1) Innovation is the introduction of a new idea, product or process into the marketplace. It involves invention plus commercialization.
2) Organizations must innovate on a continuing basis to survive in a rapidly changing economy. The goals of innovation include improving quality, creating new markets, and reducing costs and environmental damage.
3) Sources of innovation include organizational structure, management tenure, slack resources, and interunit communications. Types of innovation include product/process, open/closed, incremental/radical, and modular/architectural innovations.
2. WHAT IS AN INNOVATION?
It is an idea, practice or object that is perceived as new by
an individual or other unit of adoption.
It is a use of new knowledge to offer a new product or
service that customers want. Thus, it is
Invention + Commercialization.
“Innovation is the search for and the
discovery, developed, improvement, adoption and
commercialization of new processes, new products and
new organization structures and procedures.”
4. CHARACTERISTICS OF INNOVATION
There is an object or target which is being changed.
It can be a product, a process, an individual’s
lifestyle, an organization's strategy, a society culture.
Innovation vary in extent or magnitude i.e. degree to
which one deviates from the past.
It is closely related to problem solving since generation
& implementation of ideas for change never transpire
without difficulty.
A final characteristic is the impact of the change, the
significance or range of its effects.
5. Difference between Innovation & Invention
Invention
Innovation
1. It’s creation of new product, service
or process.
1.
2. May not be commercialized
2. Results into commercialization
3. It can be autonomous or induced
3. Usually induced
4. Can be for economic or noneconomic motive
4. Economic motive
5. Usually restricted to R&D centre
5.Spread across the organization
6. May bring few changes in
organization
6. Brings organizational change
7. Precedes innovation
7.Succeeds invention
It is the introduction of new product,
service or process into the
marketplace.
6. WHY INNOVATE ???
TURBULENT AND
RAPIDLY CHANGING
ECONOMY
ORGANIZATION
PREPARE
THEMSELVES TO
INNOVATE ON A
CONTINUING BASIS
OTHERWISE THEIR
SURVIVAL CHANCES
ARE SERIOUSLY
THREATENED
7. GOALS OF INNOVATION
Improving quality
Creation of new markets
Extension of the product range
Reducing labor cost
Improving production process
Reducing materials
Reducing environmental damage
Replacement of products/services
Reducing energy consumption
Conformance to regulations
8. SOURCES OF INNOVATION
Organizational Structure.
-
Organic structures positively influence innovation. As there is lower
vertical differentiation, formalization, centralization. Organic
organizations facilitate the flexibility, adaptation & cross-fertilization.
Long tenure in Management
- Managerial tenure apparently provides legitimacy & knowledge of how
to accomplish a task and obtain desired outcomes.
Slack Resources
- Having an abundance of resources allows an organization to afford to
purchase innovations, bear the cost of instituting innovations & absorb
failures.
Interunit Communications
- Innovative organizations are high users of committees, task forces,
cross-functional teams that facilitate interaction across departmental
lines.
9. TYPES OF INNOVATION
Product & Process Innovation
Open & Closed Innovation
Incremental & Radical Innovation
Modular and Architectural Innovation
11. Open & Closed Innovation
PROJECT
START
Concept
Development
CONCEPT
FROZEN
MARKET
INTRODUCTION
Implementation
Closed Model For Innovation
PROJECT
START
CONCEPT
FROZEN
MARKET
INTRODUCTION
Concept
Development
Implementation
Open Model For Innovation
15. INNOVATION PROCESS
Recognizing or scanning the environment.
Aligning the overall business strategy & proposed
innovation.
Acquiring technology from outside.
Generating technology in-house.
Exploring & selecting the most suitable response to the
environment.
Executing & implementing innovation.
Learning lessons for improvement.
Developing the organization.
16. INNOVATION OCCURS AT
THREE LEVELS
NATIONAL LEVEL
GOVT. POLICIES &
SUPPORT
ENTERPRISE
LEVEL
ENTERPRISE
POLICIES,
SUPPORT &
INITIATIVES
INDIVIDUAL LEVEL
INDIVIDUAL &
GROUP
INNOVATION
ACTIVITIES
18. INNOVATION MANAGEMENT
Innovation management is all about
- learning to find the most appropriate solution
- to the problem of consistently managing
aforestated process
- doing so in the ways best suited to the particular
circumstances in which the organization finds
itself.
