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Seven Strategies
for Generating Ideas
by Robert B. Tucker
How do organizations come up with new ideas? And how do they
use those ideas to create successful new products, services,
businesses, and solutions?
To answer these questions, a team of researchers from Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute in New York spent time observing radical
innovation projects such as IBM's silicon-germanium devices,
GE's digital X-ray, GM's hybrid vehicles, and DuPont's biodegradable
plastics. Their key finding? Most of the ideas behind these
projects came from "happy accidents" rather than some ongoing
process to generate ideas.
In more than a few cases, individuals or small groups were
simply "freelancing," working on ideas on their
own initiative rather than being directed by some "new
venture" board or other idea management system.
"Almost without exception, these idea-generation methods
have been applied sporadically, rather than systematically,
continuously, and strategically," the Rensselaer researchers
concluded. "In no case [we know of] has an ongoing process
been set up that regularly requests such ideas. What we observed
were one-time acts, or new systems put in place whose staying
power remains unproven."
It is little wonder that so many good ideas never even come
to the attention of management. Or that so many die short
of development--and miles from commercial success. In most
companies today, the "practice" of innovation can
be likened to the mating of pandas: infrequent, clumsy, and
often ineffective. Its practice is largely unchanged from
20 years ago. While the world has changed drastically and
organizations pride themselves for having a process for everything,
the process of innovation remains ad hoc, unsystematic, piecemeal,
seat of the pants, and, as the Rensselaer researchers confirmed,
heavily dependent on luck.
Creative, game-changing ideas will always have an element
of serendipity to them, and will never be producible on demand.
But today's present economic climate of stalled growth and
fewer ideas (growth in the number of patent requests have
stagnated in recent years) has caused a small but growing
group of organizations to rethink how ideas happen and to
examine what they can do to implement better innovation processes.
Fortifying the Idea Factory
Three-fourths of companies are consistently disappointed
in their innovation results, according to global surveys of
executives. But a minority of organizations--the innovation
vanguard--recognize the need for change if their results are
to improve. Put simply, if good ideas don't get hatched, they
won't get launched. The "vanguard organizations,"
23 of which we studied for a recently released book, create
stronger idea factories by cultivating the conditions whereby
"happy accidents" are more likely to occur. The
vanguards are, in essence, reinventing inventiveness. They
are paying much more attention to the oft-called "fuzzy
front end" of innovation where possibilities first come
to light. And they are managing these notions in vastly different
ways so that large quantities of ideas eventually fill the
pipeline and emerge as tangible results.
In reviewing the unconventional methods of these vanguard
organizations, we found that, while innovation and breakthroughs
can never be commanded from the top, leaders can do much to
increase throughput of significant ideas. And indeed they
must. We see these leading-edge organizations using seven
key strategies for fortifying the idea factory:
- Invite everyone in the quest for new ideas.
- Involve customers in the process of generating ideas.
- Involve customers in new ways.
- Focus on the needs that customers don't express.
- Seek ideas from new customer groups.
- Involve suppliers in product innovation.
- Benchmark idea-creation methods.
Clearly the customer plays an important role in these strategies
for strengthening the organizational idea factory. It only
makes sense. The goal is to create ideas--the building blocks
of new products, services, processes, and strategies--the
users of which are customers.
Ideation Strategy 1: Involve Everyone
in the Quest for Ideas
While suggestion boxes have been around for over 100 years,
innovation-vanguard organizations are wiring their suggestion
boxes so that they become a powerful, energizing force for
corporate creativity.
Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), a global pharmaceutical firm,
does not restrict its definition of innovation to activities
related to finding the next breakthrough drug. Rather, it
sees the need for new ideas in much broader terms and involves
employees constantly in the quest. BMS has developed a series
of ideation campaigns for internal customers under the leadership
of "idea searcher" Marsha MacArthur and her boss
Mark Wright, vice president of U.S. market research and business
intelligence.
