (Campbell & Alexander, 1997) than their
competition. Those companies that do heed, and utilize the seven dimensions, will realize new
sources of innovation. As they embrace and internalize strategic innovation frameworks they
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
will continue to take global market share (Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development, 2008).

Strategic Innovation in New Markets
Strategic innovation that brings Improvements in emerging markets is not all about
obtaining new consumers rather it also addresses concerns of the products appropriateness,
sustainable costs, product readiness and consumer consciousness.Companies that develop new
strategies to steal market share from competitors or enter new markets often accomplish this
by introducing architectural or business-model breakthroughs. These companies identify gaps
in the organization of an industry andthen find ways to turn those gaps into profitable markets.
They find new customers, new products or services or new ways of promoting, producing or
distributing. Although most of the focus in recent years has been in economic growth in
emerging markets, most of the research on Strategic Innovation has been focused on the
already-developed parts of the world. Understand the dynamics of growth at the base of the
economic pyramid in emerging markets have significant opportunitiesto unlock the value of
Strategic Innovation.(Lacity, Willcocks, & Feeney, 1996)

Strategic Innovation Models
The following Strategic Innovation models focus on a common theme of making large expansive
changes in products and operations versus a traditional TQM approach of incremental
monitoring, assessing, and modifying. In fact many Innovation strategies refer to these
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
explosive growths and breakthroughs created by Strategic Innovation as discontinuous change
or disruptive change and innovation as seen in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Levels of Change(Abraham & Knight, 2001)

Strategic Innovation – 7 Dimensions
For a company or organization to initiate strategic innovation, it must create a
framework to support it. Theseframeworkscan vary, but all are designed to produce outcomes
that drive organizational growth. In their soon-to-be-published book, The Executive Guide to
Innovation: Turning Good Ideas Into Great Results, Jane Keathley and co-authors present a
framework withseven dimensions forstrategic innovation and identify them as:

Dimension 1: Managed Innovation Process
Dimension 2: Strategic Alignment
Dimension 3: Industry Foresight
Dimension 4: Consumer/Customer Insight
Dimension 5: Core Technologies and Competencies
Dimension 6: Organizational Readiness
Dimension 7: Disciplined Implementation
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century

Figure 2: The 7 Dimensions of Strategic Innovation

Strategic Innovation Framework Dimensions Explained
Managed innovation processes are at the core of any strategic approach. An
organization’s goal is to find the equilibrium between external perspectives and an
organization's internal capabilities. It must look beyond the obvious in order to create a culture
that explores new possibilities. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)
Strategic alignment involves internal support and commitment among key stakeholders.
This commitment is necessary for strategic innovation. It engages the organization around a
unifying vision and goals which align its strategies and business models. (Keathley, Merrill,
Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Industry Foresight is a top-down perspective used to understand the complex forces that
drive change, it includes emerging and converging trends, the latest technology, competitive
dynamics, and alternative scenarios. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)
Consumer/Customer Insight is mirroring, bottom-up perspective, a deep understanding
of both articulated (explicitly stated) and latent, or unrecognized, needs of current and
potential customers and business segments. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey,
2014)(Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)
Core Technologies and Competencies are a set of internal capabilities, competencies
needed deliver value to the organization’s customers. Understanding these capabilities and
competencies, as well as the organization’s gaps in technologies, intellectual property, brand
equity and strategic relationships are critical for creating strategic innovation. (Keathley,
Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)
Organizational Readiness is the determination and ability for an organization to
implement new ideas and strategies, as well as, to successfully manage and sustain those ideas
and strategies once initiated. It is typically made up of three areas of readiness; cultural,
process, and structural.
Disciplined Implementation is the organization’s capability to effectively sustain the life
cycle of innovation. The sustainment of which is dependent on the organization's repeat each
step of the innovation life cycle over and over again.(Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, &
Posey, 2014)(Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
5 Phase Strategic Innovation Life Cycle Model
Jay Abraham and Daniel Knight have proposeda 5-phase Strategic Innovation Life Cycle
Model. The first phase is ‘generating’ the new idea(s) and expanding on the ideas through the
shared knowledge and background of the team members. The second phase of
‘conceptualizing’ takes the general concepts from phase one and begins to identify gaps and
inconsistencies in their knowledge of the idea, and begin the added research to more clearly
define the idea. Phase three,or ‘optimizing’phase, compares explicit concepts with explicit
criteria. This allows the organization to analyze and justify the chosen solution(s) as the best
possible selection(s). “In this phase, people take the explicit concepts from the previous phase
and evaluate them to begin converging on potential solutions. They derive evaluation criteria
from their vision, mission, values, goals, and relevant business measures. These criteria enable
them to select the concepts with the most promise and translate these concepts into solutions
or projects. [The organization can] then figure out the most likely sources of support and
resistance before moving to the next phase” (Abraham & Knight, 2001). The fourth phase of
strategic innovation is the actual implementation phase. This is where the actual product or
concept is developed, prototyped and tested. Selected solutions from phase 3 are turned into
tangible models. Not only are the team members involved developing the product but in the
process they are also learning and becoming more knowledgeable on what it takes to create
this breakthrough.This provides additional launching points for future ideas and innovations,
which is the beginning of phase 5 of ‘capturing’ the knowledge and experience gained through
the process along with mistakes, lessons learned, and gaps that may still exist. Abraham and
Knight see these 5 phases as having a spiral-like life cycle that becomes a continuous and
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
embedded process in an organization, and not just a one-time project to solve a specific
problem.

Figure 3: Strategic Innovation Spiral(Abraham & Knight, 2001)

Robert Wood, an associate professor of strategic management, studied various
companies that were and were not successful in implementing strategic innovation, and was
able to capture the 5 leadership steps that supported repeated success. The first step is to
recognize the crisis and the need for radical transformation. This step is slightly different than
other frameworks in which Innovation is not necessarily driven by a specific event. Step 2 is to
create inspiring but necessarily vague goals. This is a fundamental attribute of all Strategic
Innovation strategies, which is to think outside the normal confines of what has been done in
the past. Step 3 is to innovate without clear principles. This is directly tied to step 2, in that it
seeks to drive innovation without a set of rules. Step 4 is to learn from initial innovations
(Wood, 2007). This is very similar to Abraham’s and Knight’s model in which Innovation is a
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
learning process during the implementation phase in which the knowledge, experience and
lessons learned must be captured. Finally, step 5 is to encourage emergent strategy innovation
routines. In other words, this step is about driving and encouraging the organization to see
Innovation as an expected and key part of the overall business success.

Disruptive Strategic Innovation
Disruptive Strategic Innovation, proposed by
ConstantinosCharitouandConstantinosMarkides in their article in the MIT Sloan Management
Review, is a specific type of strategic innovation called ‘Disruptive Strategic Innovation’ that is
not only a different way of playing the game (Strategic Innovation) but is also in conflict with
the traditional way of doing business. Examples provided include; Internet, low-cost airlines,
direct insurance, online brokerage trading, online distribution of news and home delivery from
grocery stores. (Charitou & Markides, 2003)
Their review of research has shown that disruptive strategic innovations share three
common characteristics. “First, compared with traditional approaches, they emphasize
different product or service attributes. Thus traditional brokers sell their services on the basis of
their research and advice to customers, whereas online brokers sell on price and speed of
execution. As a result, innovators become attractive to a new customer segment. Second,
disruptive strategic innovations usually start out as small and low-margin businesses. That's
why they rarely gain support or long-term commitment from established competitors. The
innovations are small and are not attractive until they start growing. Third, disruptive strategic
innovations grow to capture a large share of the established market. Over time, they improve
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
to the extent that they are able to deliver performance that is good enough to meet the
previously established attributes. Inevitably, their growth attracts the attention of established
players. As more customers (both existing and new) embrace the strategic innovation, the new
business receives increasing attention from the media and established players. Soon,
established companies cannot afford to ignore the new way of doing business anymore and
begin to consider ways to respond” (Charitou & Markides, 2003, p. 55).

