Accordingly, my preference
centers upon context for measures and to see innovation as more of an
approach, a general attitude and methodology than a series of specific
steps, training and subsequent measures. Again, the measures discussed
in this Forbes article just don't make sense to me as many have no
context and thus proof that they add insight. Innovation is not a
program. It's a lifestyle.
By example, in my
experience with significant innovations, after an organization becomes
more innovative, expenditures on product development and the like
actually decrease, the number of projects decrease and the return on
invested capital, margins and customer profitability (b2b) or lifestyle
(b2c) radically increase. The noted measures by Forbes look instead at
increases in activities and the population engaged which may be
misleading.
In fact, the implication that a
certain % of time is being spent on innovation for example implies that
the staff are not innovating the other times. Really? An innovative
organization focused on all activities as being an opportunity to
engage, observe, learn, analyze, ideate and innovate does this 100% of
the time. Telling people to devote 10% of their time to innovation is
like like planning when you will get married, get promoted and hit the
big time. It simply does not work that way. Innovation is seeing,
observing things in new ways with an accumulation of highly varied
experiences that culminate in that "sudden" (really not so sudden)
epiphany.
How about the number of ideas killed?
Really? In fact, that may be a measure of ineffective ideation, as a
group with a laser focus upon global socio-demograpgic, geo-political,
industrial and environmental trends within the context of what they are
trying to do for their customers would imply that the number of ideas
should decrease but be ever increasing in their value to the latter
customers.
The number of engineers, scientists and
technicians employed does not at all directly correlate to being
innovative or effective. How many tiny upstarts with 1 to 100 employees
total have knocked off a behemoth? It's their revenue generated per
staffer, the new product revenue generated per staffer and group that
matters. In other words, context.
Accordingly,
maybe the right metrics are really centered upon new product
introduction rates, success rates, improved customer and their customer
profitability and lifestyle satisfaction measured against the size of
investment and organization and the accomplishments per unit time. In
other words, the standard stuff along with a measure of improved
performance and it's trajectory, in the proper relevant contexts.
Innovation is not a program. It's a life long enterprise. It's a
lifestyle.
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