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Managing Innovation - Chapter 5
Managing Innovation - Chapter 5
CHAPTER 5
Sources of innovation
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a well-established pattern. The fame of key cities like Venice or regions like Flanders owed as much to
the organized scientific knowledge in fields like gun-making or textile manufacture as to the entrepre-
neurial activities of traders and merchants.
In the twentieth century the rise of the modern large corporation brought with it the emergence of
the research laboratory as a key instrument of progress. Bell Labs, ICI, Bayer, BASF, Philips, Ford,
Western Electric, Du Pont – all were founded in the 1900s as powerhouses of ideas.1 They produced a
steady stream of innovations which fed rapidly growing markets for automobiles, consumer electrical
products, synthetic materials, industrial chemicals – and the vast industrial complexes needed to fight
two major wars. Their output wasn’t simply around product innovation – many of the key technologies
underpinning process innovations, especially around the growing field of automation and information /
communications technology also came from such organized R&D effort. Table 5.1 gives some examples
of science-push innovations. The Corning case study provides an example of a long-term knowledge-
push innovator.
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It’s important to see the pattern which such activity established in terms of innovation. Organized
R&D became a systematic commitment of specialist staff, equipment, facilities and resources targeted at
key technological problems or challenges. The aim was to explore, but much of that exploration was
elaborating and stretching trajectories that were established as a result of occasional breakthroughs. So
the leap in technology, which the invention of synthetic materials like nylon or polyethylene repre-
sented, was followed by innumerable small-scale developments around and along that path. The rise of
‘big Pharma’ – the huge global pharmaceutical industry – was essentially about large R&D expenditure,
but much of it spent on development and elaboration punctuated by the occasional breakthrough into
‘blockbuster’ drug territory. The computer and other industries that depend on semiconductors have be-
come linked to a long-term trajectory, which followed from the early ‘breakthrough’ years of the indus-
try. Moore’s law (named after one of the founders of Intel) essentially sets up a trajectory which shapes
and guides innovation based on the idea that the size will shrink and the power will increase by a fac-
tor of two every two years.2 This affects memory, processor speed, display drivers and various other
components, which in turn drives the rate of innovation in computers, digital cameras, mobile phones
and thousands of other applications.
This can apply to products or processes: in both cases the key characteristics become stabilized and
experimentation moves to getting the bugs out and refining the dominant design. For example, the
nineteenth-century chemical industry moved from producing soda ash (an essential ingredient in mak-
ing soap, glass and a host of other products) from the earliest days where it was produced by burning
vegetable matter through to a sophisticated chemical reaction which was carried out in a batch process
(the Leblanc process), which was one of the drivers of the Industrial Revolution. This process domi-
nated for nearly a century but was in turn replaced by a new generation of continuous processes that
used electrolytic techniques and which originated in Belgium where they were developed by the Solvay
brothers. Moving to the Leblanc process or the Solvay process did not happen overnight – it took
decades of work to refine and improve the process, and to fully understand the chemistry and engineer-
ing required to get consistent high quality and output.
The same pattern can be seen in products. For example, the original design for a camera is something
which goes back to the early nineteenth century and – as a visit to any science museum will show –
involved all sorts of ingenious solutions. The dominant design gradually emerged with an architecture
which we would recognize today – shutter and lens arrangement, focusing principles, back plate for film
or plates, etc. But this design was then modified still further, for example, with different lenses, motor-
ized drives, flash technology, and, in the case of George Eastman’s work, to creating a simple and relatively
Like it or loathe it, polythene is one of the key material innovations to come out of the twenti-
eth century. It is the world’s ‘favourite’ plastic measured in terms of consumption – 60 million
tonnes/year find their way into films, plastic bags, packaging, cosmetics and a host of other ap-
plications. Discovered by accident by chemists working at ICI in the UK in 1933 the original
low-density polyethylene product has gone through a classic pattern of incremental and occa-
sional breakthrough innovation giving rise to new products like high-density polyethylene and
film and to process innovations such as the Phillips catalysis process which enabled better yields
in production.
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‘idiot-proof’ model camera (the Box Brownie) which opened up photography to a mass market. More re-
cent development has seen a similar fluid phase around digital imaging devices.
This idea of occasional breakthroughs followed by extended periods of exploring and elaboration
along those paths has been studied and mapped by a number of writers.3,4 It’s a common pattern and
one which helps us deal with the key management question of how and where to direct our search ac-
tivity for innovation – a theme we will return to shortly.
Source: Peter Marsh (2008) Ingredients for success on a plate. Financial Times, 26 March, p. 16.
* Ralph Waldo Emerson, ‘If a man has good corn, or wood, or boards, or pigs to sell, or can make better chairs or knives,
crucibles or church organs than anybody else, you will find a broad-beaten road to his home, though it be in the woods.’
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Line extensions
Repositionings
Cost reductions
Incremental product
improvements
ways to meet those needs. For example, Henry Ford was able to turn the luxury plaything that was the
early automobile into something which became ‘a car for Everyman’, whilst Procter & Gamble began a
business meeting needs for domestic lighting (via candles) and moved across into an ever-widening
range of household requirements from soap to nappies to cleaners, toothpaste and beyond.
Just as the knowledge-push model involves a mixture of occasional breakthrough followed by ex-
tensive elaboration on the basic theme, searching around the core trajectory, so the same is true of need.
Occasionally it involves a new-to-the-world idea which offers an innovative way of meeting a need – but
mostly it is elaboration and differentiation. Various attempts have been made to classify product inno-
vations in terms of their degree of novelty, and whilst the numbers and percentages vary slightly, the un-
derlying picture is clear – there are very few ‘new-to-the-world’ products and very many extensions,
variations and adaptations around those core ideas.5,6 Figure 5.2 indicates a typical breakdown – and
we could construct a similar picture for process innovations.
Understanding buyer/adopter behaviour has become a key theme in marketing studies since it pro-
vides us with frameworks and tools for identifying and understanding user needs7 (we return to this
theme in Chapter 9). Advertising and branding play a key role in this process – essentially using psy-
chology to tune into – or even stimulate and create – basic human needs.8,9 Much recent research has
focused on detailed ethnographic studies of what people actually do and how they really use products
and services – using the same approaches which anthropologists use to study strange new tribes to un-
cover hidden and latent needs10 (see Case study 5.1 for an example). An example of using ethnographic
methods to help get closer to user needs can be found in the case study of Tesco’s Fresh & Easy store de-
sign in the USA.
Need-pull innovation is particularly important at mature stages in industry or product life cycles
when there is more than one offering to choose from – competing depends on differentiating on the ba-
sis of needs and attributes, and/or segmenting the offering to suit different adopter types. There are dif-
ferences between business-to-business markets (where emphasis is on needs amongst a shared group,
e.g. along a supply chain) and consumer markets (where the underlying need may be much more basic,
e.g. food, shelter, mobility, and appeals to a much greater number of people). Importantly there is also
a ‘bandwagon’ effect – as more people adopt so the innovation becomes modified to take on board their
needs – and the process accelerates.11
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C A S E S T U DY 5.1
Understanding user needs in Hyundai
One of the problems facing global manufacturers is how to tailor their products to suit the needs
of local markets. For Hyundai this has meant paying considerable attention to getting deep in-
sights into customer needs and aspirations – an approach which they used to good effect in devel-
oping the ‘Santa Fe’, reintroduced to the US market in 2007. The headline for their development
programme was ‘touch the market’ and they deployed a number of tools and techniques to enable
it. For example, they visited an ice rink and watched an Olympic medallist skate around to help
them gain an insight into the ideas of grace and speed which they wanted to embed in the car. This
provided a metaphor – ‘assertive grace’ – which the development teams in Korea and the US were
able to use.
Analysis of existing vehicles suggested some aspects of design were not being covered, for ex-
ample, many sport/utility vehicles (SUVs) were rather ‘boxy’ so there was scope to enhance the
image of the car. Market research suggested a target segment of ‘glamour mums’ who would find
this attractive and the teams then began an intensive study of how this group lived their lives.
Ethnographic methods looked at their homes, their activities and their lifestyles – for example, team
members spent a day shopping with some target women to gain an understanding of their pur-
chases and what motivated them. The list of key motivators that emerged from this shopping study
included durability, versatility, uniqueness, child-friendly and good customer service from knowl-
edgeable staff. Another approach was to make all members of the team experience driving routes
around southern California, making journeys similar to those popular with the target segment and
in the process getting first-hand experience of comfort, features and fixtures inside the car.
Source: Kluter, H. and D. Mottram (2007) Hyundai uses ‘Touch the market’ to create clarity in product concepts. PDMA
Visions, 31, 16–19.
Of course needs aren’t just about external markets for products and services – we can see the same
phenomenon of need pull working inside the business, as a driver of process innovation. ‘Squeaking
wheels’ and other sources of frustration provide rich signals for change – and this kind of innovation is
often something that can engage a high proportion of the workforce who experience these needs first
hand. (The successful model of ‘kaizen’ which underpins the success of firms like Toyota is fundamen-
tally about sustained, high-involvement incremental process innovation along these lines.12). Kaizen
provided the basic philosophy behind the ‘total quality management’ movement in the 1980s, the ‘busi-
ness process re-engineering’ ideas of the 1990s and the current widespread application of concepts
based on the idea of ‘lean thinking’ – essentially taking waste out of existing processes.13–15
Once again we can see the pattern – most of the time such innovation is about ‘doing what we do
better’ but occasionally it involves a major leap. The example of glassmaking (Case study 5.2) provides
a good illustration – for decades the need to produce smooth flat glass for windows had been met by a
steady stream of innovations around the basic trajectory of grinding and polishing. There is plenty of
scope for innovation in machinery, equipment, working practices, etc. – but such innovation tends to
meet with diminishing returns as some of the fundamental bottlenecks emerge – the limits of how much
you can improve an existing process. Eventually the stage is set for a breakthrough – like the emergence
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C A S E S T U DY 5.2
Innovation in the glass industry
It’s particularly important to understand that change doesn’t come in standard sized jumps. For
much of the time it is essentially incremental, a process of gradual improvement over time on di-
mensions like price, quality, choice, etc. For long periods of time nothing much shifts in either
product offering or the way in which this is delivered (product and process innovation is incre-
mental). But sooner or later someone somewhere will come up with a radical change which upsets
the apple cart.
For example, the glass window business has been around for at least 600 years and is – since
most houses, offices, hotels and shops have plenty of windows – a very profitable business to be
in. But for most of those 600 years the basic process for making window glass hasn’t changed.
Glass is made in approximately flat sheets which are then ground down to a state where they are
flat enough for people to see through them. The ways in which the grinding takes place have im-
proved – what used to be a labour-intensive process became increasingly mechanized and even au-
tomated, and the tools and abrasives became progressively more sophisticated and effective. But
underneath the same core process of grinding down to flatness was going on.
Then in 1952 Alastair Pilkington working in the UK firm of the same name began working on
a process which revolutionized glass making for the next 50 years. He got the idea whilst washing
up when he noticed that the fat and grease from the plates floated on the top of the water – and he
began thinking about producing glass in such a way that it could be cast to float on the surface of
some other liquid and then allowed to set. If this could be accomplished it might be possible to
create a perfectly flat surface without the need for grinding and polishing.
Five years, millions of pounds and over 100 000 tonnes of scrapped glass later the company
achieved a working pilot plant and a further two years on began selling glass made by the float
glass process. The process advantages included around 80% labour and 50% energy savings plus
those which came about because of the lack of need for abrasives, grinding equipment, etc.
Factories could be made smaller and the overall time to produce glass dramatically cut. So suc-
cessful was the process that it became – and still is – the dominant method for making flat glass
around the world.
of float glass – which then creates new space within which incremental innovation along a new trajec-
tory can take place.
Sometimes the increase in the urgency of a need or the extent of demand can have a forcing effect
on innovation – the example of wartime and other crises supports this view. For example, the demand
for iron and iron products increased hugely in the Industrial Revolution and exposed the limitations of
the old methods of smelting with charcoal – it created the pull which led to developments like the
Bessemer converter. In similar fashion the emerging energy crisis with oil prices reaching unprecedented
levels has created a significant pull for innovation around alternative energy sources – and an invest-
ment boom for such work.
It’s also important to recognize that innovation is not always about commercial markets or consumer
needs. There is also a strong tradition of social need providing the pull for new products, processes and
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C A S E S T U DY 5.3
The emergence of microfinance
One of the biggest problems facing people living below the poverty line is the difficulty of getting
access to banking and financial services. As a result they are often dependent on moneylenders
and other unofficial sources – and are often charged at exorbitant rates if they do borrow. This
makes it hard to save and invest – and puts a major barrier in the way of breaking out of this spi-
ral. Awareness of this problem led Muhammad Yunus, Head of the Rural Economics Program at
the University of Chittagong, to launch a project to examine the possibility of designing a credit
delivery system to provide banking services targeted at the rural poor. In 1976 the Grameen Bank
Project (Grameen means ‘rural’ or ‘village’ in Bangla language) was established, aiming to
The original project was set up in Jobra (a village adjacent to Chittagong University) and some
neighbouring villages and ran during 1976–79. The core concept was of ‘micro-finance’ –
enabling people (and a major success was with women) to take tiny loans to start and grow tiny
businesses. With the sponsorship of the central bank of the country and support of the national-
ized commercial banks, the project was extended to Tangail district (a district north of Dhaka, the
capital city of Bangladesh) in 1979. Its further success there led to the model being extended to
several other districts in the country and in 1983 it became an independent bank as a result of
government legislation. Today Grameen Bank is owned by the rural poor whom it serves.
Borrowers of the bank own 90% of its shares, while the remaining 10% is owned by the govern-
ment. It now serves over 5 million clients, and has enabled 10 000 families to escape the poverty
trap every month. Younis received the Nobel Peace Prize for this innovation in 2006.
services. A recent example was the development of innovations around the concept of ‘micro-finance’ –
see Case study 5.3.
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working at the fringes of a mainstream market and finding groups whose needs are not being met. It
poses a problem for existing incumbents because the needs of such fringe groups are not seen as rele-
vant to their ‘mainstream’ activities – and so they tend to ignore them or to dismiss them as not being
important. But working with these users and their different needs creates different innovation options –
and sometimes what has relevance for the fringe begins to be of interest to the mainstream. Clayton
Christensen, in his many studies of such ‘disruptive innovation’, shows this has been the pattern across
industries as diverse as computer disk drives, earth-moving equipment, steel making and low-cost air
travel.16
For much of the time there is stability around markets where innovation of the ‘do better’ variety takes
place and is well managed. Close relationships with existing customers are fostered and the system is con-
figured to deliver a steady stream of what the market wants – and often a great deal more! (What he terms
‘technology overshoot’ is often a characteristic of this, where markets are offered more and more features
which they may not ever use or place much value on but which come as part of the package.)
But somewhere else there is another group of potential users who have very different needs – usu-
ally for something much simpler and cheaper – which will help them get something done. For example
the emergent home computer industry began amongst a small group of hobbyists who wanted simple
computing capabilities at a much lower price than was available from the mini-computer suppliers. In
turn the builders of those early PCs wanted disk drives which were much simpler technologically but –
importantly – much cheaper and so were not really interested in what the existing disk drive industry
had to offer. It was too high tech, massively overengineered for their needs and, most important, much
too expensive.
Although they approached the existing drive makers none of them was interested in making such a
device – not surprisingly since they were doing very comfortably supplying expensive high-performance
equipment to an established mini-computer industry. Why should they worry about a fringe group of
hobbyists as a market? Steve Jobs described in an interview their attempts to engage interest, ‘. . . So we
went to Atari and said, “Hey, we’ve got this amazing thing, even built with some of your parts, and what do you
think about funding us? Or we’ll give it to you. We just want to do it. Pay our salary, we’ll come work for you.”
And they said, “No.” So then we went to Hewlett-Packard, and they said, “Hey, we don’t need you. You haven’t got
through college yet.”’
Consequently the early PC makers had to look elsewhere – and found entrepreneurs willing to take
the risks, and experiment with trying to come up with a product which met their needs. It didn’t hap-
pen overnight and there were plenty of failures on the way – and certainly the early drives were very
poor performers in comparison with what was on offer in the mainstream industry. But gradually the PC
market grew, moving from hobbyists to widespread home use and from there – helped by the emergence
and standardization of the IBM PC – to the office and business environment. And as it grew and matured
so it learned and the performance of the machines became much more impressive and reliable – but
coming from a much lower cost base than mini-computers. The same thing happened to the disk drives
within them – the small entrepreneurial firms who began in the game grew and learned and became
large suppliers of reliable products which did the job – but at a massively lower price.
Eventually the fringe market, which the original disk drive makers had ignored because it didn’t
seem relevant or important enough to worry about, grew to dominate – and by the time they realized
this it was too late for many of them. The best they could hope for would be to be late entrant imitators,
coming from behind and hoping to catch up.
This pattern is essentially one of disruption – the rules of the game changed dramatically in the mar-
ketplace with some new winners and losers. Figure 5.3 shows the transition where the new market and
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Technology X
Technology Y
Market A
Valued Market B
Performance
factors
time
suppliers gradually take over from the existing players. It can be seen in many industries – think about
the low-cost airlines, for example. Here the original low-cost players didn’t go head to head with the
national flag carriers who offered the best routes, high levels of service and prime airport slots – all for
a high price. Instead they sought new markets at the fringe – users who would accept a much lower
level of service (no food, no seat allocation, no lounges, no frills at all), but for a basic safe flight would
pay a much lower price. As these new users began to use the service and talk about it, so the industry
grew and came to the attention of existing private and business travellers who were interested in lower
cost flights at least for short-haul, because it met their needs for a ‘good enough’ solution to their travel
problem. Eventually the challenge hit the major airlines who found it difficult to respond because of
their inherently much higher cost structure – even those like BA and KLM, which set up low-cost sub-
sidiaries, found they were unable to manage with the very different business model that low-cost fly-
ing involved.
Low-end market disruption of this kind is a potent threat – think what a producer in China might
do to an industry like pump manufacturing if it began to offer a simple, low-cost ‘good enough’ house-
hold pump for $10 instead of the high-tech high-performance variants available from today’s industry
at prices 10 to 50 times as high. Or how manufacturers of medical devices like asthma inhalers will need
to respond once they have come off patent – a challenge already being posed in markets such as generic
pharmaceuticals.
But it is also important to recognize that similar challenges to existing market structures can hap-
pen through ‘high-end’ disruption – as Utterback points out.17 Where a group of users requires some-
thing at a higher level than the current performance this can create new products or services which
then migrate to mainstream expectations – for example, in the domestic broadband or mobile tele-
phone markets.
Disruptive innovation examples of this kind focus attention on the requirement to look for needs
which are not being met, or poorly met or sometimes where there is an overshoot.18 Each of these can
provide a trigger for innovation – and often involve disruption because existing players don’t see the dif-
ferent patterns of needs. This thinking is behind, for example, the concept of ‘Blue Ocean strategy’19
which argues for firms to define and explore uncontested market space by spotting latent needs that are
not well served. See Case study 5.4.
Over-served markets might include those for office software or computer operating systems where
the continuing trend towards adding more and more features and functionality has possibly outstripped
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C A S E S T U DY 5.4
Gaining competitive edge through meeting unserved needs
An example of the ‘Blue Ocean’ approach is the Nintendo Wii which has carved a major foothold
in the lucrative computer games market – a business which is in fact bigger than Hollywood in
terms of overall market value. The Wii console is not a particularly sophisticated piece of technol-
ogy – compared to rivals Sony PS3 or Microsoft Xbox it has less computing power, storage or other
features and the games graphics are much lower resolution than major sellers like Grand Theft
Auto. But the key to the phenomenal success of the Wii has been its appeal to an under-served
market. Where computer games were traditionally targeted at boys the Wii extends – by means of
a simple interface wand – interest to all members of the family. Add-ons to the platform like the
Wii board for keep fit and other applications mean that market reach extends further, for example
to include the elderly or patients suffering the after-effects of stroke.
Nintendo has performed a similar act of opening up the marketplace with its DS handheld
device – again by targeting unmet needs across a different segment of the population. Many DS
users are middle-aged or retired and the best-selling games are for brain training and puzzles.
user needs for or ability to use them all. Linux and open office applications such as ‘Star Office’ repre-
sent simpler, ‘good enough’ solutions to the basic needs of users – and are potential disruptive innova-
tions for players like Microsoft.
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The poor have no purchasing Although low income, the sheer scale of this market makes it
power and do not represent a interesting. Additionally the poor often pay a premium for ac-
viable market cess to many goods and services, e.g. borrowing money, clean
water, telecommunications and basic medicines, because they
cannot address ‘mainstream’ channels like shops and banks.
The innovation challenge is to offer low-cost, low-margin but
high-quality goods and services across a potential market of
4 billion people
The poor are not brand- Evidence suggests a high degree of brand and value con-
conscious sciousness – so if an entrepreneur can come up with a high-
quality low cost solution it will be subject to hard testing in
this market. Learning to deal with this can help migrate to
other markets – essentially the classic pattern of ‘disruptive
innovation’
The poor are hard to reach By 2015 there are likely to be nearly 400 cities in the devel-
oping world with populations over 1 million and 23 with
over 10 million. 30–40% of these will be poor – so the
potential market access is considerable. Innovative thinking
around distribution – via new networks or agents (such as
the women village entrepreneurs used by Hindustan Lever
in India or the ‘Avon ladies’ in rural Brazil) – can open up
untapped markets
The poor are unable to use Experience with PC kiosks, low-cost mobile phone sharing
and not interested in advanced and access to the Internet suggests that rates of take-up and
technology sophistication of use are extremely fast amongst this group.
In India the e-choupal (e-meeting place) set up by software
company ITC enabled farmers to check prices for their prod-
ucts at the local markets and auction houses. Very shortly
after that the same farmers were using the web to access
prices of their soybeans at the Chicago Board of Trade and
strengthen their negotiating hand!
Source: Prahalad, C.K. (2006) The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid, Wharton School Publishing, New Jersey.
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high BoP profile. There are several video clips accompanying the book The Fortune at the Bottom of the
Pyramid, available from Wharton School Publishing. In addition there is a YouTube clip of an interview
with C.K. Prahalad at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ew2zQnUh_uw.
Importantly many companies are actively using ‘bottom of pyramid’ markets as places to search for
weak signals of potentially interesting new developments. For example, Nokia has been sending scouts
to study how people in rural Africa and India are using mobile phones and the potential for new serv-
ices which this might offer, whilst the pharmaceutical firm Novo Nordisk has been learning about low-
cost provision of diabetes care in Tanzania as an input to a better understanding of how such models
might be developed for different regions.21,22. We’ll return to this theme when we look at the idea of
‘extreme users’ as sources of innovation.
C A S E S T U DY 5.5
Learning from extreme conditions
The Aravind Eye Care System has become the largest eye care facility in the world with its head-
quarters in Madurai, India. Its doctors perform over 200 000 cataract operations – and with
such experience have developed state-of-the art techniques to match their excellent facilities.
Yet the cost of these operations runs from $50 to $300, with over 60% of patients being treated
free. Despite only 40% paying customers the company is highly profitable and the average cost
per operation (across free and paying patients) at $25 is the envy of most hospitals around the
world.
Aravind was founded by Dr G. Venkataswamy in 1976 on his retirement from the Government
Medical College and represents the result of a passionate concern to eradicate needless blindness
in the population. Within India there are an estimated 9 million (and worldwide 45 million) peo-
ple who suffer from blindness which could be cured via corrective glasses and simple cataract or
other surgery. Building on his experience in organizing rural eye camps to deal with diagnosis and
treatment he set about developing a low-cost high-quality solution to the problem, originally aim-
ing its treatment in his home state of Tamil Nadu.
One of the key building blocks in developing the Aravind system has been transferring the
ideas of another industry concerned with low-cost, high and consistent quality provision – the
hamburger business pioneered by the Croc brothers and underpinning McDonald’s. By applying
the same process innovation approaches to standardization, workflow and tailoring tasks to skills
he created a system which not only delivered high quality but was also reproducible. The model
has now diffused widely – there are now five hospitals within Tamil Nadu offering nearly 4000
beds, the majority of which are free. It has moved beyond cataract surgery to education, lens man-
ufacturing, research and development and other linked activities around the theme of improving
sight and access to treatment.
In making this vision come alive Dr Venkataswamy has not only demonstrated considerable
entrepreneurial flair – he has also created a template which others, including health providers in
the advanced industrial economies, are now looking at very closely. It has provided both the trig-
ger and some of the trajectory for innovative approaches in health care – not just in eye surgery
but across a growing range of operations.
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5 . 5 TO WA R D S M A S S C U S TO M I Z AT I O N 243
Assembly Customers are offered a num- Buying a computer from Dell or an-
customization ber of predefined options. other online retailer. Customers
Products/services are made to choose and configure to suit their
order using standardized exact requirements from a rich
components menu of options – but Dell only
start to assemble this (from standard
modules and components) when
their order is finalized. Banks offer-
ing tailor-made insurance and finan-
cial products are actually configur-
ing these from a relatively standard
set of options
Fabrication Customers are offered a num- Buying a luxury car like a BMW,
customization ber of predefined designs. where the customers are involved in
Products/services are manu- choosing (‘designing’) the configura-
factured to order tion which best meets their needs
and wishes, e.g. engine size, trim
levels, colour, fixtures and extras.
Only when they are satisfied with
their virtual model does the manu-
facturing process begin – and cus-
tomers can even visit the factory to
watch their car being built
Services allow a much higher level of
such customization since there is
less of an asset base needed to set up
for ‘manufacturing’ the service – ex-
amples here would include made to
measure tailoring, personal planning
for holidays and pensions
(continued)
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Design customization Customer input stretches to Co-creation, where end users may
the start of the production not even be sure what it is they want
process. Products do not exist but where – sitting down with a de-
until initiated by a customer signer – they co-create the concept
order and elaborate it. It’s a little like hav-
ing some clothes made but rather
than choosing from a pattern book
they actually have a designer with
them and create the concept to-
gether. Only when it exists as a firm
design idea does it then get made.
Co-creation of services can be found
in fields like entertainment (where
user-led models like YouTube are
posing significant challenges to
mainstream providers) and in
healthcare where experiments to-
wards radical alternatives for health-
care delivery are being explored –
see for example, the Design Council
RED project
Source: After Lampel, J. and H. Mintzberg (1996) Customizing, customization. Sloan Management Review, 38 (1), 21–30.
MySpace, Flickr and YouTube have had a major impact. See video links of Stan Davies discussing the
future of mass customization and an interview with Frank Piller talking about mass customization and
configurators.
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drawing boards of Detroit but rather on the farms and homesteads of a wide range of users who wanted
more than a family saloon. They adapted their cars by removing seats, welding new pieces on and cut-
ting off the roof – in the process prototyping and developing the early model of the pickup. Only later
did Detroit pick up on the idea and then begin the incremental innovation process to refine and mass
produce the vehicle.26 A host of other examples support the view that user-led innovation matters, for
example petroleum refining, medical devices, semiconductor equipment, scientific instruments, the
Polaroid camera and a wide range of sports goods.
Importantly active and interested users – ‘lead users’ – are often well ahead of the market in terms of
innovation needs. In Mansfield’s detailed studies of diffusion of a range of capital goods into major firms
in the bituminous coal, iron and steel, brewing and railroad industries, he found that in 75% of the cases
it took over 20 years for complete diffusion of these innovations to major firms.27 As von Hippel points
out some users of these innovations could be found far in advance of the general market.28
One of the fields where this has played a major role is in medical devices where active users amongst
medical professionals have provided a rich source of innovations for decades. Central to their role in the
innovation process is that they are very early on the adoption curve for new ideas – they are concerned
with getting solutions to particular needs and prepared to experiment and tolerate failure in their search
for a better solution. One strategy – which we will explore later – around managing innovation is thus
to identify and engage with such ‘lead users’ to co-create innovative solutions. Tim Craft, a practising
anaesthetist, developed a range of connectors and other equipment as a response to frustrations and
concerns about the safety aspects of the equipment he was using in operating theatres. He describes the
birth of the company, Anaesthetic Medical Systems, and the underlying philosophy in the podcast inter-
view on the website.
C A S E S T U DY 5.6
User involvement in innovation – the Coloplast example
One of the key lessons about successful innovation is the need to get close to the customer. At the
limit (and as Eric Von Hippel and other innovation scholars have noted), the user can become a
key part of the innovation process, feeding in ideas and improvements to help define and shape
the innovation. The Danish medical devices company, Coloplast, was founded in 1954 on these
principles when nurse Elise Sorensen developed the first self-adhering ostomy bag as a way of
helping her sister, a stomach cancer patient. She took her idea to a various plastics manufacturers,
but none showed interest at first. Eventually Aage Louis-Hansen discussed the concept with his
wife, also a nurse, who saw the potential of such a device and persuaded her husband to give the
product a chance. Hansen’s company, Dansk Plastic Emballage, produced the world’s first dispos-
able ostomy bag in 1955. Sales exceeded expectations and in 1957, after having taken out a patent
for the bag in several countries, the Coloplast company was established. Today the company has
subsidiaries in 20 countries and factories in five countries around the world, with specialist divi-
sions dealing with incontinence care, wound care, skin care, mastectomy care, consumer products
(specialist clothing etc.) as well as the original ostomy care division.
Keeping close to users in a field like this is crucial and Coloplast have developed novel ways of
building in such insights by making use of panels of users, specialist nurses and other healthcare
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professionals located in different countries. This has the advantage of getting an informed perspec-
tive from those involved in post-operative care and treatment and who can articulate needs which
might for the individual patient be difficult or embarrassing to express. By setting up panels in dif-
ferent countries the varying cultural attitudes and concerns could also be built into product design
and development.
An example is the Coloplast Ostomy Forum (COF) board approach. The core objective within
the COF Boards is to try and create a sense of partnership with key players, either as key customers
or key influencers. Selection is based on an assessment of their technical experience and compe-
tence but also on the degree to which they will act as opinion leaders and gatekeepers, for exam-
ple by influencing colleagues, authorities, hospitals and patients. They are also a key link in the
clinical trials process. Over the years Coloplast has become quite skilled in identifying relevant
people who would be good COF board members, for example by tracking people who author clin-
ical articles or who have a wide range of experience across different operation types. Their specific
role is particularly to help with two elements in innovation:
Importantly COF Boards are seen as integrated with the company’s product development sys-
tem and they provide valuable market and technical information into the stage-gate decision
process. This input is mainly associated with early stages around concept formulation (where the
input is helpful in testing and refining perceptions about real user needs and fit with new con-
cepts). There is also significant involvement around project development where Board members
are concerned with evaluating and responding to prototypes, suggesting detailed design improve-
ments, design for usability, etc.
Sometimes user-led innovation involves a community which creates and uses innovative solutions
on a continuing basis. Good examples of this include the Linux community around computer operating
systems or the Apache server community around web server development applications, where commu-
nities have grown up and the resulting range of applications is constantly growing – a state which has
been called ‘perpetual beta’ referring to the old idea of testing new software modules across a commu-
nity to get feedback and development ideas.29 A growing range of Internet-based applications make use
of communities – for example Mozilla and its Firefox and other products, Propellerhead and other music
software communities and the emergent group around Apple’s i-platform devices like the iPhone.30
Increasing interest is being shown in such ‘crowd-sourcing’ approaches to co-creating innovations –
and to finding new ways of creating and working with such communities. The principle extends beyond
software and virtual applications – for example, LEGO makes extensive use of communities of develop-
ers in its LEGO factory and other online activities linked to its manufactured products.31 Adidas has
taken the model and developed its ‘mi Adidas’ concept where users are encouraged to co-create their
own shoes using a combination of website (where designs can be explored and uploaded) and in-store
mini-factories where user-created and customized ideas can then be produced. See LEGO and
Threadless case studies on the web.
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large population. As low-cost airlines and other disruptive innovators found, the learning effects across
large volumes of rapidly growing markets mean that many innovative solutions are developed and cre-
ate a business model which has significant challenges for established incumbents. Arguably this is not
simply a local innovation but an experiment towards the kind of industry-changing system that Henry
Ford pioneered a century ago.
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5.10 Regulation
Photographs of the pottery towns around Stoke on Trent in the Midlands of the UK taken in the early
part of the twentieth century would not be much use in tracing landmarks or spotting key geographical
features. The images in fact would reveal very little at all – not because of a limitation in the photo-
graphic equipment or processing but because the subject matter itself – the urban landscape – was ren-
dered largely invisible by the thick smog which regularly enveloped the area. Yet 60 years later the same
images would show up crystal clear – not because the factories had closed (although there are fewer of
them) but because of the continuing effects of the Clean Air Act and other legislation. They provide a
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clear reminder of another important source of innovation – the stimulus given by changes in the rules
and regulations which define the various ‘games’ for business and society. The Clean Air Act didn’t spec-
ify how but only what had to change – achieving the reduction in pollutants emitted to the atmosphere
involved extensive innovation in materials, processes and even in product design made by the factories.
Regulation in this way provides a two-edged sword – it both restricts certain things (and closes off
avenues along which innovation had been taking place) and opens up new ones along which change is
mandated to happen.44 And it works the other way – deregulation – the slackening off of controls – may
open up new innovation space. The liberalization and then privatization of telecommunications in
many countries led to rapid growth in competition and high rates of innovation, for example.
Given the pervasiveness of legal frameworks in our lives we shouldn’t be surprised to see this source
of innovation. From the moment we get up and turn the radio on (regulation of broadcasting shaping
the range and availability of the programmes we listen to), to eating our breakfast (food and drink is
highly regulated in terms of what can and can’t be included in ingredients, how foods are tested before
being allowed for sale, etc.), to climbing into our cars and buckling on our safety belt whilst switching
on our hands-free phone devices (both the result of safety legislation), the role of regulation in shaping
innovation can be seen.45
Regulation can also trigger counter innovation – solutions designed to get round existing rules or at
least bend them to advantage. The rapid growth in speed cameras as a means of enforcing safety legis-
lation on roads throughout Europe has led to the healthy growth of an industry providing products or
services for detecting and avoiding cameras. And at the limit changes in the regulatory environment can
create radical new space and opportunity. Although Enron ended its days as a corporation in disgrace
due to financial impropriety it is worth asking how a small gas pipeline services company rose to be-
come such a powerful beast in the first place. The answer was its rapid and entrepreneurial take up of
the opportunities opened up by deregulation of markets for utilities like gas and electricity.46
5.12 Accidents
Accidents and unexpected events happen – and in the course of a carefully planned R&D project they
could be seen as annoying disruptions. But on occasions accidents can also trigger innovation, open-
ing up surprisingly new lines of attack. The famous example of Fleming’s discovery of penicillin is but
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C A S E S T U DY 5.7
Cleaning up by accident
Audley Williamson is not a household name of the Thomas Edison variety but he was a suc-
cessful innovator whose UK business sold for £135 million in 2004. The core product which
he invented was called ‘Swarfega’ and offered a widely used and dermatologically safe cleaner
for skin. It is a greenish gel which has achieved widespread use in households as a simple and
robust aid with the advertising slogan ‘clean hands in a flash!’ But the original product was not
designed for this market at all – it was developed in 1941 as a mild detergent to wash silk
stockings. Unfortunately the invention of nylon and its rapid application in stockings meant
that the market quickly disappeared and he was forced to find an alternative. Watching work-
ers in a factory trying to clean their hands with an abrasive mixture of petrol, paraffin and
sand which left their hands cracked and sore led him to rethink the use of his gel as a safer
alternative.