Applied Examples of Strategic Innovation
Strategic Innovation models are being embraced more and more by organizations
wishing, not just to survive, but to thrive in what is becoming an increasingly more complex and
highly competitive global market. These companies have to change the way they think
strategically in order to innovate and develop products and services faster than the
competition. Increased competition and research and development (R&D) costs have made it
nearly impossible for companies to survive solely on their R&D efforts. More and more,
companies are looking for new, more open, sources of innovation (Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development, 2008). Companies, like General Electric (GE) for instance, have
increasingly embraced the concept of Strategic Innovation. GE’s six-part growth process (Figure
4 below) contains theSeven Dimensions Model of Strategic Innovation within it.
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century

Figure 4: General Electric’s six-part growth process (Stewart, 2006)
Many of Elon Musk’s projects and companies can be linked back to disruptive
innovation. Using SpaceX as an example, which was founded in 2002 to “revolutionize space
technology, with the ultimately goal of enabling people to live on other planets.” In several
short years SpaceX has developed new engines, new launch vehicle, achieved successful
launches, including docking with the International Space Station, which had resulted in both
NASA and commercial customers signing on to 40+ manifests. These accomplishments are
amazing in themselves, but SpaceX has focused on Disruptive Strategic Innovation that has
completed gone against the mainstream launch vehicle business in their costs savings processes
that they have developed to lower launch costs. SpaceX is developing the Grasshopper vertical
takeoff and landing (VTVL) vehicle which is a leap beyond what any competitors are doing to
develop a “fully & rapidly reusable rockets that will further transform space exploration by
radically reducing cost” (SpaceX, 2013).
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Companies like Dell Inc., IBM and Canon Inc. have benefitted from successful Strategic
Innovation endeavors. In all three cases, Strategic Innovation was the creative force behind
departures from historical practices at each company.In the case of Dell Inc., the departure
occurred as part of the redesign of the company’s direct-sales model (end-to-end value-chain
architecture).IBM changed its historical practice of independently selling hardware and
software to selling complete solutions (conceptualization of delivered customer value). Canon
Inc. used Strategic Innovation to identify and focus on developing photocopiers for small offices
instead of large corporations (identification of potential customers)(Govindarajan, 2004).
When Eastman Kodak turned over the majority of its information technology (IT)
operations to outsourcing partners in 1989, outsourcing was a $4 billion a year business(Lacity,
Willcocks, & Feeney, 1996). Other companies such as Continental Bank, General Dynamics,
Continental Airlines, and National Car Rental have transferred IT employees, facilities, hardware
leases, and software licenses to third-party vendors via seven- to ten-year contracts (Lacity,
Willcocks, & Feeney, 1996). Today, IT outsourcing has grown to nearly $40 billion a year,
according to the estimates by Frost & Sullivan, an outsourcing service company. More and
more, companies like Xerox, Delta, and British Aerospace have taken a ‘selective sourcing’
approach to IT outsourcing.Selective sourcing are based onshort-term contracts of less than five
years for specific activities.
AirAsia, Easyjet and Ryanair are good examples of companies that have implemented
strategic Innovation to enter a very difficult and competitive market. If these airlines had tried
to compete with the dominant players in the market such as United, American and British
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Airways, they probably would have never survived. Instead, each of these companies broke out
of the traditional full-service, hub and spoke strategy of the major airlines, and introduced a
low-cost, point-to-point, no frills strategy that has been successful in the United States, Asia,
and Europe. “Before long, they had captured a large segment of the market, and established
airlines in Europe were searching for answers to the threat”(Charitou & Markides, 2003).

Risks of the Strategic Innovation Model
Researchers have, over time, tried to understand and improve the process of
innovation. The simplest way to analyze this was to delve into product innovation. The study of
product innovation produced a number of valuable concepts such as innovation portfolio
mapping, innovation roadmaps, the innovation funnel, stage gate innovation and, more
recently, open innovation (Markides, 1997).
Recently, researchers have broadened the concept of innovation to include other types
of innovation, such as process innovation, design innovation, management innovation and
business model innovation. One important development has been a move to understand
innovation
in a service context. This is partly as a result of increasing numbers of organizations
adopting a business model that incorporates the delivery of solutions and experiences and,
therefore, by extension, delivery of services. Indeed, anecdotal evidence suggests that several
highly innovative service firms have succeeded in disrupting competitors by radically innovating
their overall business model, and obtained a competitive advantage as a result. Low-cost airtransportation, such as Southwest, is a good example of such a service (Porter, 1996).
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Research suggests that companies are often less innovative in a service context than
they are innovative in a product context. This is a disadvantage considering 75% of the
economies in developed countries are selling services (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012). The
nature of risk and reward in service innovation is analyzed differently from product innovation.
The service provider may invest in the infrastructure necessary to provide the new service, but
in contractually committing to pay regular service fees, the client effectively finances the
innovation process. There is limited market risk for the service provider since they have already
contracted for the service. Instead, the service provider must address the risk inherent in
delivering a novel service, whether that is higher service costs, contract penalties, loss of
profits, or damaged reputation (Markides, 1997).
There is limited market risk to this contractual agreement; the service provider still faces
uncertainty regarding the exact nature of the delivery process
and associated risks, estimating
the performance levels of the service outcomes that it commits to. The delivery or production
of the service is simultaneous with consumption, and subject to contracted performance
standards, the service provider is exposed to delivery risk in the form of higher service costs
that lead to penalties and losses, or simply reputational losses in the face of a dissatisfied
customer (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012).
To capture the benefits of innovation across an organization as a whole, companies will
need to avoid adopting a singular mentality in the way that they are organized. There are a
number of organizational elements that increase the chances of making a success of service
innovation. These include, for example, an entrepreneurial culture, corporate incentives to
innovate, and knowledge management systems that capture related data and knowledge
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
(Porter, 1996).In order to effectively mitigate risk, companies must include a series of events in
order to utilize strategic innovation effectively. Specifically;
Preparing for service innovation. Companies contemplating strategic innovation should
consider whether their business model, infrastructure, and operations, are suitable. If
not, they will benefit from making the appropriate preparations. These might include
hiring managers with service innovation experience, or setting up a separate unit to host
the new business model, for example.(Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012)
Mastering the learning challenge. Service innovation, and thus the learning, takes place
at the same time as delivery of the initial service. Organizations need to change the way
they think about innovation. They must be ready to capture the knowledge gained during
that first service delivery in the field, from the people involved in its collaborative
creation and delivery. (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012)
Customer collaboration. The intellectual input of the client is essential in the process of
collaborative creation and research and development. Firms not used to collaborative
open innovation should consider involving customers in the product innovation process,
before engaging in innovation on ‘live’ services.(Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012)
Risk and investment assessment. It is important for everyone to recognize that the
investment made in innovating initial service delivery may not produce a return straight
away. It may even produce a loss for a while. The benefits materialize when the lessons
from that initial service are applied in the same or even subsequent service contracts, or
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
inform other types of innovation. (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012)
Set up to leverage the knowledge gained. The truth is that an organization may not be
able to obtain the full benefits of strategic innovation at the level of the single service.
Instead it needs to leverage the knowledge acquired during that first service, not only in
later services, but right across the organization’s platform of services. (Visnjic, Turunen, &
Neely, 2012)
Cross-functional decision-making. Decisions about proceeding with innovation, should
involve finance managers, innovation managers, service sales managers, service
technicians, and many others. New decision-making processes, realigning corporate
structures to allow cross functional teams, company-wide incentives to innovate, and
knowledge management systems that capture related data and knowledge, may be
required.(Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012)

