Large companies are being disrupted by the pace of change. Innovation has become an imperative for their survival. But most large companies were designed to deliver steady, incremental returns. How can organizations transform themselves to deliver high growth and longevity through innovation?
Innovation-driven growth is about steering into expanding markets, expanding your share through new products and adjacent markets, and even creating entirely new markets. In this report, Suzan Briganti defines how companies can transform their ability to deliver growth through innovation – through proven approaches to organizing, staffing, leading and culture of innovation.
Suzan Briganti has worked with Fortune 500s for three decades helping them drive growth through innovation. She is the founder and CEO of Swarm Vision, a Silicon Valley software company for innovation managers and recruitment, and a sought-after speaker and writer on innovation management.
1. The only three ways to achieve business growth
2. How innovation drives growth
3. Hiring for innovation
4. Measuring innovation talent- The 8 innovation skills
5. How innovation teams are different
6. Leading innovation teams
7. Designing innovation teams
8. Culture vs. Talent — The embryo and the womb
9. Creativity vs. Innovation — What’s the difference?
10. Use case: HP
All companies seek growth to return profits to stakeholders and remain in business. And there are really just three ways to achieve that growth:
Productivity gains and cost reductions can help you keep more of that growth, but they are no substitute for top-line growth.
In fact, McKinsey found that top-line growth is vital for survival. “Companies whose revenue increased more slowly than GDP were five times more likely to succumb in the next economic cycle, usually through acquisition, than a company that expanded more rapidly.” The problem is that the majority of most companies’ workforce is focused on continuous improvement (cost and process efficiency), not top-line growth.
Innovation is the process of finding and capturing new opportunities. It is concentrated in the first two growth drivers: tapping into an expanding market/ creating new markets; and expanding your share of the market. This article provides proven methods of organizing, leading, and hiring for innovation-driven growth.
“The problem is that the majority of most companies’ talent is focused on continuous improvement (cost or process efficiencies), not top-line growth.”
So we know that innovation drives top-line growth. But how can companies capture innovation to drive growth?
Companies need to pursue growth through a range of efforts. A great way to visualize this range is to picture four horizons, from closest to your core competencies and markets, to furthest away from them. Companies need to invest in all four innovation horizons to achieve balanced growth:
According to Harvard Business Review, most companies invest about 70 percent of their resources on Core Innovation (Incremental and Continuous Improvement), despite the fact that Core produces only 10 percent of their ROI. A whopping 90 percent of the ROI from innovation comes from Adjacent and Disruptive Innovation. Yet remember, the lion’s share of the workforce in large companies is focused on maintaining the Core! A new report on The State of Innovation found that 82.8% of large companies say they are at risk of disruption, but 78% of their portfolios are invested in incremental changes.
No wonder companies are being disrupted!
“A whopping 90 percent of the ROI from innovation comes from Adjacent and Disruptive Innovation. But the lion’s share of the workforce in large companies is focused on maintaining the Core.”
It is said that we are in the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Incredible technologies ‑ from block chain to biotech ‑ are set to transform how we do pretty much everything. The pace of change will not be linear. It will be exponential. At Swarm, we call this “the Innovation Age.”
But the way companies hire workers has not really changed that much since the First Industrial Revolution. Back in the early days of mass production, companies sought workers who were reliable, followed establish procedures, could tolerate a lot of repetition, strict oversight of their work, and were respectful of authority. These traits were highly prized because they led to lower machine down times and product defect rates. When making the transition from hand-made to machine-made goods, product consistency was highly prized, and it made total sense to hire workers with these traits.
Today, companies need to hire for very different skills. Individuals often find themselves members of several virtual, fluid teams distributed around the globe. Teams are not only cross-functional but multi-cultural. They have to problem-solve at high speed, with little to no guidance from the past. Teams need to rapidly build trust, learn quickly, and pivot often. Today companies need workers who can thrive in uncertainty, learn continuously, have a growth mindset, grit, the ability to synthesize from disparate sources, and constantly create the new.
Consider this: Until the year 1900, human knowledge used to double every century. The “internet of things” will lead to the doubling of knowledge every 12 hours. With knowledge changing this fast, we can’t just hire workers for their subject matter knowledge. We need workers who can create, share and leverage new knowledge at high speed. In the future, teams will not be measured by their production efficiency, but by their innovation output.
“In the future, teams will not be measured by their production efficiency, but by their innovation output.”
As you move further from your company’s core competencies and markets, to furthest away from them, you have to thrive in greater uncertainty. It follows that, the skills needed for core innovations are quite different from those needed for adjacent and transformational innovations.
In this innovation age, where a totally different kind of skillset is needed, my team asked a pretty interesting question: “Can we predict the business outcomes from innovation based on who is involved?” After several years of intensive international research, the team answered the question, with a resounding “Yes!”
