Home Wealth Project
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Apr 23rd
The book Service Innovation by Lance Bettencourt has a great quote on innovation: “Innovation…needs and deserves to be treated like the business process it is.” (click here for review). Okay, I agree, you say, but how do I act on those beliefs for a new product? While many books about innovation focus on service or products, few examine the management of development teams and organizations exclusively.
Methodical counsel awaits you in The Other Side of Innovation: Solving the Execution Challenge by Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble, two faculty professors of the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth University. Based on years of research, the authors provide the best practices to proceed on a product or service breakthrough that can satisfy customers and grow your business.
I learned about the book through a preview from Harvard Business Review, so I asked for a review copy.
To be groundbreaking, rely on a dedicated team to break that ground
The Other Side of Innovation asserts a key premise of balance between ongoing activity and strategic needs. Companies are “Performance Engines,” entities pressured to deliver profits. A side effect of such pressures, which “shape and mold companies as they mature,” can be a reduced capacity for accomplishing some innovative projects. When considering a development project, many businesses seek an outside consultant, but adding any kind of agent without specific organizational support typically leads to a failed project. Forget seeking a business messiah for your ingenuity effort – “One person against ‘the system’ is an extraordinarily bad bet.”
From their research, the authors overall recommend establishing a Dedicated Team with unique practices and metrics, then maintaining a balanced collaborative relationship between the team and various stakeholders from the Performance Engine. The separation is meant to overcome the inertia brought about by a company’s focus on daily operations and profit-creating activity.
“A dedicated team’s purpose…is not to overcome organizational memory. It is to execute part of the innovation initiative. To do so, the Dedicated Team needs both insiders and outsiders, and it needs a healthy partnership with the Performance Engine.”
In attempting an innovation program, many companies make one of several mistakes, which can include:
More oversights are listed, though the points may feel a little repetitive when taken altogether. Nevertheless, they emphasize the struggle to treat innovation properly throughout a development process. Govindarajan and Trimble offer success stories from well-known corporations, including Timberland, BMW, Nucor and Harley Davidson. Each case shows clear results and takeaways that avoid critical mistakes. The Dow Jones, for example, incorporated a dedicated team with Internet publishing experience, resulting in a 9 percent increase in subscriptions, “the biggest one-year jump in a quarter century.”
Some prescribed practices include:
Govindarajan and Trimble also emphasize a shared understanding of objectives to develop solutions. A clear hypothesis and recording, covered in the chapter Break Down the Hypothesis, enables that understanding so that efforts remain centered on planning and associated tasks.
“Quick learning is most likely when there is a clear hypothesis of record that everyone involved in evaluating the initiatives shares and uses as a frame of reference in any discussion of the initiative’s progress.”
In short, ensure everyone is one the same page.
Better yet, make sure the page is not solely a table or chart. Readers, particularly analytics professionals, will appreciate the authors’ caution about over-reliance on a spreadsheet to engage other team members.
“Too often, we see extraordinary efforts to build the perfect spreadsheet to prove the case for investment. We’d like to shift much of the effort that goes into perfecting the spreadsheet models to improving conversations about the underlying assumptions.”
Read The Other Side of Innovation if you have a team but no charismatic leader
The aforementioned approaches contrast with ideas from companies headed by a definitive passionate leader, such as that suggested in the book Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs (see Small Business Trends review here). I feel books like The Other Side of Innovation speak to companies that do not have that business “Neo,” that mythical groundbreaker who has “the vision.” Many businesses face the challenge of arranging a team (and even the Steve Jobses of the world know how difficult it can be), so this book speaks to that moment rather than the romanticized myth of a modern-day Henry Ford or Bill Gates in a fledgling stage.
The suggestions may not appear immediately applicable for small business operations or for solopreneurs in the aforementioned fledgling stage. But small businesses and budding firms can still benefit, realizing that a dedicated time and effort to develop new methods is essential and that similar pitfalls can happen. The authors’ tips on identifying stakeholders and establishing a planning process can be re-imagined when working with remote team members or groups in a temporary setting. An assessment tool table and common innovation myths bring a thoughtful closure to the book.
Plan your revolutionary measures wisely from the start
Seth Godin once commented that to be a great client you must realize “your job is to foster innovation…. Fostering innovation is a discipline, a profession in fact. It involves making difficult choices and causing important things to get shipped out the door.”
If you read The Other Side of Innovation, your odds of accommodating your new methods to service customers better and ultimately improve profitability will be much greater.
Read The Other Side of Innovation to Transform Your Revolutionary Ideas
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Sep 7th
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At the heart of a HERO-powered business is a new pact between these critical employees, company managers, and the IT department:… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Aug 25th
Can just one employee do one single thing different and completely transform your company as a result? They can. The story of Johnny the Bagger, currently making the rounds of retail blogs, shows how it can be done.
The story begins with employee-motivation expert Barbara Glanz. The Contagious Enthusiasm author relates in her own video that she spoke several years back to an audience of 3,000 employees of a major grocery chain. She told the crowd, “Every one of you can make a difference and create memories for your customers that will motivate them to come back.”
One bagger with Down Syndrome, Johnny, contacted her later to say he had thought about her advice, and come up with a plan to create those memories. Each day when he got home from work, with help from his father, he typed and printed out a thought for the day on the family’s home computer. Then, the next day, as he bagged groceries, he’d put a slip with his thought into their bag.
The response was astonishing. Customers reported they had switched to shopping the store more often, as they didn’t want to miss any of Johnny’s thoughts! Soon his checkout line ran the length of the store, full of customers who refused to switch to shorter lines. Only Johnny’s line would give them the thought for the day.
The video above tells the story in greater detail. More than 90,000 people have watched it. Bring tissues.
Why is this store so inspiring, so uplifting? Because it’s a reminder that life is about more than dollars and cents. Remembering that can help businesses stand out from the crowd.
In the course of doing business, a company can do so much more than sell an item and collect customers’ money. Every day their stores are open, retailers have an opportunity to transform what they’re doing from a simple transaction into something that’s much more than commerce — they can lift spirits, make people smile, make employees proud of where they work, bring people together…and make their store a must-visit.
What are you doing to make your store experience memorable? Leave a comment and let us know.
View full post on Entrepreneur.com – Daily Dose
Jul 23rd
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
May 24th
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In Open… shows leaders how to tap into the power of the social technology revolution and use social media to be “open” while maintaining control. |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
May 11th
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Feb 22nd
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Twitpay is part of an ecosystem of services and applications that is transforming Twitter from a social-media site into a communications—and now an… |
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