Conclusion
Strategic Innovation has risen to the top of the agenda for senior managers and
academia in recent years. Based on dynamic stakeholder value, this paper systematically
explored the antecedents, components, processes and consequences of strategic innovation.
We argue thatstrategic innovation: is driven by the external environment and stakeholder value
change, can be decomposed into strategic innovation thinking, strategic innovation formation,
strategic innovation implementation and monitoring, and can provide potential position and
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
dynamic customer value. However, current studies still fall short of providing effective guidance
for standardized strategic innovation practices.
Since the strategic innovation process is not entirely a controllable and standardized
practice, the risks associated will never be entirely eliminated. To create risk awareness and
ensure risk reduction, the organization must identify as many controllable or preventable risks
as possible. Thus, it is also important to identify the sources of these risks and explore effective
risk management countermeasures to enhance the success of strategic innovation. It is not
enough to calculate or find the processes and results of strategic innovation through qualitative
case studies and experimentation, but it also needs more systematic quantitative explorations,
especially in these turbulent times.
In thenew global market place, any organizationstill using a traditional strategy or
relying on serendipitous acts of creativity to foster innovation will realize incremental
improvements with poorimplementation (Bands, 2012). They will invest in directionless
strategies and focus on short-sighted, strategic initiatives that, at best, will make them less
effective than their competition(Campbell & Alexander, 1997). Meanwhile, their competition
will be looking for holistic systematic approaches; ones that identify long-term opportunities,
assume rule-breaker mentalities and seek breakthroughs. These organizations will have
leaderswho want cultures that have a “different level of consciousness”, that will internalize
the concepts and applied practices of Strategic Innovation and seek inspiration from
unconventional sources. (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)The cultures of these organizations will
understand that to articulate and realize strategic innovation, engineers and managers will
need to collaborate as a whole, one engineering-management team.
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Gary Hamel summarized the importance of breakthrough innovation compared to
incremental improvements when he said. “We’ve reached the end of incrementalism. Only
those companies that are capable of creating industry revolutions will prosper in the new
economy.” (2002)
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
References
Abraham, J., & Knight, D. (2001). Strategy & Leadership: leveraging creative action for more profitable
growth. Strategy & Leadership, 29(1), 21-26. Retrieved from Emerald: https://www.emeraldlibrary.com/ft
Bands, R. (2012, April 25). Leadership Strategy: Find and Apply Serendipitous Innovations. Retrieved
November 18, 2013, from Leadership Strategy Insider:
http:/leadershipstrategyinsider.com/2012/04/25/leadership-strategy-find-and-applyserendipitous-innovations/
Campbell, A., & Alexander, M. (1997, November). What's Wrong with Strategy? Retrieved November 13,
2013, from Harvard Business Review: http://hbr.org/1997/11/whats-wrong-with-strategy/ar/1
Charitou, C. D., & Markides, C. C. (2003, January 15). Responses to Disruptive Strategic Innovation.
doi:GALE/A97574376
Govindarajan, V. (2004, January 15). Strategic Innovation and the Science of Learning. Retrieved
November 21, 2013, from MIT Sloan Management Review:
http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/strategic-innovation-and-the-science-of-learning/

Hamel, G. (2002). Leading the revolution. (Unstated edition ed.). Plume.
Keathley, J., Merrill, P., Owens, T., Meggarrey, I., & Posey, K. (2014). The Executive Guide to Innovation:
Turning Good Ideas Into Great Results. Milwaukee: Quality Press.
Lacity, M. C., Willcocks, L. P., & Feeney, D. F. (1996, April 15). The Value of Selective IT Sourcing.
Retrieved November 21, 2013, from MIT Sloan Management Review:
http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/the-value-of-selective-it-sourcing/#ref1
Lawley, J., & Tompkins, P. (2008). Maximizing Serendipity: The art of recognizing and fostering
unexpected potential. Retrieved November 18, 2013, from Maximizing Serendipity:
http://www.cleanlanguage.co.uk/articles/articles/224/0/Maximising-Serendipity/Page0.html
Loosemore, M. (September). Serendipitous innovation: enablers and barriers in the construction
industry. Procs 29th Annual ARCOM Conference (pp. 635-644). Reading: Association of
Researchers and Construction Management.
Markides, C. (1997, April 15). Strategic Innovation. Retrieved November 18, 2013, from MIT Sloan
Management Review: http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/strategic-innovation/
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. (2008, November). Open Innovation in
Global Networks. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development: http://www.oecd.org/sti/inno/41721342.pdf
Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century
Palmer, D., & Kaplan, S. (n.d.). Resources: Strategic Innovation Resources – Articles, White Papers &
Books. Retrieved November 14, 2013, from InnovationPoint: http://www.innovationpoint.com/resources.htm
Porter, M. E. (1996, November 1). What is Strategy? Harvard Business Review(74), pp. 61-78. Retrieved
November 18, 2013
Sniukas, M. (2009, June). What is Strategic Innovation. Retrieved November 15, 2013, from SlideShare:
http://www.slideshare.net/sniukas/strategic-innovation-1624620
Stewart, T. A. (2006, June). Growth as a Process. Retrieved November 14, 2013, from Harvard Business
Review: http://hbr.org/2006/06/growth-as-a-process/ar/1
Visnjic, I., Turunen, T., & Neely, A. (2012). Executive Briefing & Podcast - When Innovation Follows
Promise. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from Cambridge Service Alliance:
http://www.cambridgeservicealliance.org/news/89/65/Executive-Briefing-Podcast---WhenInnovation-Follows-Promise.html

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.potNadia Lushchak
 
Innovation and the S-Curve
Innovation and the S-CurveInnovation and the S-Curve
Innovation and the S-Curvewright4
 
Technology and Innovation Management
Technology and Innovation ManagementTechnology and Innovation Management
Technology and Innovation ManagementJamil AlKhatib
 
The Core Competence of the Corporation
The Core Competence of the CorporationThe Core Competence of the Corporation
The Core Competence of the CorporationBenny Herlambang
 
Global strategy formulation
Global strategy formulationGlobal strategy formulation
Global strategy formulationBo Sar
 
Chapter 2 - Source of Innovation
Chapter 2 - Source of InnovationChapter 2 - Source of Innovation
Chapter 2 - Source of InnovationWahyu Yudistira
 
Strategies for Firm Growth.pptx
Strategies for Firm Growth.pptxStrategies for Firm Growth.pptx
Strategies for Firm Growth.pptxJahidulIslam758305
 
Innovation models
Innovation  modelsInnovation  models
Innovation modelsZiya-B
 
Organazational and Strategic innovation
Organazational  and Strategic innovationOrganazational  and Strategic innovation
Organazational and Strategic innovationAfrouz Hojati
 
53944628 behavioral-implementation
53944628 behavioral-implementation53944628 behavioral-implementation
53944628 behavioral-implementationPranav Kumar Ojha
 
The innovator's dilemma
The innovator's dilemmaThe innovator's dilemma
The innovator's dilemmaWei Li
 
Entrepreneurial mindset
Entrepreneurial mindsetEntrepreneurial mindset
Entrepreneurial mindsetAlan Clayton
 
Morrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case Study
Morrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case StudyMorrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case Study
Morrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case Studymattbentley34
 
MediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development Team
MediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development TeamMediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development Team
MediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development TeamOlivier Serrat
 
Technology Commercialization Strategy
Technology Commercialization StrategyTechnology Commercialization Strategy
Technology Commercialization Strategycparksbi
 
Strategy review, evaluation, and control
Strategy review, evaluation, and controlStrategy review, evaluation, and control
Strategy review, evaluation, and controlAaqib Sarwar
 
2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...
2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...
2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...Nadia Lushchak
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
 
Innovation and the S-Curve
Innovation and the S-CurveInnovation and the S-Curve
Innovation and the S-Curve
 
Technology and Innovation Management
Technology and Innovation ManagementTechnology and Innovation Management
Technology and Innovation Management
 
The Core Competence of the Corporation
The Core Competence of the CorporationThe Core Competence of the Corporation
The Core Competence of the Corporation
 
Problem Solving
Problem SolvingProblem Solving
Problem Solving
 
Global strategy formulation
Global strategy formulationGlobal strategy formulation
Global strategy formulation
 
Chapter 2 - Source of Innovation
Chapter 2 - Source of InnovationChapter 2 - Source of Innovation
Chapter 2 - Source of Innovation
 
