Title: Prof' Horst O' Bender, Ph'D'
1TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION STRATEGY
Prof. Horst O. Bender, Ph.D. Rotterdam School of
Management Erasmus University (NL) THESEUS
Institute (F) hobender_at_B2B-MSI.com
2THE TECHNOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF COMPETITIVE
STRATEGY
RD INVESTMENT
NEW TECHNOLOGY
NEW PRODUCTS Timing of entry
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT AND SYNTHESIS
Suppliers Scientific community
Licensing Mergers acquisitions
RD ORGANIZATION ANDPOLICY
3THE ESSENCE OF STRATEGY VALUE, COST AND SPEED
CUSTOMER
VALUE/ SPEED
VALUE/ SPEED
COST/ SPEED
COMPE- TITOR
COMPANY
DIFFERENTIAL ADVANTAGE ? VALUE ? COST ?
SPEED
THE CRITICAL QUESTION HOW CAN WE INNOVATETO
CREATE VALUE, REDUCE COSTS AND GENERATE SPEED?
4HOW CAN WE INNOVATE TO CREATE VALUE, REDUCE
COSTS, AND GENERATE SPEED?
A. IN THE COMPANY
R D
Marketed
Purchased
Produced
Good
Good
Good
Marketing,
Manufacturing/
Sales,
Procurement
Operations
Service
B. IN THE VALUE CHAIN
Produced
Produced
Marketed
Marketed
Purchased
Purchased
Produced
Marketed
Alignment
Alignment
Purchased
Good
Good
Good
Good
Good
Good
Good
Good
Good
Alignment
5THE INNOVATION PIPELINE
- Scientific
- Discovery
- Faradays demonstration Electrical
- of electrical induction in 1831 Industry
- Shockleys theory of electrons Semiconductorand
holes in semiconductors Industry - FACTORS
- Government RD spending- Industry RD spending
- RD efficiency and effectiveness
Innovation Entrepreneurship
Average
6NETWORKS, NOT PIPELINES
- Scientists
- Entrepreneurs/intrapreneurs
- Marketers
- Sponsors
- Venure capital
- Service infrastructure firms
- Legal framework
- - Patent system- Intellectual property
- Basic research
- Societal support
7INNOVATION DYNAMICS SHORTENING MAJOR INNOVATION
CYCLES (KONDRATIEFF, SCHUMPETER)
8THE FOUR INNOVATION WAVES
9INNOVATION DYNAMICSTECHNOLOGY LIFE CYCLE AND
TECHNOLOGY S-CURVE
10INNOVATION DYNAMICSINTERRELATEDNESS OF PRODUCT
AND PROCESS INNOVATION
Rate of Product/ Process Innovation
Emergence of Dominant Design
Process Innovation
Product Innovation
0
Specific
Fluid
Transition
Stage of Development of the Manufacturing Process
The Interrelatedness of Product and Process
Innovation
Source Abernathy and Utterback, 1975
11TECHNOLOGY LIFE CYCLE
Source Foster
12INNOVATION COST AND ABILITYTO INFLUENCE OUTCOME
Ability to influence product outcome
Study
Design
Develop-ment
Marke- ting
Produc- tion
60
Activity profile of a typical CEO
35
4
1
The Typical Role of a Chief Executive Officer in
New Product Programs
13INCREMENTAL AND RADICAL INNOVATION
MAGNITUDE OF THE INNOVATION
High Radical Innovation
Low Incremental Innovation
Impact of theDisruptive Change
Differential AdvantageUnlikely to Result
Company
Industry
Industry Transformation
Company Transformation
14INNOVATION MAGNITUDE
- TECHNOLOGICAL THRUST INNOVATION TYPE WHO CREATES
IDEA? WHO WINS? - Sustaining technology Incremenal innovation
Industry leader Industry leader Established
firms Customers
Incremental Product Innovation
? Value, Price
Profit
Incremental Process Innovation
? Costs
15INNOVATION MAGNITUDE
- TECHNOLOGICAL THRUST INNOVATION TYPE WHO CREATES
IDEA? WHO WINS?Disruptive technology Radical
innovation Outside challengers Outside
challenger Contrarians (Industry
leader) Not customers
? Value, Price
Radical Product Innovation
Profit
Radical Process Innovation
? Costs
16PATTERNS OF RADICAL INNOVATIONS
- 1. The technological threat often originates
outside of the industry - It is often pioneered
by a new, outside firm - Initially crude and
expensive, it expands through successive
sub-markets, with overall growth following an
S-shaped curve - Sales of the old technology
may continue to expand for a few years, but
then usually decline, the new technology
passing the old one within 5-14 years of its
introduction - 2. The traditional firms fight back in two ways
- Trough attempting to improve the old
technology (investment into incremental
product and process innovations) - Through
attempting to master the new technology
Sources Cooper and Schendel, Christensen
17PATTERNS OF RADICAL INNOVATIONS
- 3. The odds are against them in both instances
- The value-generating potential of the new
technology vastly surpasses that of the
established one after the pioneering stage - - The new field proves to be difficult
Different capability and skill requirements
The marketplace is likely to be dynamically
competitive - Telegraph versus telephone
- Vacuum tubes versus transistors
- Steam locomotives versus diesel electric
- Fountain pens versus ballpoint pens
- Safety razors versus electric razors
- Aircraft propeller versus jet engines
- Typewriters versus word processing
18EXAMPLES OF RADICAL INNOVATIONS
- ESTABLISHED TECHNOLOGY RADICAL INNOVATION
- Mini computers PCs
- Silver halide photography Digital photography
- Wireline telephony Mobile telephony
- Wireline and mobile telephony Internet telephony
- Circuit-switched telecommunication
networks Packet-switched telecommunication
networks - Full-service stock brokerage On-line stock
brokerage - Bricks-and-mortar travel agencies E-travel
agencies (Expedia.com) - Bricks-and-mortar retailing Online retailing
- Executive MBA education Corporate universities
- Standard textbooks Custom-assembled, digital
textbooks - Offset printing Digital printing
- Manned fighter and bomber aircraft Unmanned
aircraft - MS Windows operating system Linux operating
system - General hospitals Outpatient clinics, in-home
patient care - Open surgery Arthroscopic and endoscopic surgery
- Cardiac bypass surgery Angioplasty
- MRI and Computer Tomography Ultrasound
19ISSUES IN MANAGING RADICAL INNOVATIONS
- Capturing radical ideas in the Fuzzy Front End
- Managing radical innovation projects
- Learning about markets for radical innovation
- Resolving uncertainty in the business model
- Bridging resource and competence gaps
- Making the transition to operations
- Engaging individual initiative
20ISSUES THE PRODUCT INNOVATION STRATEGY MUST
ADDRESS
- The link with corporate strategy - Overall
goals for the business new product effort - The role of product development - How do new
products tie into the business overall strategic
goals - Coverage of the three arenas of strategic focus-
Markets - Product technologies - Production
technologies and technology platforms - Deployment of resources - Spending allocations
- Splits across arenas RD
funds People Marketing and capital resources
needed for development - Development of attack strategies for each arena
in order to win
21SUMMARY TWELVE CRUCIAL INNOVATION RULES (I)
- Innovation is todays major source of sustainable
competitive advantage - Innovation means turning creativity into bottom
line results. Its not enough to just be
creative - There are four types of innovation -
Product - Process- Marketing -
ManagementProduct innovation is important, but
its certainly not the only kind of innovation
that can make a big difference in your company - Ordinary people can be made highly creative by
giving them the right environment and meeting
their psychological needs - In addition to the general environmental required
factors to enhance creativity, put in place some
basic infrastructure to support ideation
22SUMMARY TWELVE CRUCIAL INNOVATION RULES (II)
- You need an innovation process. Research shows
that those firms with a formal process for
managing innovation do much better than those
which dont - The Stage-Gate process is the current
state-of-the-art innovation process - A wide range of tools and techniques is available
to make the most of the Discovery stage where the
ideas are generated to feed the rest of the
project - Powerful and effective go/kill gates must be
constructed and used. Its as important to figure
out which project wont do as it is to select the
projects you will do
23SUMMARY TWELVE CRUCIAL INNOVATION RULES (III)
- Every project requires an effective Business
Case. The steps in creating the business case for
each new product project are- Demonstrate fit
with corporate strategy- Conduct a user needs
and wants study- Perform a competitive
analysis- Perform a detailed market
assessment- Perform a detailed technical
assessment- Conduct a concept test of the new
product as defined- Create a financial Business
Analysis - Develop a plan of action for
developing and launching the product - Big launch and rollout decisions come late in
the process, but by using the approach
recommended you begin planning for them very
early, so surprises are minimized - Implementing the stage-gate process correctly can
be tricky. Approach it with the care and
discipline you would use in launching a major new
product
24DIAGNOSTICS
25TO WHAT EXTENT DO WE FOLLOW THE TEN RULES FOR
RADICAL INNOVATION?
- Set unreasonable expectations .....
- Create an elastic business definition .....
- Define a cause, not a business .....
- Listen to new voices .....
- Create an open market for ideas .....
- Create an open market for capital .....
- Create an open market for talent .....
- Engage in low-risk experimentation .....
- Practice cellular division .....
- Allow for personal wealth accumulation .....
- 0-10 Scale 10 best