|
Report 103
Your newsletter on applied creativity, imagination, ideas and innovation in
business – delivered to your e-mail box on the first and third Tuesday
of every month.
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Issue 160
Hello and welcome to another issue of Report 103, your fortnightly newsletter
on creativity, imagination, ideas and innovation in business.
As always, if you have news about creativity, imagination, ideas, or innovation
please feel free to forward it to me for potential inclusion in Report103. Your
comments and feedback are also always welcome.
Information on unsubscribing, archives, reprinting articles, etc can be found
at the end of this newsletter.
PREDICTION MARKETS AND INNOVATION
Prediction markets are an intriguing and, when used correctly, surprisingly
accurate tool for predicting future events. Indeed, a handful of companies have
had great success with prediction markets. However, a small number of firms
are now trying to incorporate prediction markets in the innovation process in
the wrong way and the result will most likely to be to accomplish nothing highly
inefficiently!
A prediction market is essentially an on-line market in which people can buy
and sell shares in future events, rather like the futures market. Several famous
public prediction markets include The Hollywood Stock Exchange which allows
people to buy and sell prediction shares in films, actors, and directors. It
has been surprisingly accurate at determining income returns on films and famously
predicted 32 of 39 of the main Oscar awards in 2006. The University of Iowa's
Iowa Electronic Market has been remarkably good at guessing election outcomes
in the USA.
Corporate Examples
In addition, a small but growing number of companies have been experimenting
with internal prediction markets. Two of these include Google and Best Buy,
a US based chain of discount electronics shops.
Both organisations have found prediction markets to be an effective means of
predicting measurable outcomes. Bo Cowgill, who has been running Google's prediction
market for two years, claims that prediction markets have been very useful with
such questions as “How many people will use Gmail in the next three months?”
or whether or not project deadlines will be met. He has also seen success with
predictions regarding events in the market place.
Jeff Severts, Vice President of Geek Squads which is a services arm of Best
Buy, says that an early experiment in which 350 people were invited to use prediction
markets to predict holiday sales resulted in a prediction that was within an
amazing 0.1 percent of actual sales!
Why It Works
It seems that prediction markets tap into hidden knowledge within a population,
such as employees of a firm. Moreover, by allowing employees to buy and sell
shares, you allow them to act anonymously on information that they might be
reluctant to share directly. For instance, a salesperson who is interacting
with customers may realise that a certain new product will be harder to sell
than a the existing, familiar product it is replacing. However, she may be reluctant
to voice that opinion for fear of offending her manager or the product development
people who are so enthusiastic about the upcoming product launch. Hence, this
sales person, and others, will expect poor sales and buy their shares accordingly.
Likewise, a team responsible for opening a new branch outlet for a retail chain
my realise that there is now way the shop will open on schedule, but be reluctant
to bring such bad news to managers, particularly if they fear taking part of
the blame for the delay. On the other hand, in a prediction market, they will
buy shares in a delayed opening of the new shop.
However, while employees know a lot about their own companies, Severts notes
that “we’ve particularly noted a bias toward underestimating the
ability of competitors or to think you know more about them than you do”.
Also, Cowgill noted that the higher a person sits in management, the less profitably
that person's trades are likely to be. That would suggest, as many suspect,
that employees working on production lines, interacting with customers and,
perhaps even being customers, have a more accurate vision of the company's short
term future than does top management – at least en masse.
Where It Does Not Work
Thus far, prediction markets have been shown successful at predicting measurable
results in the near term future. They have not shown themselves successful at
“forecasting genuinely discontinuous innovations or leaps” according
to James Surowiecki, a staff writer at the New Yorker magazine and the author
of the influential book The Wisdom of Crowds – the book which introduced
prediction markets to the world. To be fair, he points out that there simply
has not been sufficient research in the topic upon which to demonstrate effectiveness
one way or another.
Attempts to tie a prediction market to a suggestion scheme, which I have seen
on a couple of occasions, are also potentially dangerous. Consider a suggestion
scheme that allows any user to buy or sell shares in any submitted idea immediately.
The theory is, presumably, that people will invest in ideas they believe will
be the most profitable implementations. However, in any firm, management is
unlikely to invest in implementing all ideas and users of the system will know
that. Therefore, in fact, they will invest in the ideas they believe management
is most likely to implement – rather than ideas with the most value potential.