Strategies for Firm Growth.pptx
Strategies for Firm Growth.pptxStrategies for Firm Growth.pptx
Strategies for Firm Growth.pptx
 
Innovation models
Innovation  modelsInnovation  models
Innovation models
 
Organazational and Strategic innovation
Organazational  and Strategic innovationOrganazational  and Strategic innovation
Organazational and Strategic innovation
 
6. internal and external analysis
6. internal and external analysis6. internal and external analysis
6. internal and external analysis
 
53944628 behavioral-implementation
53944628 behavioral-implementation53944628 behavioral-implementation
53944628 behavioral-implementation
 
The innovator's dilemma
The innovator's dilemmaThe innovator's dilemma
The innovator's dilemma
 
Entrepreneurial mindset
Entrepreneurial mindsetEntrepreneurial mindset
Entrepreneurial mindset
 
Morrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case Study
Morrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case StudyMorrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case Study
Morrisons: Analysis of Pre-Seen Case Study
 
MediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development Team
MediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development TeamMediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development Team
MediSys Corp.: The IntensCare Product Development Team
 
Technology Commercialization Strategy
Technology Commercialization StrategyTechnology Commercialization Strategy
Technology Commercialization Strategy
 
Strategy review, evaluation, and control
Strategy review, evaluation, and controlStrategy review, evaluation, and control
Strategy review, evaluation, and control
 
2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...
2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...
2016 - 1. The concept of Innovation and Innovation Management. The type of in...
 
Strategies in Action
Strategies in ActionStrategies in Action
Strategies in Action
 

Andere mochten auch

Six Steps to Innovation
Six Steps to InnovationSix Steps to Innovation
Six Steps to InnovationDuncan Jones
 
Strategic innovation slideshare
Strategic innovation   slideshareStrategic innovation   slideshare
Strategic innovation slideshareClaus Aasholm
 
What is Strategic Innovation?
What is Strategic Innovation?What is Strategic Innovation?
What is Strategic Innovation?Dr. Marc Sniukas
 
The 6 most innovative companies in the world
The 6 most innovative companies in the worldThe 6 most innovative companies in the world
The 6 most innovative companies in the worldRajashree Das
 
Agile methodologies in_project_management
Agile methodologies in_project_managementAgile methodologies in_project_management
Agile methodologies in_project_managementPravin Asar
 
Why is Innovation Important?
Why is Innovation Important?Why is Innovation Important?
Why is Innovation Important?Chris Mobbs
 
Top 10 innovative companies in the world
Top 10 innovative companies in the worldTop 10 innovative companies in the world
Top 10 innovative companies in the worldNikhil Narayan
 
Public Sector Value for Value Chain Development
Public Sector Value for Value Chain DevelopmentPublic Sector Value for Value Chain Development
Public Sector Value for Value Chain DevelopmentAndrew Paito
 
How Important is Innovation in Business?
How Important is Innovation in Business?How Important is Innovation in Business?
How Important is Innovation in Business?Trepspace
 
What is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good Questions
What is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good QuestionsWhat is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good Questions
What is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good QuestionsStefan Lindegaard
 
Importance of Innovation in Business
Importance of Innovation in BusinessImportance of Innovation in Business
Importance of Innovation in BusinessAashaa Zahid
 
Total Quality Culture
Total Quality CultureTotal Quality Culture
Total Quality CulturePravin Asar
 

Andere mochten auch (12)

Six Steps to Innovation
Six Steps to InnovationSix Steps to Innovation
Six Steps to Innovation
 
Strategic innovation slideshare
Strategic innovation   slideshareStrategic innovation   slideshare
Strategic innovation slideshare
 
What is Strategic Innovation?
What is Strategic Innovation?What is Strategic Innovation?
What is Strategic Innovation?
 
The 6 most innovative companies in the world
The 6 most innovative companies in the worldThe 6 most innovative companies in the world
The 6 most innovative companies in the world
 
Agile methodologies in_project_management
Agile methodologies in_project_managementAgile methodologies in_project_management
Agile methodologies in_project_management
 
Why is Innovation Important?
Why is Innovation Important?Why is Innovation Important?
Why is Innovation Important?
 
Top 10 innovative companies in the world
Top 10 innovative companies in the worldTop 10 innovative companies in the world
Top 10 innovative companies in the world
 
Public Sector Value for Value Chain Development
Public Sector Value for Value Chain DevelopmentPublic Sector Value for Value Chain Development
Public Sector Value for Value Chain Development
 
How Important is Innovation in Business?
How Important is Innovation in Business?How Important is Innovation in Business?
How Important is Innovation in Business?
 
What is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good Questions
What is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good QuestionsWhat is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good Questions
What is Innovation? Why is Innovation Important? and Other Good Questions
 
Importance of Innovation in Business
Importance of Innovation in BusinessImportance of Innovation in Business
Importance of Innovation in Business
 
Total Quality Culture
Total Quality CultureTotal Quality Culture
Total Quality Culture
 

Ähnlich wie Strategic innovation

Innovation and creativity 07 managing innovation
Innovation and creativity 07 managing innovationInnovation and creativity 07 managing innovation
Innovation and creativity 07 managing innovationKamal AL MASRI
 
Creating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergence
Creating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergenceCreating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergence
Creating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergenceMatt Mayberry
 
Tellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOs
Tellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOsTellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOs
Tellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOsTellusant, Inc.
 
corporate foresight - an introduction
corporate foresight - an introductioncorporate foresight - an introduction
corporate foresight - an introductionIan Miles
 
Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...
Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...
Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...Richard Platt
 
Scenarios for business and policy
Scenarios for business and policyScenarios for business and policy
Scenarios for business and policyIan Miles
 
Project development and implementation for strategic managers
Project development and implementation for strategic managersProject development and implementation for strategic managers
Project development and implementation for strategic managersChintan Gosai
 
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob Khan
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob KhanHow is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob Khan
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob KhanHealthcare consultant
 
Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014
Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014
Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014Ted Lemmers
 
Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...
Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...
Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...Alexander Decker
 
Leading Change_Teigland
Leading Change_TeiglandLeading Change_Teigland
Leading Change_TeiglandRobin Teigland
 
Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)
Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)
Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)johncleveland
 
Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02
Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02
Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02varsha nihanth lade
 
Business
BusinessBusiness
Businesskanu09
 

Ähnlich wie Strategic innovation (20)

Innovation and creativity 07 managing innovation
Innovation and creativity 07 managing innovationInnovation and creativity 07 managing innovation
Innovation and creativity 07 managing innovation
 
Marketing project
Marketing projectMarketing project
Marketing project
 
31362341 strategic-management
31362341 strategic-management31362341 strategic-management
31362341 strategic-management
 
Feasibility and sustainability
Feasibility and sustainability Feasibility and sustainability
Feasibility and sustainability
 
It strategy lecture
It strategy lectureIt strategy lecture
It strategy lecture
 
Creating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergence
Creating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergenceCreating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergence
Creating a sustainable competitive advantage in the age of convergence
 
Tellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOs
Tellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOsTellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOs
Tellusant - Strategy Guide: The Modern and Scientific Synthesis for CEOs
 
corporate foresight - an introduction
corporate foresight - an introductioncorporate foresight - an introduction
corporate foresight - an introduction
 
Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...
Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...
Responding to the Impact of #Covid19 Pandemic & Economic Crisis and Beyond - ...
 
KFC
KFCKFC
KFC
 
Scenarios for business and policy
Scenarios for business and policyScenarios for business and policy
Scenarios for business and policy
 
Project development and implementation for strategic managers
Project development and implementation for strategic managersProject development and implementation for strategic managers
Project development and implementation for strategic managers
 
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob Khan
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob KhanHow is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob Khan
How is COVID-19 Reshaping the role of Institutional strategy? By.Dr.Mahboob Khan
 
Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014
Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014
Executive Pulse 9 - London Aug 2014
 
Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...
Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...
Brief of the dimensionality of business strategy among the manufacturing orga...
 
Leading Change_Teigland
Leading Change_TeiglandLeading Change_Teigland
Leading Change_Teigland
 
Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)
Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)
Innovation Framework For Manufacturing (With Addendum)
 
Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02
Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02
Notesformbastrategicmanagementuniti 120924025055-phpapp02
 
Business
BusinessBusiness
Business
 
Strategic management
Strategic managementStrategic management
Strategic management
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Call Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
Call Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any TimeCall Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
Call Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Timedelhimodelshub1
 
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSMMonte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSMRavindra Nath Shukla
 
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...Paul Menig
 
GD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in managementGD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in managementchhavia330
 
Vip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service Dewas
Vip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service DewasVip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service Dewas
Vip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service Dewasmakika9823
 
0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf
0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf
0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdfRenandantas16
 
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...lizamodels9
 
rishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdf
rishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdfrishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdf
rishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdfmuskan1121w
 
/:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc...
/:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc.../:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc...
/:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc...lizamodels9
 
BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,noida100girls
 
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service JamshedpurVIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service JamshedpurSuhani Kapoor
 
Catalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT .pdf
Catalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT      .pdfCatalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT      .pdf
Catalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT .pdfOrient Homes
 
Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...
Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...
Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...lizamodels9
 
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth MarketingTech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth MarketingShawn Pang
 
Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝soniya singh
 
Vip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts Service
Vip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts ServiceVip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts Service
Vip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts Serviceankitnayak356677
 
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCRsoniya singh
 
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCRsoniya singh
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

Call Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
Call Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any TimeCall Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
Call Girls Miyapur 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
 
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSMMonte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
 
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
 
GD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in managementGD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in management
 
Best Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting Partnership
Best Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting PartnershipBest Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting Partnership
Best Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting Partnership
 
Vip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service Dewas
Vip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service DewasVip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service Dewas
Vip Dewas Call Girls #9907093804 Contact Number Escorts Service Dewas
 
0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf
0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf
0183760ssssssssssssssssssssssssssss00101011 (27).pdf
 
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
 
rishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdf
rishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdfrishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdf
rishikeshgirls.in- Rishikesh call girl.pdf
 
/:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc...
/:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc.../:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc...
/:Call Girls In Jaypee Siddharth - 5 Star Hotel New Delhi ➥9990211544 Top Esc...
 
BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Greater Noida ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
 
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service JamshedpurVIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
 
Catalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT .pdf
Catalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT      .pdfCatalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT      .pdf
Catalogue ONG NUOC PPR DE NHAT .pdf
 
Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...
Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...
Lowrate Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida ❤️8860477959 Escorts 100% Genuine Servi...
 
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth MarketingTech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
 
Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Mehrauli Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
 
Vip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts Service
Vip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts ServiceVip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts Service
Vip Female Escorts Noida 9711199171 Greater Noida Escorts Service
 
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Keshav Puram 🔝 Delhi NCR
 
KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)
KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)
KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)
 
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR
(8264348440) 🔝 Call Girls In Mahipalpur 🔝 Delhi NCR
 

Strategic innovation

  • 1. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Pravin Asar Florida Institute of Technology Dr. F.D. Christopian BUS5480/MGT5018: Strategic Management 2December 2013 Pravin Asar Page 1
  • 2. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Abstract There are different Strategic Innovation methodologies, frameworks and models that aid organizations, particularly with technology driven, production companies. Most companies must innovate and continually improve to maintain a competitive advantage, but how they accomplish these process improvements differs significantly from Strategic Innovation. Traditional strategies rely on process improvements and product development through lessons learned, adoption of internal and external best practices, and improvements that are incremental and nature that are often found in Total Quality Management programs. Strategic Innovation requires a culture that can create breakthroughs within a company’s current market, and potentially enter a new market or segment. Strategic Innovation, and the implementation models that follow, are not for every organization, and a review of traditional strategies and risks associated with Strategic Innovation will be covered.
  • 3. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Table of Contents Strategic Innovation Introduction ................................................................................................................. 2 The Traditional Strategic Approach .............................................................................................................. 3 Serendipitous Strategy .................................................................................................................................. 4 Concept of Strategic Innovation ................................................................................................................... 5 Strategic Innovation in New Markets ........................................................................................................... 7 Strategic Innovation Models ......................................................................................................................... 7 Strategic Innovation – 7 Dimensions ............................................................................................................ 8 Strategic Innovation Framework Dimensions Explained .............................................................................. 9 5 Phase Strategic Innovation Life Cycle Model ........................................................................................... 11 Disruptive Strategic Innovation .................................................................................................................. 13 Applied Examples of Strategic Innovation .................................................................................................. 14 Risks of the Strategic Innovation Model ..................................................................................................... 17 Conclusion ................................................................................................................................................... 20 References .................................................................................................................................................. 23
  • 4. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Strategic Innovation Introduction Albert Einstein is quoted as saying, “No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it.” This statement is no truer than in relation to the way many organizations approach strategic innovation. While the words, “strategy” and “strategic” have become Buzzword Bingo fodder for employees; strategic leadership and initiatives in many organizations fail to produce intended outcomes. Porter’s Five forces model, SWOT, PEST (Political, Economic, Social and Technological analysis), PESTLE (Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal and Environmental) analysis models have been traditionally been used successfully by business to stayahead of the curve.But in today’s globally connected economy, the way corporate cultures view the nature of innovation has had to change.Traditionally, innovation was associated with products, many times viewed as the result of leveraged technology and customer needs. However, researchers and practitioners have broadened the traditional approach to include types of innovation, management of innovation and business models designed to enhance innovation (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012). The reason these cultures fail strategically is often because they do not differentiate between the organization’s purpose (what the organization exists to do) and the organization’s constraints (what the organization must do to survive). Corporate objectives become intertwined with strategy and implementation. This makes it difficult to know where to begin. Compounding the problem in these situations is the presumption that planning processes lead to new and improved strategies. The fact is, the insight needed to create value seldom comes from planning meetings. Instead, it is usually derived from many different sources. All of this ultimately leads to directionless strategies, confusing processes and “flat-footed” plans. This
  • 5. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century confusing and short-sighted, strategic focus ultimately leads to less than effective organizational innovation. (Campbell & Alexander, 1997) The Traditional Strategic Approach Any company using a traditional strategic approach, other than innovative or serendipitous, is using a traditional strategy. Traditional strategy development results from the continuous application and interaction of three fundamental thinking skills: identification of elements and scope, analysis, and synthesis. The basic elements of a strategy for an enterprise are: the market (comprised of customers, competitors and technology embedded in a milieu of social, political, economic, demographic and scientific driving forces for change), stakeholders, enterprise capability and enterprise capacity. The enterprise capability and capacity are defined by it projects, resources and culture. Traditional strategy takes into account today as a starting point. It has present to future orientation. Second, using traditional strategy requires a rule-maker posture. This inhibits outof-the-box thinking. The traditional strategy accepts established boundaries and product categories. This strategy does incorporate some level of innovation incrementally. The traditional strategy primarily follows linear business planning models. It is aimed directly at gaining strength through input from traditional sources and articulated consumer needs. Traditional strategy is driven by technology and may have a one-size-fits-all organizational model approach. (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)
  • 6. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Serendipitous Strategy Serendipity is having an aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident.Many organizations rely on serendipitous acts of creativity to foster innovation. Others take an unplanned, often unstructured approach, which results in only incremental improvements with poor implementation that can lack sponsorship. A classic example of serendipitous strategy is the story of 3M Post-it notes. In 1974, Stephen Silver at 3M research laboratories was trying to develop a strong adhesive and instead created a new adhesive that was not too strong, could stick on all surfaces and be removed easily without causing damage or leaving residue. Not knowing what to make of this, it was four years later that his colleague Art Fry came up with the idea to use this low tack adhesive to attach a bookmark to his hymnal. He further developed the concept and 3M launched what became known as Post-it notes nationwide (Bands, 2012). A recent critique of business strategy argues that the role of serendipity has been largely excluded from formal strategy theory. Further, it showed that there is an element of serendipity in the fabric of all organizations and that the neo-classical model of corporate strategy cannot accommodate this reality. In today’s increasingly complex, dynamic and interconnected business world, business strategy cannot be perfectly planned in advance as traditional theories of strategy would suggest, but has to evolve in response to continually changing circumstances. This alternative and contemporary approach to business strategy argues that the challenge for executives is to build an organization which is capable of executing strategy in a fast changing environment by balancing both high alignment and high autonomy (Loosemore, September).
  • 7. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century It is important to note the difference between serendipitous strategy and synchronized strategy. The distinction between serendipity and synchronicity is a matter of time. With synchronicity there is an immediate recognition of the meaningful coincidence of two events happening close in time. Serendipity, however, cannot be assessed until later when the consequences of events are evaluated (Lawley & Tompkins, 2008). Synchronicity can become serendipity if the effects of the coincidental events have large positive significance over time. However serendipity can also arise out of events that are not synchronous. Serendipitous learning will always be there and provide great anecdotal evidence for informal learning, but serendipity is not a strategy for building a high impact, learningperforming organization. Strategic innovation is a holistic, systematic approach focused on generating beyond, incremental, or discontinuous innovations. Strategic innovation focuses on obtaining meaningful breakthroughs. Innovation becomes strategic when it is an intentional, repeatable process that creates a significant difference in the value delivered to consumers, customers, partners and the corporation. A strategic innovation initiative generates a portfolio of breakthrough business growth opportunities using a disciplined yet creative process (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.). Concept of Strategic Innovation What is strategic innovation and why is embracing it so critical to organizational success in today’s global market? According to authors, Derrick Palmer and Soren Kaplan, strategic innovation is the, “…creation of growth strategies, new product categories, services or business models that change the game and generate significant new value for consumers, customers and
  • 8. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century the corporation”(Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.).Traditional strategic approaches focus on best practices, operational effectiveness and incremental improvements in cost and equity. Leadership tends to focus on imitating competitor’s actions and hyper-focus on strategic positioning. The organizational culture often mistakes operational effectiveness with strategy. (Sniukas, 2009) Further, organizations tend to approach strategy using today as the starting point, accept established industry and product positioning and categories. Leadership may also try to use a “one-size-fits-all” organizational model. Unlike companies that embrace traditional strategy, companies that commit to strategic innovation do not rely on serendipitous creative acts, ad hoc, unstructured approaches to foster innovation. Instead they look for holistic, systematic approaches; ones that generate breakthrough or discontinuous innovations. The culture “starts with the end in mind” by identifying long-term opportunities, assume a rulebreaker mentality and seeks breakthrough, disruptive innovation. Leadership looks to create new competitive space and may experiment with entrepreneurial or different structures to accomplish innovation and growth. A culture that internalizes strategic innovation tends to seek inspiration from unconventional sources. (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.) In this new, and ever-changing, global market, organizations that fail to heed Einstein’s warning, will continue to institutionalize traditional strategy and fail to differentiate between purpose and constraint. They will invest in directionless strategies and focus on short-sighted, strategic initiatives that will make them less effective (Campbell & Alexander, 1997) than their competition. Those companies that do heed, and utilize the seven dimensions, will realize new sources of innovation. As they embrace and internalize strategic innovation frameworks they
  • 9. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century will continue to take global market share (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2008). Strategic Innovation in New Markets Strategic innovation that brings Improvements in emerging markets is not all about obtaining new consumers rather it also addresses concerns of the products appropriateness, sustainable costs, product readiness and consumer consciousness.Companies that develop new strategies to steal market share from competitors or enter new markets often accomplish this by introducing architectural or business-model breakthroughs. These companies identify gaps in the organization of an industry andthen find ways to turn those gaps into profitable markets. They find new customers, new products or services or new ways of promoting, producing or distributing. Although most of the focus in recent years has been in economic growth in emerging markets, most of the research on Strategic Innovation has been focused on the already-developed parts of the world. Understand the dynamics of growth at the base of the economic pyramid in emerging markets have significant opportunitiesto unlock the value of Strategic Innovation.(Lacity, Willcocks, & Feeney, 1996) Strategic Innovation Models The following Strategic Innovation models focus on a common theme of making large expansive changes in products and operations versus a traditional TQM approach of incremental monitoring, assessing, and modifying. In fact many Innovation strategies refer to these
  • 10. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century explosive growths and breakthroughs created by Strategic Innovation as discontinuous change or disruptive change and innovation as seen in Figure 1. Figure 1: Levels of Change(Abraham & Knight, 2001) Strategic Innovation – 7 Dimensions For a company or organization to initiate strategic innovation, it must create a framework to support it. Theseframeworkscan vary, but all are designed to produce outcomes that drive organizational growth. In their soon-to-be-published book, The Executive Guide to Innovation: Turning Good Ideas Into Great Results, Jane Keathley and co-authors present a framework withseven dimensions forstrategic innovation and identify them as: Dimension 1: Managed Innovation Process Dimension 2: Strategic Alignment Dimension 3: Industry Foresight Dimension 4: Consumer/Customer Insight Dimension 5: Core Technologies and Competencies Dimension 6: Organizational Readiness Dimension 7: Disciplined Implementation
  • 11. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Figure 2: The 7 Dimensions of Strategic Innovation Strategic Innovation Framework Dimensions Explained Managed innovation processes are at the core of any strategic approach. An organization’s goal is to find the equilibrium between external perspectives and an organization's internal capabilities. It must look beyond the obvious in order to create a culture that explores new possibilities. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014) Strategic alignment involves internal support and commitment among key stakeholders. This commitment is necessary for strategic innovation. It engages the organization around a unifying vision and goals which align its strategies and business models. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)
  • 12. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Industry Foresight is a top-down perspective used to understand the complex forces that drive change, it includes emerging and converging trends, the latest technology, competitive dynamics, and alternative scenarios. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014) Consumer/Customer Insight is mirroring, bottom-up perspective, a deep understanding of both articulated (explicitly stated) and latent, or unrecognized, needs of current and potential customers and business segments. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)(Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.) Core Technologies and Competencies are a set of internal capabilities, competencies needed deliver value to the organization’s customers. Understanding these capabilities and competencies, as well as the organization’s gaps in technologies, intellectual property, brand equity and strategic relationships are critical for creating strategic innovation. (Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014) Organizational Readiness is the determination and ability for an organization to implement new ideas and strategies, as well as, to successfully manage and sustain those ideas and strategies once initiated. It is typically made up of three areas of readiness; cultural, process, and structural. Disciplined Implementation is the organization’s capability to effectively sustain the life cycle of innovation. The sustainment of which is dependent on the organization's repeat each step of the innovation life cycle over and over again.(Keathley, Merrill, Owens, Meggarrey, & Posey, 2014)(Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)
  • 13. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century 5 Phase Strategic Innovation Life Cycle Model Jay Abraham and Daniel Knight have proposeda 5-phase Strategic Innovation Life Cycle Model. The first phase is ‘generating’ the new idea(s) and expanding on the ideas through the shared knowledge and background of the team members. The second phase of ‘conceptualizing’ takes the general concepts from phase one and begins to identify gaps and inconsistencies in their knowledge of the idea, and begin the added research to more clearly define the idea. Phase three,or ‘optimizing’phase, compares explicit concepts with explicit criteria. This allows the organization to analyze and justify the chosen solution(s) as the best possible selection(s). “In this phase, people take the explicit concepts from the previous phase and evaluate them to begin converging on potential solutions. They derive evaluation criteria from their vision, mission, values, goals, and relevant business measures. These criteria enable them to select the concepts with the most promise and translate these concepts into solutions or projects. [The organization can] then figure out the most likely sources of support and resistance before moving to the next phase” (Abraham & Knight, 2001). The fourth phase of strategic innovation is the actual implementation phase. This is where the actual product or concept is developed, prototyped and tested. Selected solutions from phase 3 are turned into tangible models. Not only are the team members involved developing the product but in the process they are also learning and becoming more knowledgeable on what it takes to create this breakthrough.This provides additional launching points for future ideas and innovations, which is the beginning of phase 5 of ‘capturing’ the knowledge and experience gained through the process along with mistakes, lessons learned, and gaps that may still exist. Abraham and Knight see these 5 phases as having a spiral-like life cycle that becomes a continuous and
  • 14. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century embedded process in an organization, and not just a one-time project to solve a specific problem. Figure 3: Strategic Innovation Spiral(Abraham & Knight, 2001) Robert Wood, an associate professor of strategic management, studied various companies that were and were not successful in implementing strategic innovation, and was able to capture the 5 leadership steps that supported repeated success. The first step is to recognize the crisis and the need for radical transformation. This step is slightly different than other frameworks in which Innovation is not necessarily driven by a specific event. Step 2 is to create inspiring but necessarily vague goals. This is a fundamental attribute of all Strategic Innovation strategies, which is to think outside the normal confines of what has been done in the past. Step 3 is to innovate without clear principles. This is directly tied to step 2, in that it seeks to drive innovation without a set of rules. Step 4 is to learn from initial innovations (Wood, 2007). This is very similar to Abraham’s and Knight’s model in which Innovation is a
  • 15. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century learning process during the implementation phase in which the knowledge, experience and lessons learned must be captured. Finally, step 5 is to encourage emergent strategy innovation routines. In other words, this step is about driving and encouraging the organization to see Innovation as an expected and key part of the overall business success. Disruptive Strategic Innovation Disruptive Strategic Innovation, proposed by ConstantinosCharitouandConstantinosMarkides in their article in the MIT Sloan Management Review, is a specific type of strategic innovation called ‘Disruptive Strategic Innovation’ that is not only a different way of playing the game (Strategic Innovation) but is also in conflict with the traditional way of doing business. Examples provided include; Internet, low-cost airlines, direct insurance, online brokerage trading, online distribution of news and home delivery from grocery stores. (Charitou & Markides, 2003) Their review of research has shown that disruptive strategic innovations share three common characteristics. “First, compared with traditional approaches, they emphasize different product or service attributes. Thus traditional brokers sell their services on the basis of their research and advice to customers, whereas online brokers sell on price and speed of execution. As a result, innovators become attractive to a new customer segment. Second, disruptive strategic innovations usually start out as small and low-margin businesses. That's why they rarely gain support or long-term commitment from established competitors. The innovations are small and are not attractive until they start growing. Third, disruptive strategic innovations grow to capture a large share of the established market. Over time, they improve
  • 16. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century to the extent that they are able to deliver performance that is good enough to meet the previously established attributes. Inevitably, their growth attracts the attention of established players. As more customers (both existing and new) embrace the strategic innovation, the new business receives increasing attention from the media and established players. Soon, established companies cannot afford to ignore the new way of doing business anymore and begin to consider ways to respond” (Charitou & Markides, 2003, p. 55). Applied Examples of Strategic Innovation Strategic Innovation models are being embraced more and more by organizations wishing, not just to survive, but to thrive in what is becoming an increasingly more complex and highly competitive global market. These companies have to change the way they think strategically in order to innovate and develop products and services faster than the competition. Increased competition and research and development (R&D) costs have made it nearly impossible for companies to survive solely on their R&D efforts. More and more, companies are looking for new, more open, sources of innovation (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2008). Companies, like General Electric (GE) for instance, have increasingly embraced the concept of Strategic Innovation. GE’s six-part growth process (Figure 4 below) contains theSeven Dimensions Model of Strategic Innovation within it.
  • 17. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Figure 4: General Electric’s six-part growth process (Stewart, 2006) Many of Elon Musk’s projects and companies can be linked back to disruptive innovation. Using SpaceX as an example, which was founded in 2002 to “revolutionize space technology, with the ultimately goal of enabling people to live on other planets.” In several short years SpaceX has developed new engines, new launch vehicle, achieved successful launches, including docking with the International Space Station, which had resulted in both NASA and commercial customers signing on to 40+ manifests. These accomplishments are amazing in themselves, but SpaceX has focused on Disruptive Strategic Innovation that has completed gone against the mainstream launch vehicle business in their costs savings processes that they have developed to lower launch costs. SpaceX is developing the Grasshopper vertical takeoff and landing (VTVL) vehicle which is a leap beyond what any competitors are doing to develop a “fully & rapidly reusable rockets that will further transform space exploration by radically reducing cost” (SpaceX, 2013).
  • 18. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Companies like Dell Inc., IBM and Canon Inc. have benefitted from successful Strategic Innovation endeavors. In all three cases, Strategic Innovation was the creative force behind departures from historical practices at each company.In the case of Dell Inc., the departure occurred as part of the redesign of the company’s direct-sales model (end-to-end value-chain architecture).IBM changed its historical practice of independently selling hardware and software to selling complete solutions (conceptualization of delivered customer value). Canon Inc. used Strategic Innovation to identify and focus on developing photocopiers for small offices instead of large corporations (identification of potential customers)(Govindarajan, 2004). When Eastman Kodak turned over the majority of its information technology (IT) operations to outsourcing partners in 1989, outsourcing was a $4 billion a year business(Lacity, Willcocks, & Feeney, 1996). Other companies such as Continental Bank, General Dynamics, Continental Airlines, and National Car Rental have transferred IT employees, facilities, hardware leases, and software licenses to third-party vendors via seven- to ten-year contracts (Lacity, Willcocks, & Feeney, 1996). Today, IT outsourcing has grown to nearly $40 billion a year, according to the estimates by Frost & Sullivan, an outsourcing service company. More and more, companies like Xerox, Delta, and British Aerospace have taken a ‘selective sourcing’ approach to IT outsourcing.Selective sourcing are based onshort-term contracts of less than five years for specific activities. AirAsia, Easyjet and Ryanair are good examples of companies that have implemented strategic Innovation to enter a very difficult and competitive market. If these airlines had tried to compete with the dominant players in the market such as United, American and British
  • 19. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Airways, they probably would have never survived. Instead, each of these companies broke out of the traditional full-service, hub and spoke strategy of the major airlines, and introduced a low-cost, point-to-point, no frills strategy that has been successful in the United States, Asia, and Europe. “Before long, they had captured a large segment of the market, and established airlines in Europe were searching for answers to the threat”(Charitou & Markides, 2003). Risks of the Strategic Innovation Model Researchers have, over time, tried to understand and improve the process of innovation. The simplest way to analyze this was to delve into product innovation. The study of product innovation produced a number of valuable concepts such as innovation portfolio mapping, innovation roadmaps, the innovation funnel, stage gate innovation and, more recently, open innovation (Markides, 1997). Recently, researchers have broadened the concept of innovation to include other types of innovation, such as process innovation, design innovation, management innovation and business model innovation. One important development has been a move to understand innovation
in a service context. This is partly as a result of increasing numbers of organizations adopting a business model that incorporates the delivery of solutions and experiences and, therefore, by extension, delivery of services. Indeed, anecdotal evidence suggests that several highly innovative service firms have succeeded in disrupting competitors by radically innovating their overall business model, and obtained a competitive advantage as a result. Low-cost airtransportation, such as Southwest, is a good example of such a service (Porter, 1996).
  • 20. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Research suggests that companies are often less innovative in a service context than they are innovative in a product context. This is a disadvantage considering 75% of the economies in developed countries are selling services (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012). The nature of risk and reward in service innovation is analyzed differently from product innovation. The service provider may invest in the infrastructure necessary to provide the new service, but in contractually committing to pay regular service fees, the client effectively finances the innovation process. There is limited market risk for the service provider since they have already contracted for the service. Instead, the service provider must address the risk inherent in delivering a novel service, whether that is higher service costs, contract penalties, loss of profits, or damaged reputation (Markides, 1997). There is limited market risk to this contractual agreement; the service provider still faces uncertainty regarding the exact nature of the delivery process
and associated risks, estimating the performance levels of the service outcomes that it commits to. The delivery or production of the service is simultaneous with consumption, and subject to contracted performance standards, the service provider is exposed to delivery risk in the form of higher service costs that lead to penalties and losses, or simply reputational losses in the face of a dissatisfied customer (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012). To capture the benefits of innovation across an organization as a whole, companies will need to avoid adopting a singular mentality in the way that they are organized. There are a number of organizational elements that increase the chances of making a success of service innovation. These include, for example, an entrepreneurial culture, corporate incentives to innovate, and knowledge management systems that capture related data and knowledge
  • 21. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century (Porter, 1996).In order to effectively mitigate risk, companies must include a series of events in order to utilize strategic innovation effectively. Specifically; Preparing for service innovation. Companies contemplating strategic innovation should consider whether their business model, infrastructure, and operations, are suitable. If not, they will benefit from making the appropriate preparations. These might include hiring managers with service innovation experience, or setting up a separate unit to host the new business model, for example.(Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012) Mastering the learning challenge. Service innovation, and thus the learning, takes place at the same time as delivery of the initial service. Organizations need to change the way they think about innovation. They must be ready to capture the knowledge gained during that first service delivery in the field, from the people involved in its collaborative creation and delivery. (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012) Customer collaboration. The intellectual input of the client is essential in the process of collaborative creation and research and development. Firms not used to collaborative open innovation should consider involving customers in the product innovation process, before engaging in innovation on ‘live’ services.(Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012) Risk and investment assessment. It is important for everyone to recognize that the investment made in innovating initial service delivery may not produce a return straight away. It may even produce a loss for a while. The benefits materialize when the lessons from that initial service are applied in the same or even subsequent service contracts, or
  • 22. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century inform other types of innovation. (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012) Set up to leverage the knowledge gained. The truth is that an organization may not be able to obtain the full benefits of strategic innovation at the level of the single service. Instead it needs to leverage the knowledge acquired during that first service, not only in later services, but right across the organization’s platform of services. (Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012) Cross-functional decision-making. Decisions about proceeding with innovation, should involve finance managers, innovation managers, service sales managers, service technicians, and many others. New decision-making processes, realigning corporate structures to allow cross functional teams, company-wide incentives to innovate, and knowledge management systems that capture related data and knowledge, may be required.(Visnjic, Turunen, & Neely, 2012) Conclusion Strategic Innovation has risen to the top of the agenda for senior managers and academia in recent years. Based on dynamic stakeholder value, this paper systematically explored the antecedents, components, processes and consequences of strategic innovation. We argue thatstrategic innovation: is driven by the external environment and stakeholder value change, can be decomposed into strategic innovation thinking, strategic innovation formation, strategic innovation implementation and monitoring, and can provide potential position and
  • 23. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century dynamic customer value. However, current studies still fall short of providing effective guidance for standardized strategic innovation practices. Since the strategic innovation process is not entirely a controllable and standardized practice, the risks associated will never be entirely eliminated. To create risk awareness and ensure risk reduction, the organization must identify as many controllable or preventable risks as possible. Thus, it is also important to identify the sources of these risks and explore effective risk management countermeasures to enhance the success of strategic innovation. It is not enough to calculate or find the processes and results of strategic innovation through qualitative case studies and experimentation, but it also needs more systematic quantitative explorations, especially in these turbulent times. In thenew global market place, any organizationstill using a traditional strategy or relying on serendipitous acts of creativity to foster innovation will realize incremental improvements with poorimplementation (Bands, 2012). They will invest in directionless strategies and focus on short-sighted, strategic initiatives that, at best, will make them less effective than their competition(Campbell & Alexander, 1997). Meanwhile, their competition will be looking for holistic systematic approaches; ones that identify long-term opportunities, assume rule-breaker mentalities and seek breakthroughs. These organizations will have leaderswho want cultures that have a “different level of consciousness”, that will internalize the concepts and applied practices of Strategic Innovation and seek inspiration from unconventional sources. (Palmer & Kaplan, n.d.)The cultures of these organizations will understand that to articulate and realize strategic innovation, engineers and managers will need to collaborate as a whole, one engineering-management team.
  • 24. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Gary Hamel summarized the importance of breakthrough innovation compared to incremental improvements when he said. “We’ve reached the end of incrementalism. Only those companies that are capable of creating industry revolutions will prosper in the new economy.” (2002)
  • 25. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century References Abraham, J., & Knight, D. (2001). Strategy & Leadership: leveraging creative action for more profitable growth. Strategy & Leadership, 29(1), 21-26. Retrieved from Emerald: https://www.emeraldlibrary.com/ft Bands, R. (2012, April 25). Leadership Strategy: Find and Apply Serendipitous Innovations. Retrieved November 18, 2013, from Leadership Strategy Insider: http:/leadershipstrategyinsider.com/2012/04/25/leadership-strategy-find-and-applyserendipitous-innovations/ Campbell, A., & Alexander, M. (1997, November). What's Wrong with Strategy? Retrieved November 13, 2013, from Harvard Business Review: http://hbr.org/1997/11/whats-wrong-with-strategy/ar/1 Charitou, C. D., & Markides, C. C. (2003, January 15). Responses to Disruptive Strategic Innovation. doi:GALE/A97574376 Govindarajan, V. (2004, January 15). Strategic Innovation and the Science of Learning. Retrieved November 21, 2013, from MIT Sloan Management Review: http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/strategic-innovation-and-the-science-of-learning/ Hamel, G. (2002). Leading the revolution. (Unstated edition ed.). Plume. Keathley, J., Merrill, P., Owens, T., Meggarrey, I., & Posey, K. (2014). The Executive Guide to Innovation: Turning Good Ideas Into Great Results. Milwaukee: Quality Press. Lacity, M. C., Willcocks, L. P., & Feeney, D. F. (1996, April 15). The Value of Selective IT Sourcing. Retrieved November 21, 2013, from MIT Sloan Management Review: http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/the-value-of-selective-it-sourcing/#ref1 Lawley, J., & Tompkins, P. (2008). Maximizing Serendipity: The art of recognizing and fostering unexpected potential. Retrieved November 18, 2013, from Maximizing Serendipity: http://www.cleanlanguage.co.uk/articles/articles/224/0/Maximising-Serendipity/Page0.html Loosemore, M. (September). Serendipitous innovation: enablers and barriers in the construction industry. Procs 29th Annual ARCOM Conference (pp. 635-644). Reading: Association of Researchers and Construction Management. Markides, C. (1997, April 15). Strategic Innovation. Retrieved November 18, 2013, from MIT Sloan Management Review: http://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/strategic-innovation/ Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. (2008, November). Open Innovation in Global Networks. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development: http://www.oecd.org/sti/inno/41721342.pdf
  • 26. Strategic Innovation: New Models for the 21st Century Palmer, D., & Kaplan, S. (n.d.). Resources: Strategic Innovation Resources – Articles, White Papers & Books. Retrieved November 14, 2013, from InnovationPoint: http://www.innovationpoint.com/resources.htm Porter, M. E. (1996, November 1). What is Strategy? Harvard Business Review(74), pp. 61-78. Retrieved November 18, 2013 Sniukas, M. (2009, June). What is Strategic Innovation. Retrieved November 15, 2013, from SlideShare: http://www.slideshare.net/sniukas/strategic-innovation-1624620 Stewart, T. A. (2006, June). Growth as a Process. Retrieved November 14, 2013, from Harvard Business Review: http://hbr.org/2006/06/growth-as-a-process/ar/1 Visnjic, I., Turunen, T., & Neely, A. (2012). Executive Briefing & Podcast - When Innovation Follows Promise. Retrieved November 13, 2013, from Cambridge Service Alliance: http://www.cambridgeservicealliance.org/news/89/65/Executive-Briefing-Podcast---WhenInnovation-Follows-Promise.html