The Public Innovator's Playbook:: Nurturing Bold Ideas in Government
The Public Innovator's Playbook:: Nurturing Bold Ideas in Government
The Public Innovator's Playbook:: Nurturing Bold Ideas in Government
Innovator’s Playbook:
Nurturing bold
ideas in government
William D. Eggers and
Shalabh Kumar Singh
Deloitte Research
Foreword by
Stephen Goldsmith
Harvard Kennedy School
of Government
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ISBN 0-9790611-1-3
ISBN13 9780-9790611-1-0
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Appendix
Frequently asked questions 131
Good sources of information on innovation 137
Endnotes 141
Stephen Goldsmith
Daniel Paul Professor of Government
Director of the Innovations in American Government Program
Harvard Kennedy School
▼
Introduction
▼ Innovation strategies
7
1. Cultivate
Idea Idea
diffusion
Innovation cycle selection
2. Replicate
3. Partner
4. Network
▼ 5. Open source
Idea
▼
implementation
Organization structure
Support strategies to innovate
three phases that innovation often gets derailed the public sector environment. One result is
in the public sector. Innovation is at times that governments have no dearth of ideas on
considered synonymous with a new idea; how- what they should or should not do. However,
ever, until the idea delivers desirable results, it idea generation has to be more systematic if
cannot be considered a successful innovation. it is to deliver valuable results. Many govern-
Chapter 1 describes the innova- ment agencies have either ignored employ-
tion process in detail and explores the ees as a source of valuable ideas or have
four stages of the innovation cycle: not done a very good job bringing in ideas
Idea generation and discovery — Numer- and innovations from outside. Excellence in
ous organizations, policy entrepreneurs, and generating ideas requires defining shared
opinion leaders regularly propose changes in goals that, if met, would make a difference
government based on their understanding of to the organization as a whole, looking at
Collaborative, ▼
outcome-focused Introduction
government
9
Employees Government Citizens
▼
▼
organization
Participative and
responsive government
▼
Internal
Reinvented government
partners
ity to generate innovative approaches. These Security Administration’s (TSA) Idea Fac-
range from strategies focused on generating tory is one experiment in idea cultivation. In
innovation inside the organization to externally April 2007, the TSA launched Idea Factory, a
oriented strategies that seek out and leverage secure intranet site that allows employees to
promising ideas from elsewhere (figure 3). Here submit ideas for improving agency operations
is a brief introduction to the five strategies: and processes. By the end of January 2009,
employees had submitted 7,837 ideas and
1. Cultivate: Changing large government orga- 69,712 comments. Of those ideas, about 39
nizations is often about engaging employees at have been implemented by the TSA. The TSA
all levels with diverse sets of skills to generate Idea Factory is an example of one tool that
ideas and see them through to final execution. governments can use out of several options to
How can public sector agencies alter their inter- cultivate innovation discussed in Chapter 2.
nal environment to enhance idea generation?
What tools are available to motivate employees 2. Replicate: Truly novel innovations are rare.
to deliver their best? The U.S. Transportation Rather than reinventing the wheel, it can often
Internal External
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Introduction
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source
11
Ontario has employed an open source strategy as blogs and wikis to co-create content with
with its E-Learning Ontario initiative. It built the users — many government entities are still
an online repository of resources developed unaware of the power of these technologies.
by teachers that can be customized to local
needs and made this cache of information Organizing for innovation
available to teachers and students at no cost.
The open source strategy, still in its infancy in Chapter 7, the concluding chapter, looks at
the public sector, is discussed in Chapter 6. how to structure an organization so as to cul-
Governments have long employed the tivate the discipline of innovation. Many public
first three of these strategies — cultivation sector organizations make sporadic efforts
of ideas in-house, replication of successful to encourage innovation, but few implement
innovations from elsewhere, and partner- the formal changes needed to spark transfor-
ships for innovation with other organiza- mational change. Without altering traditional
tions. These strategies, however, have roles, processes, and organizational structures,
often fallen short of expectations. High innovation initiatives become mired in bureau-
failure rates, slow diffusion, and crisis-driven cracy and fail to deliver fundamental change.
change plague public sector innovation. Creating a culture of sustained innovation re-
As for the network and open source strate- quires creating an organizational structure con-
gies, the public sector is just beginning to tap ducive to generating innovations. Four aspects
these promising new approaches. The external of organizational structure are particularly rele-
influence for innovations surveyed by the NAO vant from an innovation perspective; leaders of
report, for example, were limited to cross-agen- public sector agencies should ask themselves:
cy work and contractors as a source of innova- • Where are our organizational bound-
tions. Though there is growing adoption of aries? Are contractors, suppliers, and
Web 2.0 technology in government — which nonprofits a part of our extended
uses interactive Web-based applications such organization or considered outsiders?
Idea
Selection Conversion Diffusion
generation
18
Create systems Filter good ideas Convert ideas Manage
to generate and by creating an into products, stakeholders and
maintain the flow efficient sorting services and disseminate ideas
of good ideas process practices widely
External partners
The
(contractors,
innovation
nonprofits, other
cycle
governments)
Internal partners
(other government
agencies)
how developments in one area might affect some BHAGs (Big Hairy Audacious Goals).
other areas: these steps in idea generation help For a team or organization that seeks to
ensure that the organization can filter ideas to become good at idea generation, defining
pursue the ones that best fit customers’ needs. a shared goal is important. It helps focus at-
The idea generation process should also tention on what needs to be achieved. The
challenge long-held assumptions, with an eye cultivate strategy plays a primary role here with
toward finding fundamentally new ways of special focus on engaging employees in discus-
doing things. Killing a few sacred cows every sion forums. Technology can be an enabler of
now and then is a great way to generate this process through wikis and blogs. Shared
External partners
(contractors,
nonprofits, other
governments)
Employees Citizens
(public employees)
• Employ skunk works • Create dispute settlement
• Create employee prediction mechanisms
markets • Create feedback mechanisms
• Use tacit knowledge of
employees
• Create selection criteria and
metrics
Internal partners
(other government
agencies)
an impact on seemingly intractable problems. that employees can buy and sell. Projects are
Another novel approach to selecting which evaluated on the basis of management team,
projects move forward was developed by customer satisfaction, and how likely they are
Washington DC Chief Technology Officer (CTO) to finish on time and within budget. Similar to
Vivek Kundra. In 2008 he launched OCTO (Of- well-performing stocks in a portfolio manage-
fice of the CTO) Labs, which takes a portfolio ment company, promising projects get more
management approach to fund worthwhile investment. Projects unlikely to meet their goals
projects and kill projects unlikely to deliver. Each are shut down. Kundra hopes that with this
of the city’s IT projects is treated as a stock approach, the aggregated wisdom of employ-
External partners
(contractors,
nonprofits, other
governments)
Internal partners
(other government
agencies)
A good example of the importance of a progress reports. The new technology reduced
flexible approach is the Florida School Year this time substantially.10 However, the initia-
2000 Initiative, a school-reform program that tive ran into problems early on: the idea was
provided teachers a handheld device to record dependent on emerging Wi-Fi technology that
information on students that could be retrieved had just become affordable but had unique
later for assessment and reporting. The pro- limitations in the context of Florida schools.