For example, if management is known to be highly risk adverse, then employees
will not invest in the most innovative ideas, because those ideas will also
be the most risky and hence are not likely to be implemented by management.
Likewise, if a senior manager is known to like a particular kind of idea, that
kind of idea will always appeal to employee investors, not because they believe
in the ideas actual market potential, but because they believe it is likely
to be implemented by the manager in question irrespective of its market potential
or lack thereof!
Moreover, prediction markets appear to work best when managed by a knowledgeable
manager who can frame offers appropriately. For instance, rather than an abstract,
“do you think this product will succeed in the marketplace?” which
does not provide information about what constitutes success, a manager would
probably do better to ask a question with a more measurable outcome, such as
“what income do you predict for this product in its first year?”
This information could be balanced against the cost of making and marketing
the product in order to get a viable calculation of profitability – assuming
prediction markets are accurate at such a level of abstraction: calculating
the income generated by a product that does not yet exist.
Where Prediction Markets Are Likely to Succeed in Innovation
While prediction markets clearly offer potential to the overall innovation
process (see Defining Corporate Innovation in the 6 October issue of Report
103: http://www.jpb.com/report103/archive.php?issue_no=20091006),
evidence suggests that they would be most effective as a separate element of
the overall innovation process, rather than an automatic action applied to every
idea submitted to a suggestion web site, for example.
Information gleaned via prediction markets might more effectively form the
basis of an ideas campaign (ie: a process that begins with an innovation challenge
based on a business problem; is followed by collaborative idea submission and
is concluded with an evaluation process that leads to the selection of ideas
deemed most likely to become profitable innovations). For example, if via prediction
markets, employees forecast that sales of a product will decline in the upcoming
year, you can begin a process of determining what information has formed the
basis of this prediction and then run ideas campaigns designed to solve the
problem and make the product in question more attractive.
Likewise, if an ideas campaign delivers a number of good ideas which together
might be implemented to solve the problem, prediction markets might be used
to forecasting the financial return the ideas might deliver; the likelihood
the ideas will be implemented to schedule or other issues related to the implementation
of the ideas in question. Nevertheless, you should bear in mind that prediction
markets are unproven in forecasting results on highly innovative ideas such
as breakthrough innovations. But why not add to the knowledge base by experimenting
and sharing your results?
References
1. “Prediction Market”; Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prediction_market
2. “Iowa Electronic Markets”; Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iowa_Electronic_Markets
3. Renée Dye (April 2008); “The promise of prediction markets:
A roundtable”; McKinsey Quarterly https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com:443/ghost.aspx?ID=/the_promise_of_prediction_markets_2114
BACK TO INNOVATION BASICS
If you are a regular reader of Report103, you will know that we are writing
a serious of articles on the basic terminology and processes associated with
innovation. Following an informal survey some weeks ago, we have found that
there is a lack of clarity with respect to the basic terms used in innovation
– there is even disagreement on the definition of the very word itself!
Hence, I've made the rather audacious move to run in Report 103 a series of
articles covering basic terms and processes associated with innovation. If you
missed the introduction to this series of articles or would like to read it
again, you can do so at http://www.jpb.com/creative/innovation_basics.php
And if you disagree with what I've written, let me know!
OPEN INNOVATION
The term “open innovation” was popularised by Henry Chesbrough
in his book Open Innovation: The New Imperative for Creating and Profiting from
Technology. He wrote “Open innovation is a paradigm that assumes that
firms can and should use external ideas as well as internal ideas, and internal
and external paths to market, as the firms look to advance their technology”
Bearing in mind that the definition of “innovation” is “the
implementation of creative ideas in order generate value, usually through reduced
operational costs, increased income or both” (http://www.jpb.com/report103/archive.php?issue_no=20091006),
a more accurate term for “open innovation would be:“open idea generation”.
However, the term “open innovation” is in widespread use and there
is no way we are going to change that. So we will have to stick with it, as
semantically unsettling as it may be!
Wisdom of Crowds
The theory behind open innovation is that the sphere of knowledge and experience
within the organisation is necessarily limited. Worse, it may be further limited
by corporate practices and processes. As people become used to working in certain
ways and thinking in certain ways at work, they find it increasingly difficult
to break out of these moulds and adopt new ways of doing things.
