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Article
You Can't Do that
By
Rod Travers
Executive Vice President
This year marks the 30th anniversary
of Post-it®
Notes. Spencer Silver, co-inventor of the Post-it®,
is credited with saying, “If I had thought about it, I wouldn’t have
done the experiment. The literature was full of examples that said
you can’t do this.”
Innovation
sometimes happens purposefully, and other times, it happens by
chance.
Inspiration happens far more often, but translating
inspiration into innovation is the tough part. Industry-leading
companies know this, and they have a corresponding common trait:
they aren’t willing to rest on success. They encourage and support
innovation. They push it.
Innovation is
not just a fluffy penchant for creativity. It is truly a competency
composed of many elements. These include leadership, culture,
competition, communication, analysis, implementation, and reward.
For product companies, innovation tends to be a core competency
because of the nature of the market. Better, faster, tastier, more
convenient—those
qualities translate to competitive differentiation and customer
demand. Financial services companies tend not to have innovation as
a core competency (feel free to disagree). Yet now more than ever,
that’s exactly what these companies need.
Here are some
elements of the Nolan process we use when helping clients tackle
innovation:
The Nolan
process uses these elements and others, and each has important
details behind it. One important detail is allowing employees to
temporarily set aside their daily responsibilities and turn their
attention to the business of improvement. Other critical details
include establishing a resolute commitment to change and being able
to demonstrate the positive impacts to a range of constituents, from
board members to front-line workers.
You might be
tempted to think that all the good ideas have been thought of. A
simple scan of the industry will dispel that thinking—great
ideas emerge every day and, when implemented properly, they can make
a material difference in a company’s performance and market
perception. Which competitor has scooped you most recently? When was
the last time your company rolled out an innovation, whether
internally or externally? Are you playing catch-up?
Examples also
abound outside the industry, like the Post-it®
Note. My personal favorite right now (perhaps this reveals too much
about my diet) is the packaging of Oreo®
and Chips Ahoy!®
How could anyone improve on the simple nature of cookie packaging?
Nabisco has done just that with an ingenious package that looks just
like its predecessor, but is much more convenient to use. Better,
faster, more convenient.
You
can do that. |
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