innovation crowds: myths and maturity

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Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity Dan Keldsen, Principal at Information Architected www.InformationArchitected.com Hashtag for today #innodan

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From the classic "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" (from 1841) through "The Wisdom of Crowds" (2004) and the rise of Web 2.0, at a glance, it looks like ANY organization can just tap into a community, grab the best ideas and take them to market. But "crowdsourcing" isn't magic - and all too often, without planning, process, management and metrics, you're likely to end up with a "flat-lined crowd" (the "the silent majority") or outright "mob" ("innovation insanity"). Where are YOU and your COMPANY in the innovation maturity curve? Where does your community align or disengage? Find out how to assess where to start, dangers to watch out for, and how to increase the odds of successful innovation communities. Expert commentary provided by Dan Keldsen, Innovation Principal at Information Architected, and ranked as one of the Most Influential Enterprise 2.0 Bloggers by SeekOmega.com and Top Analyst Bloggers and Twitters by Technobabble 2.0, for two years running. Find him on twitter @dankeldsen. This presentation was given on Thursday April 29, 2010, on a webinar hosted by Awareness Networks. Thanks to Mike, Christine and the Awareness Team for hosting the discussion, and to the several hundred who registered and sat in on the webinar. Keep an eye on www.InformationArchitected.com for the follow-on whitepaper, with further depth on the survey-based research we'll be publishing in May 2010.

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Page 1: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Innovation Crowds:Myths and Maturity Dan Keldsen, Principal at Information Architected

www.InformationArchitected.com

Hashtag for today

#innodan

Page 2: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

About Dan• Principal at Information Architected• 16 Years in Industry, Public, Private & Non-Profit• Founding Member of the

Innovation Lab of Perot Systems• 2x Judge of “The Innovation Challenge”

– The Worldʼs Largest MBA-based Open Innovation Project, run by Idea Crossing

• Ranked One of Top 5 Most Influential Enterprise 2.0 Bloggers (by SeekOmega.com)

Page 3: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

3 Main Points for Today

1. Enough proof points to demonstrate both the need and the benefit in Actively Innovating - no more excuses

2. Examples of where your peers are - and where you are likely to be lagging

3. How to best focus Crowdsourcing for Innovation - regardless of the crowd

Page 4: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

First,What is Innovation?My definition doesnʼt matter...

YOUR definition, or perhaps your boss or someone higher up, is what matters.

Without defining Innovation in the CONTEXT of YOUR business, how can get MORE innovation, or get better at it?

BTW - “More Innovation” is a recipe for disaster - FOCUS...

Page 5: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

License 2 Innovate

Avoid Innovation ParalysisGive yourself a

License 2 Innovate

E - i - T

Page 6: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Crowd Power (Cuts Both Ways)

Page 7: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

The Viral Temptation

Page 8: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Do or do not... there is no try.

The question is... why?

Page 9: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

“innovation is over-rated, our

company is doing just fine!”

Page 10: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

S&P 500 - Jan 03 to Apr 10

Oct 07

Sept 08

Mar 09

Page 11: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

For Those Who ARE Innovation

The Ride is Safer, Mostly

Page 12: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

For Innovation Masters... Apple

The Rocket Ride

Page 13: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

The Economic Crisis Has Caused an Increase in the Importance ofInnovation in My Organization

Strongly Disagree

Disagree

Undecided

Agree

Strongly Agree 23%

46%

13%

2%

1%

Source: www.InformationArchitected.com (2009 Innovation Research)

Page 14: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

If the Economy Isnʼt Pushing You to InnovateHow about your competition?

No Yes, But Not Effectively Yes, and Effectively

11%

23%

66%

Do You Believe Your Competitors are Actively Using Crowdsourcing?(Note: Early Release Data)

Source: www.InformationArchitected.com

34% of Competition is Active Already,

How Far Behind Do You Want to Be?

Page 15: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Top Three of Top Three Benefits

Increased IdeaGeneration Volume

22%

New Customers,New Segments

35%

Increased Diversityof Innovation Sources

43%

Top Benefits

What are the top three potential BENEFITS of Crowdsourcing to your business?(Note: Early Release Data)

Source: www.InformationArchitected.com

Seeing NewOpportunities First

29%

Ability toOutrun

Competitors29%

CustomerSatisfactionand Loyalty

43%

2nd Most Important Benefits

Reputationand Brand

Image43%

IncreasedInnovationCapacity

30%

New Customers,New Segments

28%

3rd Most Important Benefits

Page 16: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Kaizen, Lean, and 1,000,000

Page 17: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Estimated that there are 200 scientists/engineers elsewhere in the world who are just as good

P&G determined they needed to changefrom "not invented here" to

enthusiasm for “proudly found elsewhere"

For every individual P&G researcher

Source: P&Gʼs New Innovation Model (Harvard Business Review. 2006)

Page 18: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

There are more smart people OUTSIDE of your organization, than INSIDE. Guaranteed.

But there are also more people within your company who are not CURRENTLY being tapped for “innovations” than youʼre using today.