By tapping into external sources, you expand your knowledge base, bring in
new ways of thinking and new ways of doing things. It is widely known that diverse
teams are more creative than teams in which all people come from similar backgrounds.
Clearly, then, adding further diversity to internal teams can only improve the
creativity – and hence the innovation potential of that team and hence
the organisation.
Some people have taken this notion one step further and claim that the more
people involved in generating ideas, the greater the diversity and level of
creativity. This, however, is unproven empirically as far as I know. Moreover,
bringing huge crowds into an innovation process will have two negative effects
that I have seen in practice:
-
The efficiency of any idea collection system is reduced as more people
submit more ideas, particularly if the system is a suggestion scheme (see
below). Thus managing ideas becomes burdensome. Voting on ideas, incidentally,
is not an effective means for evaluating whether or not ideas meet your
company's business criteria. Hence ideas need to be reviewed by an internal
team before they can be implemented and this eats into resources if there
are thousands of dissimilar ideas to work through.
-
Elements of mob behaviour can sometimes be seen. This is shown by people
backing certain popular participants of an suggestion scheme, complaining
that ideas are not being processed and submitting large numbers of highly
similar ideas because this is what the crowd is doing. All of these actions
add little value or diversity, but create substantial demands on resources.
Needless-to-say, neither of the above effects is conducive to creativity and
eventual innovation. The rule to bear in mind is that diversity is beneficial
to creativity, massive crowds are not.
Old Hat
In fact, open innovation, as such, is not terribly new. Even when I was a child
in the 60s and 70s, many hotels and restaurants had suggestion boxes inviting
ideas from customers. Any research scientist in industry will tell you that
they have been doing open innovation for years, collaborating, officially and
unofficially, with scientists in other industries as well as in universities
and research institutes. Indeed, this is a key part of why scientists keep up
with journals and attend conferences: to exchange ideas with their associates.
Likewise, the Japanese motor industry in particular has a long history of working
closely with suppliers through the entire innovation process – and not
just idea generation. Toyota's famous “just in time” inventory strategy
would never have worked if business partners were not intimately involved.
Nevertheless, widespread use of the Internet has made open innovation more
popular and more public.
Four Approaches
There are four popular approaches to open innovation: public suggestion schemes,
innovation competitions; outsourcing and publicly funded projects. Two of these
approaches are effective. One is not. One can be.
Open Suggestion Schemes
An open suggestion scheme is the application of so-called web 2.0 technologies
to those suggestion boxes I used to see in hotels 30 or 40 years ago. Rather
than put my idea in a box and wonder whether or not anyone would act on it,
I can now put my idea on a public idea sharing web site and wonder whether or
not anyone will act on it.
Of course, on the public web, other members of the public can vote on my idea
and add comments – something that never happened in the old suggestion
boxes. But absurdly low implementation rates and experience of suggestion schemes
inside large companies suggests that my idea still stands a very low chance
of ever being implemented.
This is important to bear in mind if you are considering an open suggestion
scheme for your firm. In my experience of firms setting up internal suggestion
schemes using web based tools, the schemes inevitably fail after 12-18 months
for essentially the same reason: a lot of dissimilar ideas are submitted, processing
all of these ideas is highly resource consuming and because suggestion schemes
do not align idea generation with strategy or any relevant business needs, there
is a very high rejection rate.
If suggestion schemes fail so frequently in closed innovation initiatives,
there is no reason to believe they will fare any better when the public is invited
to use them, thus increasing levels of usage substantially, without making the
back-end any more efficient!
For more information on why suggestion schemes do not work, review the back
issues of Report 103 at http://www.jpb.com/report103/archives.php – I
have written several articles on this issue.
Idea Competitions
Innocentive popularised the notion of a web site with competitions based on
very precise innovation challenges, typically focusing on technical problems,
such as “PdCl2 Recovery from Chitosan Resin. An economical method to recover
catalyst grade PdCl2 or equivalent from palladium bound chitosan is required.”
And a reward is offered for solutions to the problem. In this example, the reward
is US$15,000.
Idea competitions are effective because it allows a firm to broadcast a very
specific business need and allows experts, who have the wherewithal to solve
the problem innovatively, to do so. Suggestions can easily be evaluated according
to relevant criteria and the most suitable ideas selected and implemented. Meanwhile,
irrelevant ideas are not submitted.