It turns out that eight skill clusters are highly correlated with business results from innovation. Results such as profitability, hyper-growth, international or global expansion, top-quadrant analyst ratings, loyal, repeat customers, acquisition and IPO.
Here are the eight innovation skill clusters and their 26 components:
The Eight Essential Innovation Skills
Individuals with high Swarm scores tend to achieve 3 times the business results as those with low scores. We see the same kind of results from teams. And companies with a high mix of Adjacent and Disruptive innovators (based on Swarm scores), tend to experience much faster growth. In the example below, both companies are 75 years old, US-based and in the hardware business. In the slow-growing company, only 17 percent of their workforce sampled scores in the Horizon 2 or 3 range (Adjacent and Disruptive Innovation). At the fast-growing company, 38 percent of their workforce sampled scores in the Horizon 2 or 3 range.
Finding innovators with a high mix of the 8 skills is the first step to innovation success, and with Swarm, finding them has become easy. But it is also critical to understand how innovation teams are different, and how their leadership must also be profoundly different.
Thomas Igeme at LinkedIn nailed how innovation teams are different from ordinary teams:
Thomas says,
"Innovation teams need to be thought of differently, and the number of teams that can afford not to be innovation teams is dwindling."
Linda Hill at Harvard studied exceptional leaders of innovation—how they think, what they do, and who they are. Innovative organizations are not designed by accident, or to produce incremental results. But to be capable of innovating continually over time.
Linda describes five main differences between conventional teams and innovation teams:
Disagreement, trial and error, both-and thinking....these are delicate waters for leaders to navigate. What are the best rules of engagement for leading innovation teams?
Google’s Project Aristotle found that group norms trump individual characteristics when it comes to innovation team performance. They found that conversation turn-taking and psychological safety were the two characteristics that differentiated high-performing teams from the rest:
“The right norms, in other words, could raise a group’s collective intelligence, whereas the wrong norms could hobble a team, even if, individually, all the members were exceptionally bright.”
This all boils down to a ‘‘shared belief held by members of a team that the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking.' "What Project Aristotle has taught people within Google is that no one wants to put on a ’work face’ when they get to the office. No one wants to leave part of their personality and inner life at home. They want to bring their whole selves to work.”
“Google’s data indicated that psychological safety, more than anything else, was critical to making a team work.”
So it is clear that we need different skills on innovation teams, that innovation teams work very differently and must be led very differently. But how do you design high potential innovation teams, especially for Adjacent (H2) or Disruptive (H3) Innovation?
Think of each of the 8 Swarm innovation skills as a way of de-risking an innovation initiative and the team in charge of delivering on it:
The main principles of designing innovation teams are:
1. First define the innovation Horizon that the initiative belongs in, and using Swarm scores, match the team to the Horizon:
2. You also need the team to have coverage of all 8 Swarm skills, meaning at least one team member scores in the desired range on each of the 8 Swarm skills.
3. Obviously, you need the team to have diverse functional skills. For example, do you need people who can design, code, sell, and create financial models? The more diverse they are, the better – simply because this will help them consider many points of view before latching onto one.
4. Set a common purpose. As big and audacious one as makes sense for the mission. Discretionary effort is joyous, and is never inspired by an incremental goal.
5. The team needs to begin by setting the “group norms” that Google identified: conversational turn-taking and psychological safety. In this way, each person can contribute their full innovation and functional skills to the common purpose.
Here are some examples of two very different teams analyzed with Swarm data:
These two teams furthermore, have very different complementarity to the leader:
On Team 1, the leader is so much stronger than the rest of the team on Disrupt, Create and Control that the team may end up leaning too much on him or her.
On Team 3, the team is as strong or stronger than the leader on Think, Deliver, Control, Connect and Create.
So what matters more, the innovation talent (the embryo), or the culture it lives within (the womb)? The answer is both. One without the other is not sufficient.
Let’s say you have managed to hire a swath of true innovators (the talent). You have appointed great leaders steeped in the art of creating psychological safety. What can possibly go wrong?
As an innovation initiative at a company takes off, often, the larger organization goes into “organ rejection mode.” This is why CEO air cover is so critical, along with a sacrosanct budget for Adjacent and Disruptive Innovation.
When the larger organization feels threatened by innovation, they can use short term agendas to repel change, retreat into a silo mentality, and “slow walk” support for the innovation program until it dies. This is where structure and culture come into play.
Does this behavior look familiar?
The “parent” organization (the mothership) must be motivated to share resources with the “child” (the innovation team). The child must be free to challenge the parent. The parent must live on, regardless of the child’s success. How can this balance be achieved?
When companies attempt to pursue innovations that lie beyond their current products or markets to drive growth, what organizational and managerial structures do they use? What works, and what doesn’t?