gram design offered flexibility and efficiency. Because Florida schools often double up as
For example, teachers can spend up to a week hurricane shelters, their walls are made of high-
getting the records together to prepare student strength concrete, which were impenetrable by
the wireless technology. Instead of locking the Getting better at implementing innova-
contractors and the technology company into tive ideas means understanding better how
a dispute, the project team decided to move the change effort works (see Table 1.1).11
to a wired network. They shifted to handheld Efforts to measure progress need to
devices that had high information storage take into account the completely different
capacity and could dock with the network at way a change program works from every-
the end of the day to transfer information. By day operations. Some suggested measures
making this mid-course correction to overcome of innovation performance include:
technological limitations, the project remained • Listening to the community to get
on budget and was considered successful. their feedback on new ideas
Failure to take into account new informa- • Analyzing the number and depth
tion is not the only problem governments face of pilot projects for new ser-
in implementing innovative ideas. Multiple vice or process development
sign-offs and complex administrative struc- • Monitoring and reporting the num-
tures obscure accountability, create delays, ber of projects meeting objectives.
and make it difficult to recognize and reward These measures of performance ultimately
those leading the innovation effort. This have to flow from the mission of the organiza-
may, in turn, result in the loss of experienced tion, and unless the mission changes to ac-
employees to other organizations where they commodate these measures, innovations in the
may feel better appreciated for their efforts. public sector environment will flounder. If the
External partners
The
(contractors,
innovation
nonprofits, other
cycle
governments)
Employees Citizens
(public employees)
• Manage risks • Manage stakeholders
• Offer awards and recognition • Create network of public
• Exchange employees agencies
• Create communities of practice
• Collaborate to spread innovations
Internal partners
(other government
agencies)
One way to encourage diffusion is to “create a agencies were copying their efforts. This is
buzz” around successful innovations. The Flori- what Ken Miller, the founder of the Change
da Department of Children and Families, which and Innovation Agency, a firm that helps
provides various child and community care organizations radically improve performance,
services, including licensing facilities, slashed has termed “guerilla warfare” for innovation.13
customer wait times by 45 minutes, shrunk Programs with proven track records tend
turnover, and saved $11 million annually. After to meet less resistance than untried ideas.
their efforts earned them several awards, word Therefore, publicizing a program’s success in
spread fast, and soon other state and federal one unit can help to diffuse it to other parts
Innovation is not just about generating good ideas — that’s only the first step. Organizations also
must select the best ideas, implement them, produce results, and then diffuse them.
Idea generation: Clearly defining the problem and seeking the best possible solution is the first The
innovation
step in the innovation process. Ideas may be generated internally; agencies also should examine cycle
and perhaps adopt innovations developed in other organizations. One example is the recent “in-
novation exchange” program between the city of London and New York City. London offers its
expertise in dealing with issues like congestion pricing and climate change while New York City 29
shares its experience in improving access to services through 311 and other technology initiatives.
Selection: Which innovations are worth pursuing? This question is particularly important to public
sector organizations, which have a hard time defending new ideas and face multiple stakehold-
ers who might say no. The World Bank created an innovative process to give good ideas a fair
chance: the Development Marketplace. The Bank set up a “bazaar” in its atrium, with booths
allotted to 121 teams, each with an idea to propose. A panel of senior executives from the World
Bank, private organizations, and the nonprofit sector evaluated the proposals. In a single day, 11
ideas received funding from a total budget of $3 million.
Implementation: Once selected, an idea must be funded, developed, and executed. Incentive
mechanisms such as gainsharing and share-in-savings contracts can help; however, many govern-
ment programs lack predictable end results. Dealing with uncertainties and unexpected events
requires flexibility and willingness to make mid-course corrections. The Florida School Year 2000
Initiative, a school-reform program that provided teachers handheld devices to record student
information, worked because officials modified the technology used by the program after they
encountered unexpected problems. Successful implementation also requires effective leadership
that defines the mission of the organization and builds a coalition for change.
Diffusion: The last stage in the innovation cycle refers to the spread of an innovation through-
out an organization or from one organization to another. This requires gaining support from all
stakeholders, breaking down organizational silos, and overcoming apathy toward innovations.
One way to encourage diffusion is to “create a buzz” around successful innovations. The Florida
Department of Children and Families, which provides various child and community care services,
slashed customer wait times by 45 minutes, reduced turnover, and saved $11 million annually.
After the department’s efforts earned several awards, word spread fast, and soon other state and
federal agencies copied its efforts.
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source
Cultivate
Primary source 33
of innovation:
employees
Drive
employees
Engaged
In April 2007, the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) launched a secure intranet
Web site called the “Idea Factory” that allows employees to submit ideas for improving agency
operations and processes. By the end of January 2009, employees had submitted 7,837 ideas
and 69,712 comments. Of those ideas, about 39 have been implemented by the TSA.
The TSA created the Idea Factory site after an internal survey revealed that TSA employees be-
lieved their voices were not being heard by the agency’s leadership. TSA employees now review
ideas posted on the site, and they vote for the suggestions they think are most worthy of man-
agement attention. The best ideas receive a certificate and a memento from the organization.
Response to the TSA’s Idea Factory has sparked widespread interest in the idea as a meth-
od for breaking through organizational barriers to innovation. The site is an extremely good
example of how to create a positive environment for innovative ideas.
The guiding principle for any initiative to generate innovations is to understand that ulti-
mately you will get only as many ideas as you have the ability to implement. A purely linear view
of the Idea Factory process would suggest that because employees submitted so many good
ideas, they translated into multiple initiatives. However, a systems view would suggest that so
many good ideas were submitted because these ideas were acknowledged and implemented,
creating a positive environment for submitting more ideas.