There are now a handful of different firms offering managed idea competitions
– a demonstration of the effectiveness of this approach. Indeed, even
our idea management software allows clients to create competitions.
Outsourcing
Because publicising specific business needs in an open forum like an idea competition
might provide too much information to competitors or simply because the firms
in question are uncomfortable using a public forum for open innovation, many
companies outsource elements of innovation to trusted third parties, such as
small firms specialising in developing specialised innovative technologies.
In these cases, the outsourced firms are not merely generating ideas, they
are going much further, typically providing comprehensive concepts often complete
with business plans, prototypes and more.
The advantage to such an arrangement is that it facilitates a higher level
of sharing of information between the two firms, intellectual property rights
can be clarified from the beginning and the company seeking outside innovation
can be assured of confidentiality. The downside, is that the group looking into
the problem is necessarily restricted and thus there may not be the breadth
of knowledge, experience and creativity that would be available in a more public
forum.
Publicly Funded Projects
A lesser known, but well established, means for open innovation is publicly
funded projects. The European Commission has been funding research and development
projects for more than 50 years and since 1984 has been launching regular Framework
Programmes which, to simplify greatly, are legal documents that precede periodic
Calls for Proposals. In a Call for Proposals, a consortium of organisations
may submit an innovative proposal that responds to one of the action lines.
If successful, the consortium receives funding (typically 50%) to implement
the project.
Normally, a project must consist of at least two, and usually several, organisations
from different member states. Partner companies collaborate to develop the project
and provide deliverables along the way. Results must be publicised and certain
kinds of projects are expected to develop commercialised products or services.
Having spent some time with EU projects, I know the system is greatly flawed
in many respects that are mostly to do with bureaucracy and legal processes.
Nevertheless, some very good work comes out of Framework projects and billions
of Euro are given away to companies for carrying out their innovative research
and development under the programme.
Likewise, other governments offer grants which encourage innovative collaboration
to develop research and development projects. And many non-profits, such as
the Gates Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation, offer grants to collaborative
teams comprising more than one organisation.
Low-Key Open Innovation
In addition to the above more public and structured approaches to open innovation,
many companies also involve outsiders in their regular innovation process. Many
of our clients invite outside business partners into the idea management application
we provide (see advert below!) and report favourable results. Indeed, outside
partners are often more active in the idea management application than are employees,
presumably because they wish to demonstrate their value to the company and ensure
their contracts are renewed.
Intellectual Property
In short, open innovation is really very much like closed innovation, except
that outsiders are invited to participate. However, there is one very big difference,
in a closed idea generation environment involving only employees and possibly
contracted business partners: the issues of intellectual property rights (IPR)
associated with ideas is very clear. It will certainly have been clarified in
everyone's employment contract or outsourcing contract. However, in public forums,
no such contracts are pre-existing. Hence the issue of IPR needs to be considered
even before the project begins. Likewise, participants in open innovation initiatives
need to be aware of what rights they are losing with their idea submissions
(all rights, typically in an open suggestion scheme). For more information on
this critical issue, read “The Legal Side of Open Innovation” in
the 6 October 2009 issue of Report 103: http://www.jpb.com/report103/archive.php?issue_no=20091006
Open Idea Generation
So, in a nut shell, open innovation is simply opening up a part of the idea
generation process to a group of people outside the organisation. As a result,
the same rules that apply to closed idea generation initiatives also apply to
open idea generation initiatives. I would further argue that there is a lot
of unnecessary hype associated with open innovation as it is really an element
of the innovation process which has been around since people started collaborating
to innovate!
References
H.W. Chesbrough (2003) Open Innovation: The New Imperative for Creating and
Profiting from Technology; Boston; Harvard Business School Press, p. xxiv
INNOVATION BASICS IN YOUR FIRM?
If you are impressed with what I've written in this and previous issues of
Report 103? Imagine, then, what my team and I could do in your firm! If you
need support in designing and implementing an innovation process in your organisation,
contact me and let's talk.
We can also facilitate idea generating events and provide training courses
anywhere you'd like. Let me know what you need – and I'll let you know
how we'll deliver it!
INNOVATION IN THE 21ST CENTURY: KEEPING THE US COMPETITIVE
Yesterday, Newsweek magazine and Intel (the silicon chip manufacturer) released
the findings from their survey on innovation and the economy in the US. Overall,
they found that Americans retain their belief in innovation and technology as
the “primary engines” of growth. Nevertheless, Americans feel that
the country has suffered as a result of the economic slowdown. More information
in the Huffington Post at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/justin-r-rattner/innovation-in-the-21st-ce_b_359383.html
LATEST IN BUSINESS INNOVATION
If you want to keep up with the latest news in business innovation, I recommend
Chuck Frey's INNOVATIONweek (http://www.innovationtools.com/News/subscribe.asp).
It's the only e-newsletter that keeps you up-to-date on all of the latest innovation
news, research, trends, case histories of leading companies and more. And it's
the perfect complement to Report 103!
JENNI: ALIGNING YOUR INNOVATION WITH YOUR STRATEGY
Did you know that Jenni is the only idea management software specifically designed
to align innovation with strategy? From Jenni's sophisticated ideas campaign
module that allows you to set up precisely targetted ideas campaigns to her
criteria based evaluation tool that not only sets up multi-expert evaluations,
but compiles the results in an easy to interpret report, Jenni is all about
focusing innovation on your strategic needs. Better still, our experts are at
your beck and call to coach you through the innovation process and its management.
Perhaps that's why a leading water provider in Australia selected Jenni to
support innovation according to their complex strategic needs. Owing to severe
drought, they needed to improve significantly the efficiency of their water
delivery system, encourage customers to use less water and still make a profit.
Moreover, with super busy employees, they needed a system that was incredibly
easy for employees to grasp and use. They chose Jenni. And for three years,
Jenni has supported ideas campaigns that have generated ideas leading to substantial
efficiency improvements, resulting in reduced operational costs, communications
ideas and more.
And perhaps that's why a global convenience food provider, that needed to improve
the healthiness of their snack foods, choose Jenni for their research and development
unit. They needed not only healthy snack food concepts, but also packaging that
communicated this new brand value. Jenni did the trick and enabled their creative
thinkers to generate all kinds of terrifically tasty and healthy food ideas.
How about your firm? If it is important that your innovation process is aligned
with strategy, you owe it to your firm to learn more about how Jenni can help
you innovate more effectively and gain an unfair advantage over your competition!
Tell us your strategic needs and we will tell you how Jenni can help you align
your innovation to meet those needs – with complete confidentiality from
our first conversation. Find your nearest Jenni representative at http://www.jpb.com/jenni/contact.php
and we'll direct your questions to the person best placed to determine how we
can answer them.
More information about Jenni, meanwhile, can be found at http://www.jpb.com/jenni/
ARE YOU AN INNOVATION CONSULTANT?
If you are providing innovation services such as consulting, training or coaching
and want to add a great idea management software solution to your portfolio
of products and services, contact
me and let's talk about how Jenni can help your clients innovate better
– and help you gain new clients.
You benefit from our generous commission programme, marketing on the popular
www.jpb.com web site (150,000-200,000 page hits/month) and collaborating with
a fantastic global team of innovation, marketing and sales experts (http://www.jpb.com/about/index.php).
In addition, by packaging your services with Jenni, you can provide your clients
with value added innovation services that help them increase profitability.
It's a fantastic win-win-win scenario for your, your client and jpb.com!
ARCHIVES
You can find this and every issue of Report 103 ever written at our archives
on http://www.jpb.com/report103/archives.php
Happy thinking!
Jeffrey Baumgartner
---------------------------------------------------
Report 103 is a complimentary twice monthly eJournal from Bwiti bvba of Belgium
(a jpb.com company: http://www.jpb.com). Archives and subscription information
can be found at http://www.jpb.com/report103/
Report 103 is edited by Jeffrey Baumgartner and is published on the first and
third Tuesday of every month.
You may forward this copy of Report 103 to anyone, provided you forward it
in its entirety and do not edit it in any way. If you wish to reprint only a
part of Report 103, please
contact Jeffrey Baumgartner.
Contributions and press releases are welcome. Please contact Jeffrey in the
first instance.
Return to Report 103 home/archives | Return
to top of page
* Notes
-
you may unsubscribe at any time by e-mail.
-
We use the double opt-in process. This means you will receive an
e-mail which you must reply to in order to subscribe. Although this
is a minor inconvenience, it ensures that only people who want to
receive Report103 actually do receive it.
-
We will not share your e-mail address with anyone else or send you
any e-mails other than Report 103 unless you contact us first.
|