When the patent was about to expire on Glucophage, an oral
medication for type 2 diabetes, MacArthur helped coordinate
a campaign to solicit ideas on how to get more people to use
the drug in the meantime. Rather than classifying this as
a marketing problem and letting the people in that functional
area work on it, the ideation campaign was a sort of call
for ideas to all corners.
The campaign was publicized by employees walking around wearing
sandwich boards declaring, "We're waging war on diabetes
and we need your help!" Town Hall meetings were set up
for the team to describe the problem in greater detail: How
do we drive patients to their doctors' offices? How do we
get patients to switch from the medications they're currently
using?
Tip lines were then set up on BMS's intranet site so employees
could submit their ideas. One idea was to run a national campaign
declaring war on diabetes. Another, to create a museum for
diabetics.
"I was really proud of everybody and the ideas that
were submitted," says MacArthur. "They weren't obvious
ones like, 'talk to doctors.' We already do that. They were
quite well thought out."
That single ideation campaign generated 4,000 inquiries from
429 employees all over the world. In a typical year, idea
searcher MacArthur coordinates 20 to 30 such campaigns, both
at the division level and enterprise-wide.
Lesson: Organizations can enlarge
their pool of ideas by including more employees in the process
of new product and service ideation and in solving vexing
organizational problems. Start by encouraging them to listen
to customers. Don't allow managers, technical specialists,
or purchasing, finance, or human resource professionals to
participate in new product/service/market development decisions
unless they spend at least 20% of their time with current
(or future) customers and suppliers.
Ideation Strategy 2: Involve Customers
in Your Process
New products are most often initiated by ideas from customers,
rather than from in-house brainstorming sessions or developed
internally by research and development, according to a study
by business researchers Robert G. Cooper and Elko J. Kleinschmidt
of McMaster University in Ontario.
If you immediately think "focus groups" when the
subject of involving customers comes up, better think again.
Vanguard firms are going well beyond such techniques as they
seek more powerful insights and ideas.
To maintain its market positioning as the "ultimate
driving machine," Munich-based BMW must constantly seek
new technologies and design features that keep it slightly
ahead of the pack. To accomplish this objective, BMW tossed
conventional wisdom to the roadside and created what it calls
a Virtual Innovation Agency (VIA) to listen to customers directly.
Car buffs worldwide can access the VIA Web site and join online
discussions to share their ideas with other enthusiasts around
the world--and with the BMW Group.
The VIA submission process allows anyone with Internet access
to submit ideas--and the ideas are protected. If the idea
has potential, it's routed to the appropriate working group
at BMW for follow-up. Within the first week after VIA was
launched in July 2001, 4,000 ideas had been received.
Lesson: The traditional focus
group needs more focus. Form advisory boards of key customers
to serve as sounding boards for ideas. Identify customers
who tend to buy the latest versions of your products. These
"lead adopters" can provide you with insights about
where the market may be headed and how your organization can
best position itself.
Ideation Strategy 3: Involve Customers
in New Ways
Organizations evolve and embrace new ways of doing things
at different rates. Nowhere is this more evident than in the
ways they listen to customers. For instance, customer surveys
may be old hat to retailers but they blow the lids off homebuilders.
KB Home, a market-leading homebuilder based in Los Angeles,
only began surveying customers in the late 1990s; in a very
short time it gained insights on new ways of doing business.
In Denver, KB Home built houses with fireplaces and basements,
assuming that's what everyone wanted. But some buyers weren't
biting. CEO Bruce Karatz eavesdropped on a sales pitch to
prospective buyers who wanted to save money. The couple said
they didn't need a basement, but the salesman kept pushing
them to accept it as everyone else had.
Karatz decided then and there to survey customers. Their
answers shattered KB Home's preconceived notions about what
homebuyers wanted. In Denver, people were more than willing
to do without basements when omitting them cut the price by
as much as 20%. In Phoenix, where covered porches were thought
mandatory, fewer than half of the buyers said they cared about
them.
By polling for preferences, KB Home opened up its business
to budget-minded buyers. But it also discovered other, more-desirable
amenities that customers were willing to pay for: coffee bars
in the master bedroom, built-in home offices, and higher-quality
windows, for example. This "amenity customization"
proved popular for buyers--and traumatic for competitors still
locked in to the one-size-fits-all housing approach.
DaimlerChrysler used a more experiential approach to try
to divine what fickle car buyers wanted next, turning to anthropology
and ethnography for a process known as "archetype research."
The development team created a prototype model of a vehicle
mixing retro and futuristic design elements. But instead of
then testing the prototype with traditional focus groups,
such as young men ages 18 to 24, they chose people that represented
the entire national culture and studied their emotional responses
to the prototype.
The designers realized that participants were looking for
protection from "the jungle out there." The retro/futuristic
prototype was too playful, too toylike; they seemed to be
saying, "Give me a big thing like a tank." The revised
design: the PT Cruiser, which was an instant success when
it was introduced in North America in 2000.
Lesson: Look outside your own
field or industry for ideas on how to get customer input.
Automakers, retailers, consumer electronics manufacturers,
for instance, are on the leading edge of customer surveying
and are often considered the early adopters of ideational
techniques.
Ideation Strategy 4: Focus on the Unarticulated
Needs of Customers
Another reason traditional focus groups are inadequate idea
generators is that they provide feedback only on existing
ideas. How do you get feedback on ideas that don't exist?
One approach growing in popularity is to probe the unarticulated
needs of customers, asking them to consider hypothetical products
and prototypes to see how they would respond.
Consider the microwave oven. Asked why they like it, most
people would say it's because it heats food up faster than
conventional ovens. Asked how they actually use it, most people
might say "to heat up my coffee" or "to pop
popcorn." What they don't say--their unarticulated desire--is
that when they try to use their microwave to make a "real
meal," such as a roast or a steak, the results are ugly,
gray, and unappetizing.
GE probed just such unarticulated needs in 1999 and came
up with Advantium, a speed cooker for roasts, steaks, and
other items. A white hot halogen bulb browns the outside part
of the meat while microwaves cook the inside. The result:
home-cooked meals that are fast and good.
Another great innovation-vanguard organization is Callaway
Golf, creator of the Big Bertha. Callaway's innovators went
out to country clubs and public courses and observed how golfers
approached the game, quizzing them on how they felt about
their skills. The observers discovered that many golfers felt
frustrated and intimidated by the game. The unarticulated
need was simply to succeed at something they loved doing.
Callaway's breakthrough Big Bertha club features a large
and forgiving "sweet spot" and a longer shaft, making
it easier for golfers to hit the ball--and to hit it farther.
As a result, new players took up the sport--and old players
traded in their drivers for Big Berthas. By focusing on customers'
unarticulated needs, Callaway's innovators created a blockbuster.
Lesson: Learn from customers by
observing what they are not doing, listening to what they
are not saying. Recognize the sources of their frustration
and find potential ways of eliminating it.
Ideation Strategy 5: Seek Ideas from
New Customer Groups
Most organizations should have a good idea of who their customers
are. But if you expand your definition of customer, you can
also expand your ability to generate winning ideas.
The medical products division of Holland-based Philips Electronics
had assumed its only customers were doctors in hospitals,
since they were the ones making decisions about medical supplies.
But Philips managers looked more deeply at changes in the
health-care industry and saw that more services were being
provided in nontraditional environments, such as in outpatient
clinics, in homes, and even on the street for homeless people.
By asking themselves what these customers in non-hospital
environments might need, Philips came up with such products
as a stethoscope with improved acoustics to filter out voices,
traffic, and other background noise, making it easier for
caregivers in chaotic settings to hear heart murmurs or breathing
problems.
Lesson: Look at your customers'
customers and your competitors' customers. Instead of looking
at only the present, look also at the past (former customers)
and the future (anyone you haven't done business with yet).
Ask how you might meet those customers' needs.
Ideation Strategy 6: Involve Suppliers
in Product Ideation
Suppliers can be key partners in the idea-creation process,
but many organizations are reluctant to share information
with suppliers (who, after all, might be partners with the
competition as well). Other obstacles include cultural differences,
lack of cooperation, lack of resources, and lack of vision--an
inability to conceptualize new opportunities.
The chief global purchaser for a leading consumer products
company used to visit suppliers and try to solicit ideas by
saying, "If you have any new ideas or technologies you
think we'd be interested in, be sure to let us know."
Result: zero new ideas.
Now, he brings his problems to his suppliers: "What
I need to know, for example, is whether you might have an
adhesive that would work well on elderly skin, sensitive skin,
bruised skin, diseased skin, and five other kinds of skin
that we've identified." This approach encouraged suppliers
to contribute to the company's idea-creation process, the
manager reported. "Even one of our notoriously noncreative
suppliers developed two proprietary materials for the company
in the last 12 months. It's unbelievable how excited some
of our suppliers get when we ask them to be creative on our
behalf." And the seemingly routine procurement process
added value to other departments in the organization, from
R&D to marketing.
Lesson: Just as you look to your
customers for new ideas (such as by detecting their unarticulated
needs), think of your organization as your supplier's customer.
You, too, have unarticulated needs. Try articulating them
and get your supplier's idea-generating capacity working in
concert with yours.
Ideation Strategy 7: Benchmark Ideation
Methods
Innovation-vanguard organizations actively manage the ideation
process by examining its effectiveness and questioning how
the ideas-to-results process might be improved. Ideation is
not something that should be left to chance.
Ideation specialists can be called on to teach new techniques,
shake things up, and inject maverick thinking into the process.
One leading-edge ideation specialist is Doug Hall, a former
product manager at Procter & Gamble who runs idea sessions
at Eureka! Ranch outside Cincinnati, Ohio, for companies like
Celestial Seasonings.
Hall's replicable, quantifiable process for inventing breakthrough
ideas involves a combination of play, "sensory overload,"
and analytical rigor. The goal is to generate as many new
product ideas as possible: No idea is too radical, he tells
his groups. "Breakthroughs are going to contradict history,
so you have to break rules," he says. Eureka! Ranch sessions
promise clients 30 commercially viable ideas in three days.
Lesson: Organizations that rely
on innovation need to seriously examine the climate in which
ideation takes place and put someone in charge of making the
process better, more productive, and more innovative. Innovation-adept
firms invest in ideation sessions, read books, attend seminars,
and constantly seek to improve their skills.
Monday Morning at the Idea Factory
As the world changes at a faster and faster pace, ideas and
ways of operating that were adequate only yesterday no longer
suffice. Given the torrid pace of change, the rapid commoditization
of products, and the convergence of strategies, firms that
rely on yesterday's ideas, yesterday's products, and yesterday's
assumptions are clearly vulnerable.
Organizations need a constant stream of new ideas if they
are to create exciting and prosperous futures. Yet, in most
organizations, there is resistance to change the approach
to innovation lest it upset the status quo. Most companies
today have allowed their methods of encouraging, nurturing,
and acting on new ideas to languish while they focused on
more immediate concerns, such as taking costs out of existing
processes and products and services.
Yet because of the present economic climate, firms are increasingly
willing to rethink their most central of processes: how they
accomplish innovation.
Robert B. Tucker is the author of Driving Growth through
Innovation: How Leading Firms Are Transforming Their Futures
(Berrett-Koehler, 2002, $27.95), from which this article is
drawn. A popular keynote speaker, Tucker is president of The
Innovation Resource, a consulting firm based in Santa Barbara,
California, that assists companies in implementing innovation
for growth. E-mail: rtucker@innovationresource.com
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