one of many stories in which mistakes and accidents turned out to trigger important innovation direc-
tions. For example, the famous story of 3M’s ‘Post-it’ notes began when a polymer chemist mixed an
experimental batch of what should have been a good adhesive but which turned out to have rather
weak properties – sticky but not very sticky. This failure in terms of the original project provided the
impetus for what has become a billion dollar product platform for the company. Henry Chesbrough
calls this process ‘managing the false negatives’ and draws attention to a number of cases.50 For exam-
ple, in the late 1980s, scientists working for Pfizer began testing what was then known as compound
UK-92,480 for the treatment of angina. Although promising in the lab and in animal tests, the com-
pound showed little benefit in clinical trials in humans. Despite these initial negative results the team
pursued what was an interesting side effect which eventually led to UK-92,480 becoming the block-
buster drug Viagra.
The secret is not so much recognizing that such stimuli are available but rather in creating the
conditions under which they can be noticed and acted upon. As Pasteur is reputed to have said,
‘chance favours the prepared mind!’ Using mistakes as a source of ideas only happens if the conditions
exist to help it emerge. For example Xerox developed many technologies in its laboratories in Palo
Alto which did not easily fit their image of being ‘the document company’. These included Ethernet
(later successfully commercialized by 3Com and others) and PostScript language (taken forward by
Adobe Systems). Chesbrough reports that 11 of 35 rejected projects from Xerox’s labs were later
commercialized with the resulting businesses having a market capitalization of twice that of Xerox
itself.50
In similar fashion shocks to the system which fundamentally change the rules provide not only a
threat to the existing status quo but a powerful stimulus to find and develop something new. The
tragedy of the 9/11 bombing of the Twin Towers served to change fundamentally the public sense of
security – but it has also provided a huge stimulus to innovate in areas like security, alternative trans-
portation, fire safety and evacuation.45
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R E S E A R C H N OT E
In a major research project around ‘ideation’ – where do innovation ideas come from? – Robert
Cooper and Scott Edgett looked at 18 possible sources in the field of product innovation. Their
sample covered 160 firms in the business-to-business and business-to-consumer markets, split
approximately 70%/30% and covering a wide size range. They looked at how extensively each
method was used but also asked managers to report on how effective they felt each technique to
be. Their results are summarized below:
Source: Cooper, R. and S. Edgett (2008) Ideation for product innovation: What are the best methods? PDMA Visions,
Product Development Management Association, March, 12–16.
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Using an innovative research method, UC Davis scholars Fred Block and Mathew Keller analysed
a sample of innovations recognized by R&D Magazine as being among the top 100 innovations
of the year over the last four decades. They found that while in the 1970s almost all winners
came from corporations acting on their own, more recently over two-thirds of the winners have
come from partnerships involving business and government, including federal labs and federally
funded university research. Moreover, in 2006 77 of the 88 US entities that produced award-
winning innovations were beneficiaries of federal funding.
Source: http://www.itif.org.
technology – is often about solutions looking for a problem. So we would expect a different balance of
resources committed to push or pull within these different stages.
This kind of thinking is reflected in the Abernathy/Utterback model of innovation life cycle which
we covered in Chapter 1.52 This sees innovation at the early fluid stage being characterized by extensive
experimentation and with emphasis on product – creating a radical new offering. As the dominant
design emerges attention shifts towards more incremental variation around the core trajectory – and as
the industry matures so emphasis shifts to process innovation aimed at improving parameters like cost
and quality. Once again this helps allocate scarce search resources in particular ways.
A fourth and related issue is around diffusion – the adoption and elaboration of innovation over
time. Innovation adoption is not a binary process but rather one which takes place gradually over time,
following some version of an S-curve.53 At the early stages innovative users with high tolerance for
failure will explore, to be followed by early adopters. This gives way to the majority following their lead
until finally the remnant of a potential adopting population – the laggards in Roger’s terms – adopt or
remain stubbornly resistant. Understanding diffusion processes and the influential factors (which we
will explore in more detail in Chapter 8) is important because it helps us understand where and when
different kinds of triggers are picked up. Lead users and early adopters are likely to be important sources
of ideas and variations, which can help shape an innovation in its early life, whereas the early and late
majority will be more a source of incremental improvement ideas.54
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Source: Fourth European Community Innovation Survey. (c) European Communities 2007. Reproduced with permission.
Data from studies like the Community Innovation Survey gives us one picture – and it reinforces the
view that successful innovation is about spreading the net as widely as possible, mobilizing multiple
channels. Although surveys of this kind tell us a lot they also miss important elements in the sources of
innovation picture. A lot of incremental innovation and how it is triggered lies beneath the radar screen,
and there is a bias towards product innovation where we know that a great deal of incremental process
improvement goes on. And surveys don’t capture position or business model innovation so well, again
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Development
New
market
Boundary
of the firm
Current
Research
market
projects
especially at the incremental end. It tends to focus on the ‘obvious’ search agents like R&D or market
research departments – but others are involved, e.g. purchasing, and within the business the idea of sug-
gestion schemes and high-involvement innovation. But surveys give us a broad picture – and underline
the need for an extensive net.
Building rich and extensive linkages with potential sources of innovation has always been important
– for example studies by Carter and Williams in the UK in the 1950s identified one key differentiator be-
tween successful and less successful innovating firms as the degree to which they were ‘cosmopolitan’ as
opposed to ‘parochial’ in their approach towards sources of innovation.55 There are, of course, arguments
for keeping a relatively closed approach, for example there is a value in doing your own R&D and mar-
ket research because the information collected is then available to be exploited in ways that the business
can control. It can choose to push certain lines, hold back on others, keeping things essentially within a
closed system. But as we’ve seen the reality is that innovation is triggered in all sorts of ways and a sensi-
ble strategy is to cast the net as widely as possible. In what is termed ‘open innovation’ organizations
move to a more permeable view of knowledge in which they recognize the importance of external sources
and also make their own knowledge more widely available.56 Figure 5.4 illustrates this principle.
This is not without its difficulties – on the one hand it makes sense to recognize that in a knowledge-
rich world ‘not all the smart guys work for us’. Even large R&D spenders like Procter & Gamble (annual
R&D budget around $3 billion and about 7000 scientists and engineers working globally in R&D) are
fundamentally rethinking their models – in its case switching from ‘Research and Develop’ to ‘Connect
and Develop’ as the dominant slogan, with the strategic aim of moving from closed innovation to sourc-
ing 50% of its innovations from outside the business.57 But on the other we should recognize the ten-
sions that arise around intellectual property (how do we protect and hold on to knowledge when it is
now much more mobile – and how do we access other people’s knowledge?), around appropriability
(how do we ensure a return on our investment in creating knowledge?) and around the mechanisms to
make sure we can find and use relevant knowledge (when we are now effectively sourcing it from across
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the globe and in all sorts of unlikely locations). In this context innovation management emphasis shifts
from knowledge creation to knowledge trading and managing knowledge flows.58
We will return to this theme of ‘open innovation’ and how to enable it, shortly.
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area of innovation studies the ideas behind ‘technological learning’ – the processes whereby firms ac-
quire and use new technological knowledge and the underlying organizational and managerial
processes which are involved – were extensively discussed by, inter alia, Freeman,1 Bell and Pavitt75 and
Lall.76 Cohen and Levinthal’s original work was based on exploring (via mathematical modelling) the
premise that firms might incur substantial long-run costs for learning a new ‘stock’ of information and
that R&D needed to be viewed as an investment in today’s and tomorrow’s technology.72 In later work
they broadened and refined the model and definition of absorptive capacity to include more than just
the R&D function and also explored the role of technological opportunity and appropriability in deter-
mining the firm’s incentive to build absorptive capacity.
Absorptive capacity is clearly not evenly distributed across a population. For various reasons firms
may find difficulties in growing through acquiring and using new knowledge. Some may simply be un-
aware of the need to change never mind having the capability to manage such change. Such firms – a
classic problem of SME growth for example – differ from those which recognize in some strategic way
the need to change, to acquire and use new knowledge but lack the capability to target their search or
to assimilate and make effective use of new knowledge once identified. Others may be clear what they
need but lack capability in finding and acquiring it. And others may have well-developed routines for
dealing with all of these issues and represent resources on which less experienced firms might draw – as
is the case with some major supply chains focused around a core central player.77
Reviewing the literature on why and when firms take in external knowledge suggests that this is not
– as is sometimes assumed – a function of firm size or age. It appears instead that the process is more
one of transitions via crisis-turning points. Some firms do not make the transition, others learn up to a
R E S E A R C H N OT E Absorptive capacity
Research by Zahra and George (2002) noted that carrying out studies of absorptive capacity (AC)
has become fraught with difficulty owing to the diversity and ambiguity surrounding its defini-
tion and components. Zahra and George decided to review and extend the absorptive capacity
construct and suggested that several different processes were involved – rather than a simple ab-
sorption of new knowledge there were discrete activities linked to search, acquisition, assimila-
tion and exploitation. Potential AC relates to Cohen and Levinthal’s (1990) research on how a
firm may value and acquire knowledge, although not necessarily exploit it. The firm’s ability to
transform and exploit the knowledge is captured by Realized AC. In short, absorptive capacity is
a set of organizational routines and processes which are used to create a dynamic organizational
capability. The authors state that firms need to build both types of absorptive capacity in order to
maintain a competitive advantage.
Zahra and George discuss how Potential and Realized AC are separate but complementary,
and why the distinction is useful. By distinguishing between Potential and Realized absorptive
capacity we are able to ascertain which firms are unable to leverage and exploit external
information. This can provide useful implications for managerial competences in developing
both aspects of AC. They use the Potential and Realized absorptive capacity constructs to build
a model of the antecedents, moderators and outcomes of the construct. For instance, they
propose that a firm’s experience and exposure to external knowledge will influence the
development of Potential AC. Activation triggers, such as a change in dominant design may also
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play a moderating influence in determining the locus of search for external sources of
knowledge. Finally they introduce the role of the social integration mechanism in reducing the
gap between Potential and Realized AC. These mechanisms can help distribute information
throughout the firm and provide an environment whereby information can be exploited.
Their work spawned extensive discussion and application – but the resulting proliferation
of use of the term led to problems highlighted by Lane et al. (2006), who tried to evaluate how
much divergence there has been in the field. These authors analysed 289 absorptive capacity
papers from 14 journals to understand how the construct had been used and to identify the
contributions to the broader literature of absorptive capacity. From their analysis, the authors
concluded that the construct had become reified. ‘Reification is the outcome of the process by which
we forget the authorship of ideas and theories, objectify them (turn them into things), and then forget
that we have done so’ (p. 835). They identified only six papers which extended the understanding
of absorptive capacity in any meaningful way.
Todorova and Durisin (2007) also focus on the dynamic characteristics of the absorptive
capacity construct, by examining the relationship between identification and acquisition of
relevant knowledge, and the ability to apply that knowledge to commercial ends. In particular
they claim that ‘transformation’ should be regarded not as a consequence but as an alternative
process to ‘assimilation’ suggesting a more complex relationship between the components of
absorptive capacity. In addition, they highlight the role of power relationships and socialization
mechanisms within the dynamic model of absorptive capacity.
Sources: Zahra, S.A. and G. George (2002) Absorptive capacity: a review, reconceptualization and extension. Academy of
Management Review, 27, 185–94; Cohen, W. and D. Levinthal (1990) Absorptive capacity: a new perspective on learning
and innovation. Administrative Science Quarterly, 35 (1), 128–52; Lane, P., B. Koka and S. Pathar (2006) The reification
of absorptive capacity: a critical review and rejuvenation of the construct. Academy of Management Review, 31 (4),
833–63; Todorova, G. and B. Durisin (2007) Absorptive capacity: valuing a reconceptualization. Academy of Management
Review, 32 (3), 774–96.
limited level. Equally the ability to move forwards depends on the past – a point made forcibly by Cohen
and Levinthal in their original studies.
The key message from research on AC is that this complex construct – acquiring and using new
knowledge – involves multiple and different activities around search, acquisition, assimilation and
implementation. Connectivity between these is important – the ability to search and acquire
(Potential AC in Zahra and George’s model) may not lead to innovation. To complete the process fur-
ther capabilities around assimilation and exploitation (Realized AC) are also needed. Importantly
AC is associated with various kinds of search and subsequent activities, not just large firm formal
R&D; mechanisms whereby SMEs explore and develop their process innovation, for example are
also relevant.
AC is essentially about accumulated learning and embedding of capabilities – search, acquire, assim-
ilate, etc. – in the form of routines (structures, processes, policies and procedures) which allow organi-
zations to repeat the trick. Firms differ in their levels of AC and this places emphasis on how they
develop, establish and reinforce these routines. In other words their ability to learn. Developing AC
involves two complementary kinds of learning. Type 1 – adaptive learning – is about reinforcing and
establishing relevant routines for dealing with a particular level of environmental complexity; and type
2 – generative learning – for taking on new levels of complexity.78,79
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It’s important to recognize that much of the knowledge lies in the experience and ideas of ‘ordinary’
employees rather than solely with specialists in formal innovation departments like R&D or market re-
search. Increasingly organizations are trying to tap into such knowledge as a source of innovation via
various forms of what can be termed ‘high-involvement innovation’ systems such as suggestion
schemes, problem-solving groups and innovation ‘jams’.
Sources of innovation
We look in the usual places for our industry. We look at our customers. We look at our suppliers.
We go to trade bodies. We go to trade fairs. We present technical papers. We have an input com-
ing from our customers. What we also try to do is develop inputs from other areas. We’ve done
that in a number of ways. Where we’re recruiting, we try to bring in people who can bring a dif-
ferent perspective. We don’t necessarily want people who’ve worked in the type of instruments we
have in the same industry . . . certainly in the past we’ve brought in people who bring a com-
pletely different perspective, almost like introducing greensand into the oyster. We deliberately
look outside. We will look in other areas. We will look in areas that are perhaps different technol-
ogy. We will look in areas that are adjacent to what we do, where we haven’t normally looked. And
we also do encourage the employees themselves to come forward with ideas.
Some of our product ideas have come from an individual who was sitting as a peripheral part
of a little project team that was looking at different project ideas, different products for the future
of the business. He had an idea. He created something in his garage. He brought it into me and
says, what about this? And we looked at it. We had a quick discussion about it, talked to the
management team and initiated a development that we did for one of our suppliers. That came
right from outside the area we normally operate in. It came through one of our employees, a long-
service employee, so not someone who was recent to the business. But it was triggered by him
thinking in a different way. An idea came that he has married up to a potential market need
because of the job he worked in when he was working in the service and repair area. He said,
right, there’s an opportunity for this product. He created a prototype out of a piece of drainpipe
and some pieces he had taken from the repair area and made a functional model. And from that,
we actually created a product that has spawned a product range of small manual instruments,
which traditionally the business hasn’t been involved with for probably 20 years. So, that’s an idea
that came from within the business. It came from an existing employee, but it’s not something that
we would have thought of as part of our normal pipeline.
We didn’t immediately see, oh, there’s a demand for this, let’s do that. This came from him
having some local knowledge and talking to customers at lower levels and saying, there’s actually
a demand for this small product. It’s small, it’s relatively niche, it’s not going to set the world alight,
but it enhances our product range and it puts us into an area where we’ve never been before. So,
we’re very receptive to those ideas coming forward. We create an environment where we
encourage people to question and challenge. We’ve actually got an appraisal system where we
look at people’s competencies rather than performance, and one of the competencies we want is,
is that person going to question and challenge? Are they willing to say, how can we do this better,
how can we do this more effectively? So, continuous improvement is something we look for. But
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we also want people to hold up hands and say, hang on a minute, why are you doing it that way?
What about this? I’ve seen this because of something I’ve done, one of my hobbies or in some of
the social activities, and we encourage people to bring those ideas in and work with us to develop
that into a product idea. We’ve actually set up a mechanism where we run a project team where
we take people from all areas of the business . . . this is no longer just a product development
area. We then put them in a room with all the resources they need for three or four days and say,
what we want out of this is a number of product ideas that are different to what we do. Where
can we go in the future? Where can you take this little business? Working within the limits of
what we’re capable of they will come up with product ideas, and the last one that we ran, we had
seven or eight product ideas came out.
A full video version and transcript of the interview with Patrick is on the website.
One rich source of internal innovation lies in the entrepreneurial ideas of employees – projects which
are not formally sanctioned by the business but which build on the energy, enthusiasm and inspiration of
people passionate enough to want to try out new ideas. Encouraging internal entrepreneurship –
‘intrapreneurship’ as it has been termed81 – is increasingly popular and organizations like 3M and Google
make attempts to manage it in a semi-formal fashion, allocating a certain amount of time/space to em-
ployees to explore their own ideas.82 Managing this is a delicate balancing act – on the one hand there is
a need to give both permission and resources to enable employee-led ideas to flourish, but on the other
there is the risk of these resources being dissipated with nothing to show for them. In many cases there
is an attempt to create a culture of what can be termed ‘bootlegging’ in which there is tacit support for
projects which go against the grain.83 An example in BMW – where these are called ‘U-boat projects’ –was
the Series 3 Estate version which the mainstream company thought was not wanted and would conflict
with the image of BMW as a high-quality, high-performance and somewhat ‘sporty’ car. A small group of
staff worked on a U-boat project, even using parts cannibalized from an old VW Rabbit to make a proto-
type – and the model has gone on to be a great success and opened up new market space.84
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establishing new roles and structures. In the former case there is already strong evidence of the impor-
tance of customers and suppliers as sources of innovation and the key role which relevant staff have in
managing these knowledge sources. In the field of process innovation, for example, where the ‘lean’
agenda of improving on cost, quality and delivery is a key theme, there is strong evidence that diffusion
can be accelerated through supply-chain learning initiatives like the UK Industry Forum in the auto
components, aerospace, textiles and other sectors.85,86
But the ‘open innovation’ challenge also points us to where further experimentation is needed to
make new connections. Table 5.5 identifies these and the following section explores some approaches
which represent this ‘frontier’ in terms of search behaviour.84
Sending out scouts Dispatch idea hunters to track down new innovation triggers
Exploring multiple futures Use futures techniques to explore alternative possible futures; and
then develop innovation options
Using the web Harness the power of the web, through online communities, and
virtual worlds, for example, to detect new trends
Working with active users Team up with product and service users to see the ways in which
they change and develop existing offerings
Deep diving Study what people actually do, rather than what they say they do
Mobilize the mainstream Bring mainstream actors into the product and service development
process
Corporate entrepreneurship Stimulate and nurture the entrepreneurial talent inside the
and intrapreneuring organization
Use brokers and bridges Cast the ideas net far and wide and connect with other industries
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In moving from intervention to prevention – that’s challenging the business model where the
pharmaceuticals industry is deriving its revenues! . . .We believe that we can focus on some ma-
jor global health issue – mainly diabetes – and at the same time create business opportunities
for our company.
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Another related approach is to build ‘concept’ models and prototypes to explore reactions and pro-
vide a focus for various different kinds of input which might shape/co-create future products and
services. Concept cars are commonly used in the automotive industry not as production models but as
stepping stones to help understand and shape the products of the future. Similarly Airbus and other
aerospace firms have concept aircraft whilst Toyota is working on concept projects around housing,
transportation and energy systems.
More recently companies have started to see value in developing such scenarios jointly with other
organizations and discover exciting opportunities for cross-industry collaboration (which often means
the creation of an entirely new market).
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manufacturers around the world. At the beginning of 2007, CommuniSpace operated more than 300
parallel communities. In each of these communities, members discuss either concrete product concepts
posted by companies, or develop in a more open discussion new ideas and trends. Each community
contains between 50 and 200 members, who are screened, selected and invited by CommuniSpace to
participate.
Beyond these uses come those which bring users into the equation as ‘co-creators’ – a theme we dis-
cussed earlier. For example, BMW makes use of the web to enable a ‘Virtual Innovation Agency’ – a
forum where suppliers from outside the normal range of BMW players can offer ideas that BMW may be
able to use. These can be both product related and also process related, for example a recent suggestion
was for carbon recycling out of factory waste. Although this carries the risk that many ‘cranks’ will offer
ideas, suggestions may also provide stepping stones to new domains of interest.
‘Deep diving’
Most market research has become adept at hearing the ‘voice of the customer’ via interviews, focus
groups, panels, etc. But sometimes what people say and what they actually do is different. In recent
years there has been an upsurge in the use of anthropological-style techniques to get closer to what
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people need/want in the context in which they operate. ‘Deep diving’ is one of many terms used to de-
scribe the approach – ‘empathic design’ and ‘ethnographic methods’ are others.
Much of the research toolkit here originates from the field of anthropology where the researcher aims
to gain insights primarily through observation and immersing herself in the day-to-day life of the object
of study – rather than through questioning only. For example, to ensure their new terminal at Heathrow
would address user needs well into the future, BAA commissioned some research into what users in 2020
might look like, and what their needs might be. Of course the ageing population came up as an issue; fo-
cusing on the behaviour of older people at the airport they noticed that they tend to go to the toilet rather
frequently. So, the conclusion was to plan for more toilets at Terminal 5. However, when someone really
followed people around they noted that many people going to the restrooms did not actually go to the
toilet – but went there because it was quiet, and they could actually hear the announcements!
Corporate venturing
One widely used approach involves setting up of special units with the remit – and more importantly
the budget – to explore new diversification options. Loosely termed ‘corporate venture’ (CV) units they
actually cover a spectrum ranging from simple venture capital funds (for internal and externally gener-
ated ideas) through to active search and implementation teams, acquisition and spin-out specialists. For
example, Nokia has a very interesting corporate venturing approach for finding innovation. It has
moved beyond ‘not invented here’ and is embracing ‘let’s find the best ideas wherever they are’. Nokia
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Venturing Organization is focused on corporate venturing activities that include identifying and devel-
oping new businesses, or as they put it ‘the renewal of Nokia’. Nokia Venture Partners invests exclusively
in mobile and Internet Protocol (I/P) related start-up businesses. They have a very interesting third
group called Innovent that directly supports and nurtures nascent innovators with the hope of growing
future opportunities for Nokia.
SAP has set up a venture unit called SAP Inspire to fund start-ups with interesting technologies. The
mission of the group is to ‘be a world-class corporate venturing group that will contribute, through busi-
ness and technical innovation, to SAP’s long-term growth and leadership’. It does so by:
• seeking entrepreneurial talent within SAP and providing an environment where ideas are evaluated
on an open and objective basis
• actively soliciting and cultivating ideas from the SAP community as well as effectively managing the
innovation process from idea generation to commercialization
• looking for growth opportunities that are beyond the existing portfolio but within SAP’s overall vision
and strategy.
The purpose of corporate venturing is to provide some ring-fenced funds to invest in new directions
for the business. Such models vary from being tightly controlled (by the parent organization) to being
fully autonomous. (Chapter 10 discusses this approach in detail.)
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Striking a suitable balance is tricky enough under what might be called ‘steady-state’ innovation
conditions, but the work of Christensen and others on disruptive innovation suggests that under certain
conditions (for example the emergence of completely new markets) established incumbents get into dif-
ficulties. They are too focused in their search routines (both explore and exploit) for dealing with what
they perceive as a relevant part of the environment (their market ‘value network’) and they fail to re-
spond to a new emerging challenge until it is often too late. This is partly because their search behav-
iour is so routinized, embedded in reward structures and other reinforcement mechanisms, that it
blinds the organization to other signals.87–89
Importantly this is not a failure in innovation management per se – the firms described are in fact
very successful innovators under the ‘steady-state’ conditions of their traditional marketplace, deploy-
ing textbook routines and developing close and productive networks with customers and suppliers. The
problem arises at the edge of their ‘normal’ search space and under the discontinuous conditions of new
market emergence.
In similar fashion incumbent organizations often suffer when technologies shift in discontinuous
fashion. Again their established repertoire of search routines tends towards exploitation and bounds
their search space – with the risk that developments outside can achieve considerable momentum and
by the time they are visible the organization has little reaction time.90 This is further complicated by the
issue of sunk costs which commit the incumbent to the earlier generation of technology, and the ‘sailing
ship’ effect whereby their exploitation routines continue to bring a stream of improvements to the old
technology and sustain that pathway while the new technology matures.91 (The ‘sailing ship’ effect refers
to the fact that when steamships were first invented it gave a spur to an intensive sequence of innova-
tion in sailing ship technology which meant the two could compete for an extended period before the
underlying superiority of steamship technology worked through.)
It is also clear that another key issue is how to integrate these different approaches within the same
organization – how (or even if it is possible) to develop what Tushman and O’Reilly call ‘ambidextrous’
capability around innovation management.92 Much recent literature on disruptive, radical, discontinu-
ous innovation highlights the tensions which are set up and the fundamental conflicts between certain
sets of routines – for example, Christensen’s theory suggests that by being too good at ‘exploit’ routines
to listen to and work with the market, incumbent firms fail to pick up or respond to other signals from
new fringe markets until it is too late.
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Successful innovation management requires that we can get hold of and use knowledge about compo-
nents but also about how those components can be put together – what they termed the architecture of
an innovation.93
One way of looking at the search problem is in terms of the ways in which ‘innovation space’ is
framed by the organization. Just as human beings need to develop cognitive schemas to simplify the
‘blooming, buzzing confusion’ which the myriad stimuli in their environment offer them, so organiza-
tions make use of simplifying frames. They ‘look’ at the environment and take note of elements which
they consider relevant – threats to watch out for, opportunities to take advantage of, competitors and
collaborators, etc. The construction of such frames helps give the organization some stability and –
amongst other things – defines the space within which it will search for innovation possibility. Whilst
there is scope for organizations to develop their own individual ways of seeing the world – their busi-
ness models – in practice there is often commonality within a sector. So most firms in a particular field
will adopt similar ways of framing – assuming certain ‘rules of the game’, following certain trajectories
in common.
These frames correspond to accepted ‘architectures’ – the ways in which players see the configura-
tion within which they innovate. The dominant architecture emerges over time but once established be-
comes the ‘box’ within which further innovation takes place. We are reminded of the difficulties in
thinking and working outside this box because it is reinforced by the structures, processes and toolkit –
the core routines – which the organization (and its key reference points in a wider network of competi-
tors, customers and suppliers) has learned and embedded.
This perspective highlights the challenge of moving between knowledge sets. Firms can be radical
innovators but still be ‘upstaged’ by developments outside their search trajectory. The problem is that
search behaviour is essentially bounded exploration and raises a number of challenges:
• When there is a shift to a new mindset – cognitive frame – established players may have problems be-
cause of the reorganization of their thinking which is required. It is not simply adding new informa-
tion but changing the structure of the frame through which they see and interpret that information.
They need to ‘think outside the box’ within which their bounded exploration takes place – and this is
difficult because it is highly structured and reinforced.94
• This is not simply a change of personal or even group mindset – the consequence of following a par-
ticular mindset is that artefacts and routines come into place which block further change and rein-
force the status quo. Christensen points out, for example, the difficulty of seeing and accepting the
relevance of different signals about emerging markets because the reward systems around sales and
marketing are biased towards reinforcing the established market.87 Henderson and Clark highlight
the problems of social and knowledge networks which need to be abandoned and new ones set up in
the move to new architectures in photolithography equipment.93 Day and Shoemaker show how or-
ganizations develop particular ways of seeing and not seeing.95 These are all part of the bounding
process – essentially they create the box we need to get out of.
• Architectural – as opposed to component innovation – requires letting go of existing networks and
building new ones.96 This is easier for new players to do, hard for established players, because the in-
ertial tendency is to revert to established pathways for knowledge and other exchange – the finding,
forming and performing problem.
• The new frame may not necessarily involve radical change in technology or markets but rather a re-
arrangement of the existing elements. Low-cost airlines did not, for example, involve major techno-
logical shifts in aircraft or airport technology but rather problem solving to make flying available to
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an under-served market segment. Similarly the ‘bottom of the pyramid’ development is not about rad-
ical new technologies but about applying existing concepts to under-served markets with different
characteristics and challenges.20 There may be incremental innovation to make the new configuration
work but this is not usually new to the world but rather problem solving.
Radical
Bounded
Co-evolve
exploration
Innovation
Exploit Reframing
Incremental
Established frame New frame
Environmental complexity
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Using this idea of different ‘frames’ we can explore four zones in Figure 5.5 which have different im-
plications for the ways in which innovation is managed. Whilst those approaches for dealing with the
left-hand side – zones 1 and 2 – are well developed we argue that there is still much to learn about the
right-hand side challenges and how to approach them in practical terms – via methods and tools.
Zone 1 corresponds to the ‘exploit’ field discussed earlier and assumes a stable and shared frame
within which adaptive and incremental development takes place. Search routines here are associated
with refining tools and methods for technological and market research, deepening relationships with es-
tablished key players. Examples would be working with key suppliers, getting closer to customers and
building key strategic alliances to help deliver established innovations more efficiently.
The structures for carrying out this kind of search behaviour are clearly defined with relevant actors
– department or functions responsible for market research, product (service) development, etc. They in-
volve strong ties in external networks with customers, suppliers and other relevant actors in their wider
environment. The work of core groups like R&D is augmented by high levels of participation across the
organization – because the search questions are clearly defined and widely understood high involve-
ment of nonspecialists is possible. So procurement and purchasing can provide a valuable channel
as can sales and marketing – since these involve contact with external players.97 Process innovation can
be enabled by inviting suggestions for incremental improvement across the organization – a high-
involvement kaizen model.15
Zone 2 involves search into new territory, pushing the frontiers of what is known and deploying dif-
ferent search techniques for doing so. But this still takes place within an established framework – a
shared mental model which we could term ‘business model as usual’. R&D investments here are on big
bets with high strategic potential, patenting and IP strategies aimed at marking out and defending terri-
tory, riding key technological trajectories (such as Moore’s law in semiconductors). Market research sim-
ilarly aims to get close to customers but to push the frontiers via empathic design, latent needs analysis,
etc. Although the activity is risky and exploratory it is still governed strongly by the frame for the sector
– as Pavitt observed there are certain sectoral patterns which shape the behaviour of all the players in
terms of their innovation strategies.98
The structures involved in such exploration are, of necessity, highly specialized. Formal R&D and
within that sophisticated specialization is the pattern on the science/technology frontier, often involving
separate facilities. Here too there is mobilization of a network of external but similarly specialized
researchers – in university, public and commercial laboratories – and the formation of specific strategic
alliances and joint ventures around a particular area of deep technology exploration. The highly special-
ized nature of the work makes it difficult for others in the organization to participate – and indeed this
gap between worlds can often lead to tensions between the ‘operating’ and the ‘exploring’ units and the
boardroom battles between these two camps for resources are often tense. In similar fashion market re-
search is highly specialized and may include external professional agencies in its network with the task
of providing sophisticated business intelligence around a focused frontier.
These two zones represent familiar territory in discussion of exploit/explore in innovation search.
But arguably they take place within an accepted frame, a way of seeing the world which essentially fil-
ters and shapes perceptions of what is relevant and important. This corresponds to Henderson and
Clark’s architecture and, as we have argued, defines the ‘box’ within which innovative activity is
expected to occur. Such framing is, however, a construct and open to alternatives – and Zone 3 is essen-
tially associated with reframing. It involves searching a space where alternative architectures are gener-
ated, exploring different permutations and combinations of elements in the environment. Importantly
this often happens by working with elements in the environment not embraced by established business
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models – for example, Christensen’s work on fringe markets,87 Prahalad’s bottom of the pyramid20 or
von Hippel’s extreme users.26
For example, the low-cost airline industry was not a development of new product or process – it still
involves airports, aircraft, etc. Instead the innovation was in position and paradigm, reframing the busi-
ness model by identifying new elements in the markets – students, pensioners, etc. – who did not yet fly
but might if the costs could be brought down. Rethinking the business model required extensive product
and process innovation to realize it – for example in online booking, fast turnaround times at airports,
multi-skilling of staff, etc. – but the end result was a reframing and creation of new innovation space.
Zone 4 represents the ‘edge of chaos’ complex environment where innovation emerges as a product
of a process of co-evolution. This is not the product of a predefined trajectory so much as the result of
complex interactions between many independent elements.99,100 Processes of amplification and
feedback reinforce what begin as small shifts in direction and gradually define a trajectory. This is the
pattern – the ‘fluid state’ – before a dominant design emerges and sets the standard.52 As a result it is
characterized by very high levels of experimentation.
Search strategies here are difficult since it is impossible to predict what is going to be important or
where the initial emergence will start and around which feedback and amplification will happen. The
best an organization can do is to try and place itself within that part of its environment where something
might emerge and then develop fast reactions to weak signals. ‘Strategy’ here can be distilled down to
three elements – be in there, be in there early and be in there actively (i.e. in a position to be part of the
feedback and amplification mechanisms).
With these four zones we have a simple map on which to explore innovation routines. Our concern
in this chapter is with search routines – how do organizations manage the process of recognizing and
acquiring key new knowledge to enable the innovation process? There are also implications for how
they assimilate and transform (select) and how they exploit and implement but we will not focus on
those at this stage. As we have suggested each zone represents a different kind of challenge and leads to
the use of different methods and tools. And whilst the toolbox is well stocked for zones 1 and 2 there is
value in experimentation and experience sharing around zones 3 and 4.
Table 5.6 summarizes the challenge.
Table 5.6
1 ‘Business as Exploit – extend in in- ‘Good practice’ new Formal and mainstream
usual’ – innova- cremental fashion product/service develop- structures
tion but under boundaries of technol- ment
High involvement
‘steady-state’ ogy and market. Refine
Close to customer across organization
conditions, lit- and improve. Close
tle disturbance links/strong ties with Technology platforms and Established roles and
around core key players systematic exploitation functions (including
business model tools production, purchasing,
etc.)
(continued)
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4 Radical – new Emergence – need to Complexity theory – feed- Far from mainstream
to the world – co-evolve with stake- back and amplification,
‘Licensed dreamers’
possibilities. holders probe and learn, prototyp-
New architec- ing and use of boundary Outside agents and
Be in there
ture around as objects facilitators
yet unknown Be in there early
and established
Be in there actively
elements
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