It is the search of effective routines.
It is about managing the learning process to deal
with the challenge of the innovation process.
19. Innovation Management
Management of Innovation comprises three
things:
- linking of engineering,
- science &
- management disciplines
to plan, develop & implement technological
capabilities to shape & accomplish the strategic
& operational objectives of an organization.
20. Need/Objectives of Innovation Management
To reap in the economic benefits of new technological
inventions by commercializing them on time
To integrate technology into overall strategic objective of
the organization.
To get into and out of the technologies faster and more
efficiently.
To accomplish technology transfer.
To reduce new product development time.
To manage large ,complex & interdisciplinary projects
and systems.
21. Organizational Process for Innovation
Management
Market
Learning
Setting
Unreasonable
Expectations
& Stretching
the Business
Definition
Effectively
Building
Business
Models
Listening
to New
Voices
Creating a
Cause &
not a
business
Designing
an open
market for
:Ideas, Capit
al, Talent
Building
Partnership
and
Alliances
Lowering the
risks of
experimentation
Paying the
Innovators
Well
22. VALUE INNOVATION(VI)
One of the most prominent programmatic approaches to
innovation currently in use.
It is different from building layers of competitive
advantages & does not means segmenting market &
accommodating customer needs.
It’s main focus is on offering those products & services
which creates a superior buyer value in existing markets &
enables a quantum leap for the firm to create new
markets.
Value Innovation also differs from technology innovation.
New technology developed does not becomes a value
innovation unless it is cheap enough for MASS BUYERS.
23. Three Basic
Building Blocks
of Strategy
Competition
Customers
Corporate
Capabilities
Conventional
Value Innovation
Focus
Process
Outperforming the
Competition
Retaining & better
satisfying existing
customers
Leveraging & extending
the current capabilities
of with other companies
Seeking Radically Superior
value to capture the entire
mass market
Targeting the mass of buyers by
following non-customers closely
& willingly losing some
existing customers
Willing to combine
a company
capabilities
24. CHALLENGES FACED WHILE
MANAGING INNOVATION
1. Why Change?
- Only innovation matters.
2. What to Change?
- Ranging from changes in product & service to the
ways(i.e. process innovation).
3. Understanding Innovation.
- Understanding common problems associated with partial
views of innovation.
4. Building an Innovation Culture.
- Managing Innovation is all about creating firm specific
routines(i.e. repeated, reinforced patterns of behavior)
which define its particular approach to the problem.
25. CONTD……….
5. Continuous Learning
- Firms constantly needs to develop their routines to
deal with the environmental challenges.
6. High Involvement Innovation
- Higher level of participations in innovation represents
a competitive advantage.
7. Managing Connections
- In current scenario business organizations are required
to operate in relationship with others rather than in
splendid isolation.
26. BARRIERS TO INNOVATION
External Barriers
-
Market-Related Barrier
Government & its Policies
Others (Technical, Societal, & Inter
Organizational Barriers)
Internal Barriers
- People Related
- Structural
- Strategy Related
27. LEARNING TO MANAGE INNOVATION
HOW TO OVERCOME THESE BARRIERS
SHARED
VISION,
LEADERSHIP &
THE WILL TO
INNOVATE.
APPROPRIATE
CULTURE
• Clearly articulated &
shared sense of purpose
• Stretching strategic intent
• Top management
commitment.
• Encouraging creativity
• Enabling learning &
interaction
• Balancing between ‘organic
& mechanistic’
29. EXTENSIVE
COMMUNICATION
CREATIVE CLIMATE
LEARNING
ORGANISATION
• Within & between the
organization and
outside
• Positive approach to
creative ideas,
supported by relevant
motivation systems
• High level of
involvement within &
outside the firm in
proactive
experimentation
• Knowledge capture &
dissemination
30. CONCLUSION
Enterprises should emphasize
Planning &
Controlling
Systems
With high
degree of
Flexibility
Respect for
Individual
Initiative
And
Personal
Growth
Tolerance for
mistakes
And
Allowing
Room for
Failure