Researching the Code of Federal Regulations means that when employees perform in ways
and GSA’s internal orders, he found a provision that merit awards, their annual reviews note
buried in the personnel policy that allowed that performance. Cultural change is not likely
cash awards to employees who created sav- to happen if employees who “risk” innova-
ings. He decided that he could share the award tion see no positive impact on their careers.
with his colleagues as an incentive for pushing Some organizations also provide innova-
ahead with the project. “A year later, the deal tive employees with grants they can use
was done and we requested our spiff,” Keogh in any way to promote further innovation,
says. “It was split between five GSA employ- perhaps hiring staff or procuring new tech-
ees and two at the treasury department.”30 nology. In government, this tactic sometimes
Keogh points out that many government takes the form of a productivity bank, a pot
agencies have the same kinds of award and of money that funds good ideas offered by
bonus programs found in the private sector. employees, thus encouraging employees to
Managers do not use them widely, however, suggest new ideas and receive funding.
and employees often have no idea how they
are likely to be measured and rewarded if they Accept failures
make suggestions that improve operations. Innovation is about experimentation. Experi-
Proactive award programs empower em- ments often fail. A can’t-afford-to-fail environ-
ployees to pursue rewards, rather than leaving ment is not very conducive to making ambi-
managers to dispense them as an afterthought tious decisions or investments. It also seldom
for a job well done. Aligning incentives also results in a high-performance organization.
in various ways in the business world. Pioneer- the environmental impact of land improvement
ing companies such as Google and 3M allow projects for other Forest Service units, and
their employees to spend close to 20 percent of they charge fees that cover all their expenses,
their time developing their own business ideas. including overhead costs, salaries, and benefits.
3M made one of its big breakthroughs, Post-it The idea, now known as the Enterprise
notes, thanks to an intrapreneur who wanted Program, wasn’t imposed from above. Instead
something to mark pages in his hymn book. it emerged from both ends of the organization.
But intrapreneuring isn’t confined to the When David Radloff, chief of the Forest Ser-
private sector. When budget cuts in the 1990s vice’s reinvention efforts, challenged employees
threatened administrative functions at the to make the organization more self-supporting,
U.S. Forest Service, the agency created self- the agency’s Pacific Southwest region led the
supporting business units that deliver a wide way. The region’s financial manager, Mike Duf-
range of services to forest managers. Now fey, contacted Pinchot and ultimately created
internal Forest Service “intraprises” handle tasks internal units that now compete for agency
like estimating lumber yields and measuring tasks much like outside businesses would.
The cultivate strategy involves engaging employees at all levels with diverse sets of skills to gener-
ate ideas and see them through to final execution. The strategy enables governments to realize the
following benefits:
Tap into diverse knowledge in the field. Embedded knowledge is born of sheer experience but
how do you capture that knowledge and convert it into practices that not only help organizations
perform better but also deliver more valuable service? Governments can tap into the tacit knowl-
46 edge in the field by utilizing these approaches:
Engage employees at all levels. The R&D Network at the Bureau of Motor Equipment of the
New York City Department of Sanitation allows worksite committees of mechanics to adopt
proposals and implement changes within the scope of their operations, with the agreement of
the facility manager.
Employ prediction markets. Organizations use this kind of independent mechanism to aggre-
gate diverse insights from its employees. Siemens allows employees to bet on projects they
think will finish on time, which helps direct managerial attention to critical projects.
Use collaboration tools. Web 2.0 collaboration tools such as blogs, wikis, tags, and peer-to-
peer networking can facilitate bottom-up innovation by giving front-line employees an oppor-
tunity to float their ideas directly to peers and senior management.
Tap informal markets. The social network analysis tool reveals the most important players in an
agency or communities’ informal networks. It can help increase cooperation and collaboration
through increased understanding of actual processes and workflows.
Drive organizational change. Understand the system to identify levers that create big results and
influence behavior. Governments can encourage innovation and drive organizational change by:
Taking a “systems” view. A systemic view allows an understanding of the interrelationship be-
tween key variables and how changing one variable can affect the entire system.
Aligning incentives. Many governments allow cash awards to employees who create savings.
The key is for managers to use these incentives proactively.
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source
Replicate
Primary source 49
of innovation:
employees, other
public agencies,
jurisdictions,
governments,
private companies
Ex artn
rtn na
te er
s
p
pa xter
rn s
▼
al
E
52
Uncover Adapt
and apply Internal partners to local
what works context
▼
▼
▼
Discover
subtle
lessons
▼
Political.
Get support
Motivation. from unions and Funding.
Persons leading the politicians Ensure that Replicate
replication effort are adequate funds
convinced of its are available at
usefulness each stage
▼ 55
▼
▼
Leadership. Trust.
When led by a When citizens
popular leader, the Adapt to trust government,
▼
▼
▼
Legal. Specialists.
Interest.
Modify laws in Experts will play a
Frequent changes
tune with the role, but understand
without results can create
innovation that replication is
employee antipathy,
about team work
which means that the
changes are only at the
surface without
impacting the “core”
required infrastructure (analysts, office space, illegal guns from the streets wasn’t working.
computers, conference room, and the like). In fact, the program was so successful that
But efforts to replicate CompStat elsewhere there were simply fewer illegal weapons to
haven’t always been successful. A key feature confiscate. This example has a clear message:
of the program is to regularly analyze gains metrics used to evaluate a program continually
and failures. The goal is to track the impact need to be re-examined. The broader implica-
of new programs, single out approaches that tion for replication is that even relatively simple
are working and replace ineffective practices and intuitive ideas like using statistics to deploy
with new tactics. However, CompStat’s metrics resources must be tailored to local needs.
constantly evolve to suit changing condi-
tions, and they must be customized to local Adapt to local context
requirements. In one jurisdiction, the shrinking
number of weapons confiscated by officers Applying a blueprint from elsewhere without
was taken as a sign that a program to remove considering the local situation or stage of
59
Discover subtle lessons practice” (CoPs): self-organizing social groups
formed by people working in the same field to
In the public sector, regional diffusion occurs share experiential knowledge, discuss prob-
when agencies adopt innovations from their lems, create solutions, and build innovations.
sister agencies in neighboring states.44 It is of- Their purpose is to gain the tacit knowledge
ten easier to reach out to neighboring jurisdic- residing in other parts of the organization or in
tions to understand what made the innovation distinct organizations. This network becomes
successful because government employees essential when rapid external change neces-
are more likely to know their counterparts in sitates creation of a learning organization.
the contiguous districts, regions, or states. CoPs are also efficient conduits of explicit
Thus one way to speed diffusion of ideas knowledge as people prefer to ask a colleague
and innovations is to build relationships with rather than go through a manual on the topic,
other government agencies using all avail- cutting the time needed to solve a problem.
able channels of communication. This practice Communities of practice could become
is in line with the idea of diffusion through very effective tools for organizations that are
interlocking networks, such as the diffusion of likely to see a vast store of knowledge walk
“poison pills” (strategies designed to prevent out the door as the baby boomers begin to
takeover bids) in the private sector through retire. Years of experience give practitioners
directors who serve on multiple boards.45 an intuitive grasp of their subject matter, the
A “relationship network” — developed ability to handle exceptions, and the facility to
through communities of practice (both online think through alternatives. This is the kind of
and offline), the efforts of well-connected knowledge that helps them make snap judg-
“policy entrepreneurs,” or less formal channels ments or “thin-slice,” to use the term coined by
such as lunch meetings — can help govern- Malcolm Gladwell in his book Blink: The Power
ments identify good ideas as well as the key of Thinking Without Thinking.46 The problem
people who can help with replication. What with this kind of knowledge is we often cannot
is often quite effective are “communities of tell exactly how we know what we know. Ask
The replicate strategy suggests that governments can build on existing innovations elsewhere in
new contexts. The replicate strategy allows governments to realize the following benefits:
Replicate
Uncover and apply what works. Benchmark innovations others have already implemented. Every
two years the Texas Performance Review searches for innovations that Texas can apply to its own
government to cut costs, increase public value, and improve performance. The program has saved 61
Texas billions of dollars since 1992.
Adapt to local context. Align innovation with the goals and capabilities of the local jurisdiction
and be aware of regional legal, institutional, and ideological hurdles. Before launching innovations,
understand best practices, define performance criteria, develop metrics, and research regulatory
barriers.
Discover subtle lessons. Reach out to neighboring jurisdictions and other government agencies to
understand what made the innovation successful. Communities of practice — self-organizing social
groups formed by people working in the same field — can be catalysts for innovation sharing.
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source
Partner
63
Primary source
of innovation: internal
partners (other public
agencies, jurisdictions,
governments); external
partners (nonprofits,
private companies)
M any of today’s problems are so complex that no single agency can solve
them. Tasks such as reducing poverty, improving health care, or fighting
terrorism simply demand more resources — and more innovative thinking —
than one organization can bring to bear. The need for both new resources and
new thinking drives growing interest in partnering among government agen-
cies, and among government, private industry, universities, and nonprofits.
These relationships let governments test new ideas quickly by import-
ing them from innovative partners. They also help agencies overcome
bureaucratic and financial constraints, allowing them to attack long-
standing problems with novel methods and cutting edge technologies.
For example, the United Nations Foundation and the Vodafone Group Founda-
tion launched a $30 million technology partnership in 2005 to develop mobile
technology for responding to emergencies and collecting health data. Work-
ing with a nonprofit consultancy, the partnership created EpiSurveyor, the first
free, open-source software for collecting health data. EpiSurveyor eliminates
paper forms traditionally used to gather health data. Instead, health research-
ers collect data in the field using handheld computing devices and transfer the
information to desktop computers for processing and analysis. The inexpensive
and user-friendly software makes data collection easy and information analysis
faster. Further, the new process cuts the cost of program assessments, which
Seek new
solutions Partner
▼
65
▼
partnersh
es of ips
Typ
▼
Test new
approaches
Public-private Public-public
▼
Benefit from
▼
cross-border Public-
diffusion
▼ nonprofit
▼
▼
Overcome
internal
constraints
The partner strategy enables governments to work with other agencies, private industries, uni-
versities, and nonprofit organizations to create new solutions. Careful application of the partner
strategy allows governments to realize the following benefits:
74 Seek out new solutions. Partnering offers an opportunity to “buy” innovations from “best-in-
class” providers. One of these is state-of-the-art customer service. Citizens have become accus-
tomed to obtaining services from the private sector that cater to certain personal comforts and
conveniences. The partnership that created the CityLink private tollway in Melbourne, Australia,
offers services, such as installing toll tags, at customers’ doorsteps.
Deploy cutting edge technology. Partnering can also enable governments to make use of
technology not available in-house. By partnering with a private firm, Transport for London
was able to launch a new online system in 2007 that reduced the costs of licensing and
hosting by 80 percent, promoted innovative marketing, and provided flexibility to add new
applications with no downtime. The private firm is responsible for managing the online
system, leaving TfL free to devote its attention to user experience and business processes.
Test new approaches. Even the best ideas need to be tested for viability. Partnering can al-
low governments to raise funds and mitigate risks for testing new approaches. Mayor Michael
Bloomberg used privately funded partnerships with businesses and foundations to test many
cutting edge reforms for improving New York’s underperforming schools. One example is the
Empowerment Schools program, in which schools commit to high levels of student achievement
in exchange for greater local autonomy.
Overcome internal constraints. Three initial constraints often block public agencies from im-
proving their performance: lack of flexibility, difficulties in attracting employees with specialized
skills, and opposition from multiple stakeholders opposed to new ideas. Partnering strategies can
help governments overcome all three.
Surmount resource constraints. Opportunities exist for partnering across multiple levels of
government. Summit County, Ohio, and the city of Akron purchased a single 911 emergency
phone system that saved nearly $150,000 and is expected to lower operating expenses by
40 percent.
Benefit from cross-border diffusion. Government organizations can also benefit from the dif-
fusion of innovations spawned in other jurisdictions by private sector organizations involved in
delivering public services across the globe. Meanwhile, simultaneous adoption of an innovation
across multiple jurisdictions can help diffuse ideas that otherwise may not get adopted, such as
the Multi-State Clean Diesel Initiative that required heavy-duty diesel engine manufacturers to
abide by strict diesel emission control norms.
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source
Network
77
Primary source
of innovation:
external partners
such as nonprofits,
private companies,
and citizens
Network
s
pa xter
E
▼
Predict ideas worth Citizens report a
pursuing ▼ number of problems
External partners, • Prediction markets
citizens and • Aggregation
mechanisms
▼
employees can be
engaged in selecting
ideas
▼ Engage the creativity
Engage citizens and specialized skills of
and outside groups ▼ a range of providers
• Discovery studios
Citizens know what • Social networks
they want but may •Citizen-innovators
▼
not be able to
articulate it clearly
▼
Create a learning
organization
• Mechanisms to
Middle and senior collect reactions
managers should not • Timely access to
▼
▼
Drivers New strategy Challenges Networked model
Network
• Increasing difficulty in • Acquire 50% of • Massive operational Proprietary networks:
creating organic innovations from changes • Technology entrepreneurs:
growth of 4-6 %
• Growing competition
outside
• Identify promising
• Reinventing the culture
to “proudly found
Senior leaders develop the
needs list; define and spell
81
• Stagnant innovation ideas across the globe elsewhere” from “not out the problem; and
success rate • Apply own capabilities invented here” create external connections
(percentage of to create better and • Redefining the R&D • Cocreation with suppliers
products that met cheaper products organization — 7,500
financial objectives) people inside plus 1.5 Open networks:
• Growing interest in million outside with •NineSigma: helps in
forming partnerships permeable boundary connecting with contract
between them partners for solution
• InnoCentive: brokered
solution for narrowly
defined problems
• YourEncore: connecting
with high-performing
retired people with deep
Stro experience
ng le • Yet2.com: brokered
ade
rshi technology transfer —
p co
mm licensed or purchased
itme
nt
signed to measure the efficacy of the broad- to come from people either on the periphery
casting technique using InnoCentive.com’s or outside the original field of inquiry, using
website showed just this. Of the 166 prob- methods that are common in other scientific
lems that could not be solved by well-known disciplines. For instance, solutions to one
R&D-intensive firms internally, one third were problem —identification of a polymer delivery
successfully solved in a limited time (an aver- system — came from an aerospace physicist, a
age of 166 days) by disclosing the problems small agribusiness owner, a transdermal drug
to outside solvers. Solutions are most likely delivery specialist, and an industrial scientist.
85
ing technologies to create a new campaign the collective wisdom. Southern California set
model will have big implications for gover- up a wiki application where citizens, disaster
nance. As an example of how governments relief associations, and private companies
stand to gain by harnessing social networks, could get real time information in case of a
consider the role citizens played in assisting lo- wildfire breakout in their area. The state’s
cal fire departments during Southern Califor- fire agency linked to the Web site of KPBS, a
nia’s wildfires in October 2007 that destroyed radio station in San Diego, which presented
nearly 1500 homes and more than 500,000 live 24/7 coverage of the wildfires using wikis
acres of land.77 Nearly one million people had to coordinate this effort. A fairly new applica-
to evacuate their homes, dubbed “the largest tion, My Map, that was earlier used as a fun
single peacetime movement of Americans since tool to pinpoint the best places to play golf
the Civil War” by NBC Nightly News.78 It took or get a drink, was reinvented by the employ-
19 days to contain the fire. Throughout this pe- ees of KPBS into a virtual map of Southern
riod, disaster management and recovery efforts California with symbols for where to find
required constant information flow on fire pe- shelter, what roads were closed, and what
rimeters, evacuation centers, and road closing. had burned. The map attracted more than 1.2
Citizens organized themselves rapidly through million hits.79 NASA provided detailed satel-
social networking sites to assist the authori- lite images that showed the active fire zones
ties to coordinate the emergency response: and the speed at which the fires spread.
pictures of fires were posted on Flickr; more Social networking and citizen participa-
than 100 social groups sprung up on Facebook tion helped meet a number of challenges.
to support people affected by the fires; and Primary among them, the user-generated
KNBC.com, a digital news channel, received live content helped the coordination of the
streaming video and user-submitted photos. emergency management effort, thus in-
Government agencies did their bit to harness creasing its efficiency. Citizens remained
The network strategy utilizes the innovation assets of a diverse base of organizations and
individuals to discover, develop, and implement ideas within and outside organizational
boundaries. Careful application of the network strategy allows governments to realize the
following benefits:
92 In-source innovations and ideas. Procter & Gamble uses an elaborate system of scouts, sup-
pliers, and open networks such as Yet2.com to identify and adapt promising ideas. This strategy
is based on the notion that for every researcher in P&G there are 200 equally competent people
outside.
Develop solutions to complex problems. The CIA has funded a nonprofit organization, In-Q-
Tel, to find and deliver technological solutions to the agency for its wide variety of needs. In-Q-Tel
provides seed capital to small start-up companies to develop promising new technologies that
meet the CIA’s needs.
Engage citizens and outside groups in policy development and program delivery. Delivering
greater value to citizens requires a deeper understanding of citizen needs. There are several ways
governments can do this:
Establish discovery studios. This is a mechanism to discover the deep-seated, often uncon-
scious needs of customers by mapping their entire experience domain.
Harness social networks. Citizens can be engaged to get the word out about government
services and programs through social networks.
Engage citizen-innovators. Citizens can become an important source of ideas and help to
identify future trends, reduce costs, and test a variety of ideas that may not otherwise be
possible. An example of this is the BBC backstage initiative that allows users to submit a
variety of prototypes.
The network strategy works best when the government needs to:
• Find the “best” solution to a problem
• Keep ideas flowing in
• Aggregate information across a diverse group of people
• Use the information available from users to select the best solution to a problem
• Tap into myriad perspectives
• Understand conscious and unconscious needs of consumers
• Get users to design solutions that best meet their needs
• Create multiple access points to customers
• Take advantage of dispersed knowledge.
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source Open source
95
Primary source
of innovation:
external partners
(nonprofits, private
companies),
citizens
Open source
Open source
Create
model of Lower costs
97
repositories
▼
▼
of ideas innovation
▼
▼
Attract
Enhance
specialist
quality ▼ contribution
Engage the
broader
community to
serve a public
purpose
Wikipedia offers an interesting example of how diffusion is ingrained in the open source
strategy. Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia where all content can be read, edited, copied,
and even sold as long as the authorship rights are passed on to people receiving the content. In
short, all users of the content on Wikipedia must confer freedom to use and reuse the content
on everyone who comes across that content.
One of the guiding principles of the open source strategy is the democratic process. This
again is visible in the way Wikipedia functions: decisions are not imposed from the top but come
from the bottom up. When people contribute content to Wikipedia, there is no guarantee that
it will appear unchanged. The content is verified to the extent possible by the wider community
and edited to ensure that it meets its requirements of verifiability, language, and neutrality.
Any content that is not based on verifiable sources is marked for editing or deletion. At times,
disputes result in “edit wars” or feverish editing of content by separate groups in an attempt to
ensure that their point of view is accepted as the final one. Edit wars go against the established
policy of consensus building and are strongly discouraged.
Edit wars and other conflicts are initially handled through the democratic process. For in-
stance, users may ask for a third opinion on the topic or request informal mediation.
However, there are limits to the extent of democracy in an open source model. A look at Wiki-
pedia’s dispute resolution process makes this point clear.93 Registered users can edit content,
move pages, or start new articles. Above the registered users are those who have permission to
roll back a page to its previous version if there is an unacceptable change. Administrators, who
number around 1,500 and are selected by the Wikipedia community through an established
process, have the right to delete pages, freeze content on a page to be edited only by other
administrators, and block delinquent users from editing a page. Above the administrators are
bureaucrats who have higher privileges including the liberty to promote people to the level of
administrator. Finally, there is an arbitration committee of about a dozen users that acts as the
final touch point for dispute resolution. Any decision made by the arbitration committee is bind-
ing on all parties.
For example, the Peer-to-Patent project cites problems for their nonprofit clients. They creat-
the names of those who have submitted ed links between academia and civil society to
prior art with their profile and photograph, solve problems, such as soil pollution, that af-
the type of submission, and reference to the fect daily life. This effort produced the first “sci-
patent application to which the prior art is ence shop,” sparking a movement that spread
applicable. Others offer cash rewards, or in across countries, creating a global network of
some extraordinary cases, employment to shops that shared knowledge and expertise.
those who help make the final decisions. The movement grew through volunteers and
students. To encourage students to join these
Engage the broader community to groups, many universities today offer academic
serve a public purpose credit for their participation. The European
Commission funds science shop projects ben-
Governments are beginning to realize the efitting local civil society organizations without
power of the largely self-sustaining open source the means to conduct such research. Further,
movement to shape a knowledge society that it promotes activities that encourage network-
meets the needs of citizens. One example is ing among science shops to help spread the
the European Commission’s effort to promote movement across the European Union.
“science shops.” In the early 1970s, a group of Typically, the science shops work with com-
Dutch students got together to solve scientific munity groups facing a pressing problem. Fi-
User community
104
Local Development community
community Citizens
Open source
Specialists companies
Open source project
Government agency
▼
Nonprofits Private
companies
Technology
experts Students
Global Government
community organizations
107
rather than an offshoot of the process. Not re- to change. It tests options on a limited scale to
peating others’ mistakes is possible only when see whether changing some parts would make
data, resources, and knowledge are shared the overall program more effective. Tools such
openly in a democratic environment. To be suc- as wikis and blogs are used to create com-
cessful, the open source culture requires a shift munity groups to discuss options and share
in mindset away from secrecy and suspicion. experiences. Constant feedback is critical for
promoting continuous innovation and flexibility.
Create feedback loops The examples cited here offer only a small
As mentioned earlier, one of the important window into the possibilities for improving
roles of the “development community” is to governance and service delivery by tapping into
provide continuous feedback. Feedback mecha- open source models. The open source strategy
nisms can take a variety of forms. Based on its has been fruitfully employed by governments to
interactions with the user group, the develop- tackle challenges in education, technology, and
ment community provides detailed documenta- patenting. The greatest limit to the application
tion of successes and failures and what needs of this concept will be our finite imaginations.
The open source innovation strategy entails a shift away from knowledge “monopolies” to an
open source model that encourage many people to collaborate voluntarily to develop ideas and
create solutions. This strategy can allow governments to achieve the following benefits:
Build repositories of innovative ideas and tools. Officials with the government of Ontario,
Canada, realized that they had to do something creative to provide a flexible educational plan
that is customized to the learning choices of teenagers to help them develop solid reading,
writing, and math skills. To meet these objectives, they built an online repository of resources
developed by teachers that is available to teachers and students at no cost and can be custom-
ized to local needs.
108
Enhance quality by creating mechanisms for continuous improvement. The more widely
available programs are for public testing and experimentation, the more rapidly problems can be
fixed and improvements made. This was the primary reason NASA released World Wind as an
open source program. The city of Melbourne in the state of Victoria, Australia, used wiki technol-
ogy to place the city plan online as a shared document to be edited by the public.
Gain customized solutions with minimal investment. The District of Columbia launched a
contest called Apps for Democracy that invites open source Web applications to convert real
time data from multiple government agencies into an accessible and useable format. For an
investment of $50,000, the District of Columbia government received 47 applications in 30 days,
worth around $2.7 million in benefits.
Attract specialist contributions. A U.S. Patent & Trademark Office peer reviewed pilot called the
Peer-to-Patent Project permits anyone to submit prior art that could help patent examiners make
faster and better decisions. As of January 2009, 2416 people had signed up to be reviewers and
had cited 301 instances of prior art on 50 applications
Engage the broader community to serve the public. Using an open source model, govern-
ment can attract innovative people to important projects and connect diverse organizations and
individuals in a manner where they augment each other’s capacity to produce an important
public outcome. Governments could also consider funding open source initiatives that are not
self-financing because they do not provide a consistent revenue stream but are doing work that
benefits society at large.
An open source initiative requires creating a physical infrastructure that supports the activities
of the open source community, building a community of collaborators, and at a more abstract lev-
el, creating mechanisms for sharing knowledge and information in a democratic environment.
Create open database and distribution mechanisms. NASA has created a Web site and a
database to allow public volunteers to identify and catalog craters on the surface of Mars from
a freely available satellite image. The “clickworkers” decide where and for how long they choose
to work.
Build a community. Future Melbourne project had a yearlong phase of collecting citizen submis- Open source
sions online and discussion forums organized by the Future Melbourne team that helped raise
awareness and interest. The project also had a reference group of prominent leaders and thinkers
who provided guidance and support, and worked as champions for the initiative. 109
Promote flexibility and open knowledge sharing. There is no need for governments to spend
taxpayer money in duplicative efforts when much of the functionality of a system is common
across agencies, regions, and levels of government. This flexibility will not occur, however, unless
governments share their resources in a systematic way.
Create feedback loops. Constant feedback is critical for promoting continuous innovation and
flexibility. In an open source project, the development community documents successes and fail-
ures and provides feedback to the “core” on what needs to change. It also tests options on a lim-
ited scale to see whether changing some parts would make the overall program more effective.
Drivers
▼
• Plummeting costs of • Growing number of
partnering problems that require
cross-sector response
R&D
7500 Government labs
persons YourEncore
Individuals
Suppliers
Yet2.com
Retired persons
▼
▼
Permeable boundaries
knowledge. CSIRO, a heavily siloed and inter- divisions around desired outputs and then
nally focused organization, needed a window giving control over those outputs to the indi-
to the outside world — both for bringing in vidual divisions. This initiative had four critical
new ideas and disseminating them. Further, elements: shift the focus from input to output,
the organization was under growing pressure centralize all support services, adopt a matrix
to justify its investments and deliver results. To organizational structure, and implement a new
address these requirements, CSIRO launched software solution. These elements were meant
its Flagship program, which created research to act like glue, holding the networks of the
partnerships with industry, government, and organization together in a web-like structure.
other research bodies. These partnerships Catherine Livingstone, who chaired the
are organized around large scale themes, CSIRO board for five years during the trans-
such as energy, light metals, and water. formation, said the changes were neces-
To support the new approach, CSIRO trans- sary in an era of global competition. “CSIRO
formed its organizational structure by aligning comprised many disparate divisions working
Sustaining
Collaborative research a culture of
and development Innovation platforms innovation
117
Technology
strategy board
from the private sector. The pilot projects works help stimulate the flow of knowledge,
focused on Intelligent Transport Systems and information, and people across players (firms,
Services and Network Security. Since then, universities, research organizations, customers,
three more priority areas have been added: suppliers) and sectors. So far, the technology
Low Carbon Vehicles, Assisted Living, and Low board has spawned 22 knowledge transfer
Impact Buildings. The Intelligent Transport networks involving more than 13,000 people.
Systems and Services project has coordinated The second mechanism is the Knowledge
more than £34 million to create a holistic solu- Transfer Partnership, which enables a company
tion to the country’s transportation challenges, to improve its performance by collaborating
particularly issues associated with traffic con- on projects with a knowledge partner, such as
gestion, traffic network management, crime, a university. The technology board bears the
infrastructure, and user travel information. costs of the knowledge partner’s participation.
The board accomplishes diffusion through As government agencies tackle their innova-
two mechanisms. The first is the Knowledge tion challenges, they would do well to take an
Transfer Network, which brings together integrated and systemic approach across the
individuals from academia, business, finance, continuum of five strategies and four stages of
and technology to generate innovations, innovation. Designing a system that encourages
facilitate knowledge exchange, and inform innovation and enables the organization to
the government about issues that advance execute new ideas requires a systemic view of
or stall innovation, such as regulations. Lack the innovation process (figure 7.4). The strate-
of access to information and technology is gies do not operate in silos. Moreover, multiple
considered the greatest obstacle that busi- strategies work in unison, at various stages of
nesses face in embracing innovation. Net- the innovation cycle, to take an idea all the
Sustaining
Cultivate Replicate Partnership Network Open source a culture of
• Skunk works • Review • Buy innovations • Idea scouts • Any source but
innovation
Idea commissions from best-in- mainly users
• Tacit knowledge • Suppliers
generation of employees • Policy class providers
• Proprietary
• Intrapreneurs entrepreneurs • Partners as
“knowledge
networks 119
• New col- brokers” • External
laboration tools networks
(e.g., wikis) • Silo busting
• Citizen
innovators
• Innovation • Criteria for • Create metrics • Prediction • Users
Idea selection markets selection – markets
• Gain funds • Dispute
• Employee simple, voluntary • Studio process settlement
participation, • Define mu-
prediction tual benefits (deep needs mechanisms
markets tied to goals of citizens)
and “ideals” and goals • Centralized
• Skunk works • Citizen control
participation
Idea • Create safe • Adapt to local • Use innovative • New delivery • Build
havens context public private mechanisms infrastructure
Life cycle
Sustaining
▼ a culture of
High innovation
Requisite skills/ competency Dispute settlement
Risk management Relationship management
Systemic innovation (series Clearly defined problems
of complementary Trust 121
innovations) Absorptive capacity
Core activity
Internal capability
Low ▼
Strategy
Internal External
▼
▼
orientation orientation
Open
Cultivate Replicate Partner Network
source
cally will not sustain innovative performance. profit organizations over the public sector. The
They also make it harder to attract and retain major reason why: Excessive bureaucracy.)100
talent. And a talent shortage is something Many of the workplace values most im-
public agencies can ill afford at a time when portant to Generation Y — the generational
vast numbers of baby boomers are expected cohort born between 1979 and 2000 that is
to retire, leaving big holes in government orga- expected to replace the retiring baby boom-
nizations. (In numerous surveys, for example, ers — align quite well with public sector work.
today’s college students interested in making a For example, Gen Y demonstrates a notable
difference say they favor working for non- preference for job mobility within a single or-
Skills profile
Technology Availability calendar
Search function
Enablers Culture, behavior, performance management
Without altering traditional roles, processes, and organizational structures, innovation initiatives can
become mired in bureaucracy and fail to deliver fundamental change. Some changes in organiza- Sustaining
a culture of
tional structures and culture are often necessary to make optimal use of innovation strategies. innovation
Redefine organizational boundaries. Proctor & Gamble and CSIRO developed networked ap-
proaches designed to collect ideas from external sources and develop holistic solutions. Both cases 127
involved forging relationships with multiple organizations and individuals in order to gain a new
window into the world. P&G used proprietary and external networks to identify good ideas. CSIRO
created the Flagship program, a network of organizations tied to broad thematic issues and held
together through a new management structure and technology.
Take an integrated view: Multiple innovation strategies work in unison to take an idea to market.
The Technology Strategy Board in the United Kingdom, for example, uses multiple strategies to
translate knowledge residing in various organizations into innovations. The board consults with
members of the private sector to set priorities and uses a dedicated Web site to solicit funding
ideas. The board then selects projects to be funded, and research partners convert those ideas into
practical solutions. To diffuse these solutions, the board created 22 knowledge transfer networks
involving more than 13,000 people.
Flatten organization. The United Kingdom’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(DEFRA) initiated an integrated approach to performance management. Employees are grouped
into a series of competencies based on skill sets defined by training and experience, and project
groups are created by selecting employees from these groups. Managers coordinate among the
groups and coach employees.
Create a culture of innovation. The British Columbia Public Service is reshaping its organizational
culture to overcome barriers to innovation. The organization defined core organization values in
consultation with employees and issued a brand statement “Where Ideas Work” to encourage
the flow of ideas and attract innovators. Future activities to promote cultural change include
organizing “Innovation Sessions” where employee focus groups study how they can become
more innovative.
Step #1: Define what innovation means in the context of your organiza-
tion. Are you looking to increase your revenues, reduce costs, improve service FAQ
delivery, or all of the above? Without a benchmark to validate their ideas, em-
ployees will likely find it difficult to suggest innovative ideas, and when they do,
they will not know how ideas will be evaluated. It will also be difficult to secure 131
innovations from external sources. This is why organizations such as Tesco have
clearly defined what they mean by innovation. An idea has to meet three criteria
to be considered innovative: better for customers, simpler for staff, and less
expensive for Tesco (page 35).
Step #2: Help employees create a business case for their ideas. Frontline em-
ployees, many having spent a greater part of their working life performing routine
jobs in an insulated environment, might not have the skills and acumen required
to prepare and present a business case. This was the greatest challenge facing the
U.S. Forest Service when it launched the Enterprise Program to promote intrapre-
neurs (page 45). The In-house R&D Network at the Bureau of Motor Equipment
of the New York City Department of Sanitation overcame this by enlisting bureau
analysts to help develop the business case for each project (page 35).
Step #3: Decide who takes responsibility for implementing ideas. Some
ideas can be left to employees to implement. For example, the In-House R&D
Network allows worksite committees of mechanics to adopt proposals and
implement changes within the scope of their operations (page 35).
Step #5: Develop the skills and competencies to innovate. Top leadership
should pay attention to developing the requisite competencies in frontline em-
ployees. To make partnering a “way of life,” the U.S. Department of the Interior
sends employees to work in locations that excel at collaboration (page 69).
The fear of failure and wariness of funding untested approaches pose signifi-
cant challenges for innovation. Political realities drive this risk aversion — failures
make headlines while successes are spread thinly, over millions of constituents.
The fact that many innovations don’t bear fruit within the political election cycle
doesn’t make things any easier.
Innovation is about experimentation. Experiments often fail. A can’t-afford-
to-fail environment is not very conducive to making ambitious decisions or
investments. Governments need to provide incentives for risk taking and create
mechanisms for calculating risk, so that the fear of failure does not trump the
desire to create new initiatives.
Today, many governments suffer from big ticket failures with projects that run
Organizations need to create time for employees to reflect on what they are
doing and why, and to take up projects that add more value. Otherwise, innova-
tion will remain a top-down management exercise. Pioneering companies such
as Google and 3M allow their employees to spend close to 20 percent of their
time developing their own business ideas (page 44).
Another option is to create safe havens — separate units kept close to main-
stream activities but away from line organizations — to permit low-risk experi-
mentation. Skunk works, a type of safe haven, are composed of small groups
of highly talented and motivated people who are freed from bureaucracy, paper
work, and most routine administrative responsibilities (page 43). The Technol-
ogy Strategy Board in the United Kingdom is a good example of a skunk work
to promote innovation (page 117–118). The U.S. Department of Homeland
Security’s Science & Technology Directorate has created a special center to work
with outside partners on innovation.
#1. Create an innovation culture. The beliefs, behaviors, and assumptions that FAQ
have accumulated over time together form the culture of an organization. These
are transmitted as much through formal means (rules and regulations) as through
informal means (norms, guidelines, and casual conversation). If you create new 135
rules but make no effort to change the informal structures, employees will likely
not change their behavior (page 124). The British Columbia Public Service has
tried to instill a culture of innovation throughout the organization using ev-
erything from organizing “Innovation Sessions” where employee focus groups
examine what they need to become more innovative, to defining the new brand
statement for the organization as being “Where Ideas Work” (page125).
#2: Smash the silos. Many public sector organizations are looking at creating
flexible performance management systems through tools such as “surplus pools,”
or placing employees in common pools (instead of remaining stuck in divisional
silos) between projects from where they can be allocated to other projects.
#3: Follow through on the execution of the innovation. Leaders also need to
demonstrate their support to employee initiatives. This means taking a systems
view of the innovation process; merely focusing on idea generation without an
efficient process to select and implement ideas will impede the innovation pro-
cess. TSA’s idea factory provides a good example of expecting innovation (page
40).
David Osborne and Peter Plastrik, The Reinventor’s Fieldbook: Tools for Trans-
forming Your Government (Jossey-Bass, 2000).
David Osborne and Peter Plastrik, Banishing Bureaucracy: The Five Strategies for
Reinventing Government (Basic Books, 1997).
John Kao, Innovation Nation: How America Is Losing Its Innovation Edge, Why It
Matters, and What We Can Do to Get It Back (Free Press, 2007).
Business Innovation:
Tom Kelley, The Ten Faces of Innovation (Broadway Books, 2005); and The Art
of Innovation: Lessons in Creativity from IDEO, America’s Leading Design Firm
(Broadway Books, 2001).
Gary Hamel, Leading the Revolution (Harvard Business School Press, 2002).
John Hagel III and John Seely Brown, The Only Sustainable Edge: Why Business
Strategy Depends on Productive Friction and Dynamic Specialization (Harvard
138 Business School Press, 2005).
Idea Generation
Chip Heath and Dan Heath, Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others
Die (Random House, 2007).
Ilkka Tuomi, Networks of Innovation: Change and Meaning in the Age of the
Internet, (Oxford University Press, 2006).
Satish Nambisan, The Global Brain: Your Roadmap for Innovating Faster &
Smarter in a Networked World (Wharton School Publishing, 2007).
Stephen Weber, The Success of Open Source (Harvard University Press, 2005).
Henry Chesbrough, Open Innovation: The New Imperative for Creating and Good
Sources on
Profiting from Technology (Harvard Business School Press, 2003); Open Busi- Innovation
ness Models: How to Thrive in the New Innovation Landscape (Harvard Business
School Press, 2006); and Open Innovation: Researching a New Paradigm (Oxford
University Press, 2006). 139
Georg von Krogh, Kazuo Ichijo, and Ikujiro Nonaka, Enabling Knowledge Cre-
ation: How to Unlock the Mystery of Tacit Knowledge and Release the Power of
Innovation (Oxford University Press, 2000).
Publications:
Governing (www.governing.com)
Government Executive (www.govexec.com)
Canadian Government Executive (http://www.networkedgovernment.ca/)
Harvard Business Review (http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu/)
Sloan Management Review (http://sloanreview.mit.edu/)
Organizations:
Web sites:
Global
Greg Pellegrino Bill Eggers
Global Managing Director Deloitte Research Director
United States United States
+1 617 437 2776 +1 202 378 5292
gpellegrino@deloitte.com weggers@deloitte.com
This book hits the sweet spot between concept and practice. Nearly
all public sector organizations are now in the innovation business—
particularly in these times of disruption. Public sector leaders
therefore must become more expert at the practice of innovation as
well as how to address the need to constantly reinvent their value
proposition. By presenting a sophisticated and practical approach to
innovation as a learnable, objective set of concepts and methods, The
Public Innovator’s Playbook is an invaluable resource for public sector
stakeholders worldwide. – John Kao, author of Innovation Nation
Packed with dozens of examples and case studies from around the world, this groundbreak-
ing handbook shows how government organizations can become “serial innovators” — how
the public sector can develop and sustain a culture of innovation.
Becoming a serial innovator requires a new organization and governance model that taps
all the sources of innovation available to governments — employees, citizens, businesses, and
nonprofits. The book describes five strategies governments can use to tap all these sources,
ranging from how to cultivate innovation within an organization to how to use the outward-
focused network and open source models to in-source great innovations from elsewhere.
To excel at innovation, governments must also manage innovation as a discipline. Innova-
tion is a discipline, just like strategy, planning, or budgeting. Like these disciplines, sustained
innovation requires a methodical view of the innovation process, from idea generation through
selection, implementation, and diffusion. This entails moving beyond the “idea equals innova-
tion” model to embrace the process of converting best ideas into practice.
Proper execution of innovation will also require shifting from ownership to collaboration;
from invention to adaptation; and from a culture of acquiescence to a culture of performance.
This transition will involve rethinking organizational boundaries by creating more networked
and less siloed organizations.
When governments can do all of this successfully, the day may come when “innovative
government” is no longer widely held to be an oxymoron.