Title: Innovation there is no option
1 - Innovation there is no option
- Alistair Keddie
- WIMRC Seminar, 27 February 2007
2Innovating Companies
- Grow faster than non-innovators
- Are much more profitable
- Sustain higher performance
- (From an analysis of 500 listed companies by
Geroski Machin)
3Definitions
- Innovation the successful exploitation of new
ideas - new products, services and processes driven by
customers and markets - enabled by science, technology, design and new
business practices - creates wealth, improves wellbeing, uses
resources more efficiently/productively - Value added
- Wealth created by companies/organisations
- Measured as sales less cost of bought-in
materials, components and services
4Levels of Innovation
Zone 3 Transformational Innovation
Zone 2 Relative Innovation
Zone 1 Incremental Innovation
Minor product or service enhancements eg the new
LandRover Discovery Coke with lemon
Improved customer care
Innovations that build on existing
products/services Taking existing products to
new markets eg Dyson cleaner Carphone
Warehouse Supermarket on-line shopping
New concept products or services, Breakthrough
value propositions and business models eg mobile
phone, I-Pod, Low cost airlines, Web-based
banking
5Some quotes
- The fundamental characteristic of a modern market
is not price, but innovation.technological
superioritythe best technology wins, the second
best loses - Innovation is as much an attitude of mind as a
scientific or practical exercise (Sir Paul
Girolami, Chairman, Glaxo, 1993) -
- Innovation is the key to growth because it
delights our customers - We are managing in chaos, and this is the right
way to manage innovation..in reaching our goals - (William Coyne, Senior Vice President RD, 3M,
1996)
6Some Quotes
- Innovation drives profits and improves the human
experience - Principles of successful innovation
- Hire the best and let them lead you, regardless
of title or department - Create communities with partners, customers and
business groups that allow collaboration and open
innovation - Create small groups and give them autonomy task
forces, not steering committees - Allow public debate, but know when the debate
should end and then move quickly to focus
resources - Have the courage to make the hard decisions
- Great companies and leaders pursue projects with
dramatic potential - Innovation is a messy business
-
- (Jonathan Schwartz, CEO and President, Sun
Microsystems, 2006)
7Global Pressures - Examples
- Exports of manufactured goods from developing
countries - 2005 25 è 2025 50
- Graduates produced per year
- 2 million in both China and India
- Growth in RD investment
- 15 per year in Singapore
- Environmental issues
- Climate change
- Waste minimisation
8Global RD Growth Rates, 2000 2005 (From
Booz Allen Hamilton, 2006)
9Value Added by Knowledge Based Services and
Industries
10DTI Innovation Report Economic Message
- UK Businesses will only achieve long-term success
in global markets by focusing on greater value
added as their competitive edge. -
- Innovation is the key to achieving this.
-
- Businesses need to keep innovating to stay ahead
of the competition.
11DTI Innovation Report Key Conclusions
- UK innovation performance accounts for
significant part of productivity gap - Weaknesses in innovation and productivity
performance affect all sectors - Need more innovation in business and a larger
number of innovative businesses more high value
added activity - Government has significant role to play by
influencing behaviour of business and other
participants in the innovation system
12Critical Success Factors
Innovation
Regulatory environment
Access to finance
Sources of new knowledge
Customers Suppliers
Capacity to absorb and adapt new knowledge
Competition entrepreneurs
Networks collaboration
13Business Innovation
14Public Policy Context for Business Innovation
- Enablers
- Intellectual property framework
- National Measurement System
- Technical standards
- Advice and Support
- Best practice
- Programmes
- Support for
- Developing new
- Technology
- Help for accessing
- Finance
- RD Tax Credits
- Opportunities
- Public procurement
- Regulations
Business innovation
- Building blocks of innovation a supportive
climate - Macroeconomic stability
- Competition policy
- Education, training and skills
- Science and technology
- Physical and IT infrastructure
15Characteristics of Innovative Businesses
- An innovation culture with corporate leadership
that expects growth through development of new
products and services. - A worldwide focus, often requiring early
expansion overseas. - A balanced growth strategy, with a majority of
organic growth and targeted acquisitions to enter
new markets or acquire critical expertise. - A focus on what really matters to the customer.
- Above average investment in market-led research
and development. - Above average investment in physical and business
processes - Sources DTI analysis of company reports to
compile Value Added and RD Scoreboards,
reporting on the performance of major UK and
European companies. The analysis has identified
successful companies that invest heavily in
innovation.
16Innovation and RD
- RD is only one measure of innovation performance
- RD is a measure of technological innovation it
does not capture non-technological aspects - RD accounts for about 40 of all investment in
innovation - RD intensity (RD/Sales) is a key benchmark of
company investment in RD, especially in RD
intensive sectors - But a low RD intensity does not necessarily mean
a firm/sector does not innovate, or does not
generate substantial value added
17RD Performance of UK Based Firms
- Within any sector UK based firms have similar RD
intensities to their competitors in the same
sector - But the UK has relatively few large firms and low
economic activity in some high RD intensive
sectors - Hence overall UK business RD investment is below
that of major competitors in terms of RD
intensity (RD/Sales), 1.8 for the UK compared
with 2.6 for France, 3.80 for Japan and over
4.0 for Germany and the USA
18Challenge More Business RD in the UK
- Government wants to see total UK RD (business
and public) increase in real terms from 22.5
billion per year (1.9 of GDP) to 39 billion
(2.5) between 2004 and 2014 - Business share of this would increase by 12
billion per year, from 14.5 billion to 26.5
billion - How realistic is the ambition?
- What are the options for achieving it?
- Is there a better alternative to simply focusing
on RD ?
19Grouping of Sectors by RD Intensity
- Group 1. High intensity ( 5.0 or greater).
Pharmaceuticals biotechnology and health some
chemistry-based sectors. - Group 2. High intensity (5.0 or greater).
Electronics and IT which include electronics
electrical, IT hardware and software computer
services. - Group 3. Medium intensity (2.5 to 4.9).
Engineering and chemicals. This group includes
aerospace, automotive and chemicals. - Group 4. Low intensity (1.1 to 2.4). Includes
beverages, food producers and telecomms. - Group 5. Very low intensity (up to 1). Includes
construction, oil gas, mining and utilities.
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25Performance of High-Leverage Innovators (From
Booz Allen Hamilton, 2006)
26HighLeverage Innovators Geographical
Distribution (From Booz Allen Hamilton, 2006)
27Examples of High-Leverage Innovators (From
Booz Allen Hamilton, 2006)
- North America
- Apple Computer, Black Decker, Caterpillar,
Dell, Exxon Mobile, Google, Kellog, Par
Pharmaceutical, Research in Motion, SanDisk, St
Jude Medicical, Symantec, Yahoo - Europe
- Adidas, Cadbury Schweppes, Christian Dior,
Volvo - Japan
- Casio Computer, Kobe Steel, Komatsu, Konica
Minolta, Toyota Motor - Rest of World
- AU Optronics, Hen Hai Precision Industry,
Hyundai Motor, Mediatek, Petrobas, Samsung
Electronics, Tata Motors, Teva Pharmaceutical
Industries -
28Case Study Grippel, Sheffield
- Product spring loaded wire tensor
- Markets agriculture, electrical and lighting
- Performance
- 30 growth per annum
- 90 exports
- 6.7 of revenues re-invested
- 27 stock turns per year
- 24 hour delivery
- 1.2 labour costs, reduced from 40 in 1989
- People
- 146 employees, 86 are shareholders
- All involved in continuous product and process
improvement - 7 of time on training
- Fun place to work
29Another Quote
- We dont want to manufacture because you end up
running the plant rather than running the
business - (Tony Moloney, Co-founder, Anthony Allan
Foods/WeightWatchers, 2007)
30A final quote
- He that will not apply new remedies must expect
new evils for time is the great innovator - (Francis Bacon, Essay on Innovation, 1625)
31Some Questions
- Can successful innovation be managed?
- Does the best technology always win?
- Is the Government objective of increasing UK RD
investment from 1.9 to 2.5 of GDP by 2014
realistic? - Do the most successful business models exclude
manufacturing? - How long can the low wage advantage of emerging
economies last?
32References
- Geroski and Machin, Business Strategy Review,
Summer 1992, pp 79-90 - DTI Innovation Report, Competing in the global
economy the innovation challenge, December 2003 -
- DTI Economics Paper No 11, RD Intensive
Businesses in the UK, March 2005 - The 2006 RD Scoreboard, Commentary and Analysis
Part 1, DTI and Company Reporting Ltd, October
2006 - The 2006 Value Added Scoreboard, Commentary and
Analysis Part 1, DTI and Company Reporting Ltd,
July 2005 - The Global Innovation 1000, Booz Allen Hamilton,
Special Report, 2006 - Manufacturing Excellence Awards, 2004
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