Feel like doubling your odds?

Page 19: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Show Me The Innovation!

Page 20: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Not Applicable

Planned

Implemented

Subset of EmployeesAll Employees

CustomersPartners

Suppliers

Subset of EmployeesAll Employees

CustomersPartners

Suppliers

Subset of EmployeesAll Employees

CustomersPartners

Suppliers 1%

8%

90%

4%

11%

85%

5%

15%

79%

10%

17%

73%

20%

10%

70%

5%

27%

68%

7%

53%

41%

21%

49%

30%

25%

26%

49%

35%

17%

49%

26%

23%

51%

43%

28%

29%

47%

32%

21%

39%

22%

39%

46%

12%

42%

Planning vs ImplementingIn Your Organization, What Community or Communities did you target

or will you target with Crowdsourcing? (Note: Early Release Data)

Source: www.InformationArchitected.com

2008 (2 years ago) 2010 (Now) 2015 (5 years out)

Page 21: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Employees

Business Partners

Customers

Consultants

Competitors

Associations, etc.

Internal Sales and Service Units

Internal R&D

Academia 12%15%16%17%

20%22%

35%37%

41%

Most Significant Sources of Innovative Ideas

Source: IBM

Who to Target?Target Crowds By Where the Most Value Is

Page 22: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Where are you weak with Innovation right now? Where are you STRONG?

Orientation to Change

DeveloperExplorer

Ways of Deciding

External Internal

Person Task

Manner of Processing

What’s your VIEW?

Page 23: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Source: Geoffrey Moore - Dealing With Darwin

Innovation Maturity and the Chasm

Page 24: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Bad News: You’re Already Behind SOME Of The Innovation-SavvyGood News: Active Innovation Management Is Still Fairly Rare - Start Now!

Good News/Bad News

No Involvement

Some Experimentation, Not Sure of Value

Some Experience, Mixed Results

Used in Special Circumstances 10%

18%

34%

34%

How Would You Rate the Use of Crowdsourcing by Your Company?(Note: Early Release Data)

Source: www.InformationArchitected.com

Page 25: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Content Context

Community

FocusingInnovation Efforts

Page 26: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Who benefits from the value of your innovation?

Buyers?End users? Which end?

Multiple customers?Suppliers?

Employees?Partners?

Page 27: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Content Context

Community

Multiple Communities?

Content Context

Community

Content Context

Community

Content Context

Community

Content Context

Community

Page 28: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Top Three of Top Three Risks

EffortRequired

in ManagingCommunity

Relationships30%

TimeRequiredto Start

Crowdsourcing34%

IntellectualProperty/

OwnershipConcerns

36%

Top Risk/Concern

What are the top three potential RISKS/CONCERNS ofCrowdsourcing to your business? (Note: Early Release Data)

Source: www.InformationArchitected.com

ExpertiseRequiredto Start

Crowdsourcing25%

EffortRequired

in ManagingCommunity

Relationships34%

TimeRequiredto Start

Crowdsourcing41%

2nd Most Important Risk/Concern

Fear ofCompetitorAccess to

Communityand Ideas

27%

ExpertiseRequiredto Start

Crowdsourcing35%

EffortRequired

in ManagingCommunity

Relationships39%

3rd Most Important Risk/Concern

Page 30: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Whereʼs the gold?

Creating ideas is part of the problem, finding the BEST is the real challenge

and most aren’t equipped well

Page 31: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Attribute Listing

Idea Generation Tools (Creative Thinking)

Idea Focusing Tools (Critical Thinking)

Morphological Matrix Force-Fitting SCAMPER Brainstorming

Hits and Hot Spots ALoU

Paired Comparison

Analysis

Sequencing: SML

Evaluation Matrix

Page 32: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity
Page 33: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Recent Engagements• GE (5)• HP • Sun Microsystems (3)• Centura Health• Avaya Global Systems• Kelloggʼs (4)• Velcro USA (4)• Fish and Richardson (2)• PepsiCo (3)• Association of Equipment Manufacturers (4)• United States Air Force/Air National Guard (2)• Cooper Tire (2)• Dialogic (2)

(Parenthetical # indicates multiple sessions, typically classes of 20-30 people at a time)

Page 34: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Recent Engagements (Contʼd)• Univ. of Tennessee Business School (5)• Univ. of Denver Business School• University of Toronto • Ryerson University• University of Scranton• Capilano University• Time Warner• Eastman Chemical (3)• FedEx (5)• Buckeye Industries (2)• Interaction Associates (2)• Deloitte (Canada)• Colorado/Iowa/Oklahoma Performance Excellence

(State Baldridge programs) (3)• Chinese Government (STM)

Page 35: Innovation Crowds: Myths and Maturity

Dan KeldsenCo-founder, Principal

[email protected]/dankeldsen

617-933-9655Details on Innovation Workshop at

bit.ly/bSONfr orwww.informationarchitected.com/innovate

Q & A

Continue on twitter #innodan