HBR finds that first, successful companies pursue both "Exploitation" of existing core competencies, and "Exploration" of new territories. Second, they separate their new, exploratory units from their traditional, exploitative ones, allowing for different processes, structures, and cultures; at the same time, they maintain tight links across units at the senior executive level. In other words, they manage organizational separation through a tightly integrated senior team. These kinds of companies are called “ambidextrous organizations.”
There are four different ways companies tend to structure these efforts:
So which of the four org structures works best for innovation results?
“When it came to launching breakthrough products or services, HBR found that ambidextrous organizations were significantly more successful than the other three structures. While none of the cross-functional or unsupported teams and only a quarter of the functional designs produced real innovations, more than 90 percent of the ambidextrous organizations achieved their goals.”
What explains the success of ambidextrous org structures? “The structure of ambidextrous organizations allows cross-fertilization among units while preventing cross-contamination. The tight coordination at the managerial level enables the fledgling units to share important resources from the traditional units—cash, talent, expertise, customers, and so on—but the organizational separation ensures that the new units’ distinctive processes, structures, and cultures are not overwhelmed by the forces of “business as usual.” At the same time, the established units are shielded from the distractions of launching new businesses.”
“One of the most important lessons is that ambidextrous organizations need ambidextrous senior teams and managers—executives who have the ability to understand and be sensitive to the needs of very different kinds of businesses. Combining the attributes of rigorous cost cutters and free-thinking entrepreneurs while maintaining the objectivity required to make difficult trade-offs, such managers are a rare but essential breed.”
Yes. Swarm can be used to identify ambidextrous leaders and managers.
Finally, ambidextrous leaders must model, recognize and reward the 8 innovation skills, and advocate for them inside the mothership. This creates the innovation culture (the womb). The ambidextrous leader also keeps the innovators connected to the larger corporate strategy.
“More than 90% of the ambidextrous organizations achieved their goals.”
It is important to clarify that creativity is not the same thing as innovation skill. Sometimes the two terms seem to be used inter-changeably. Swarm research uncovered 8 innovation skills, only one of which is "Create."
At Swarm, we define innovation as a “novel solution that achieves commercial adoption.” It may include an invention. But it must go well beyond that to be considered innovation. It may include artful design or a unique brand identity, but it must solve a real human need that people will pay money for, as well.
So what is the role of creativity in innovation? Let’s contrast Artistic Ability (far left below) and Invention Ability (far right). Artistic Ability involves mastery of a craft (such as a visual or verbal art) and a drive for self-expression. While essential ingredients in Artistic Ability, craft and self-expression were not highly correlates with positive innovation business outcomes.
Similarly, an invention may involve technical ability and the scientific method, but that is not enough to produce a true innovation. Inside the Ven diagram are the unique dimensions of creativity that our research found highly correlated with business success in innovation: Novelty-seeking, Problem-solving, Uncommon connection and Growth mindset:
Artistic Ability Innovation Invention Ability
Artists and inventors may (or may not) also have the traits inside the overlapping part of the Ven diagram. But innovators need to have these Create skills. And as a team, they also need the other seven skills: Drive, Disrupt, Connect, Control, Think, Deliver and Give.
So far, we have talked about the role of innovation in driving top-line growth. We have covered the four horizons of innovation, and their contribution to growth. We’ve unveiled the 8 skills companies need to hire for in the innovation age, and some of the key ways innovation teams are different from conventional teams. We’ve touched on how leading innovation teams requires profoundly different approaches, and the most successful way to structure for innovation success. Finally, we distinguish between often-confused creativity and innovation talent.
How do real companies use this knowledge? HP is known as one of the founders of Silicon Valley. They are the world’s largest PC maker. But as PCs have become somewhat of a price-sensitive commodity, how did HP go about driving faster growth and profits?
HP hired a legendary innovator, Jon McCormack. Prior to HP, Jon led Google Advanced Projects, and before that, was CTO of Amazon Devices. Jon was brought in by HP to transform the PC experience through software.
Jon and I met at a small social event. When I told Jon that Swarm software identifies innovation talent to drive growth in large companies, his eyes opened wide. Jon had joined HP to lead a business into a completely new area and drive both growth and profit. He suspected the existing team needed additional skills, and so he was thrilled to find Swarm Vision. Jon moved quickly to use Swarm.
Here's what he did at HP:
Jon's Three-Step Plan to Transform His Workforce
The results? A much higher innovation output, AND (surprise) much higher employee engagement, in just six months.
What can we learn from a serial innovator like Jon?
If you're like a lot of innovation leaders, you look to Silicon Valley for inspiration on your journey. Swarm is a concrete, proven Silicon Valley tool that you can use at your company to accelerate your innovation success. So, what should you do now? Perhaps start by taking the Swarm Innovation Profiler yourself here, and sharing 15 free licenses with your colleagues.
Then go ahead, transform your organization for the innovation age by: