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Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Is Innovation Trial and Error?

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

In this composition we attempt to review and analyze the concepts Blue Ocean Strategy and Innovation. We look into the history of innovation, traditional theories, the development and the present state of the field in comparison with the systematic process Blue Ocean Strategy developed in 2005. By evaluating innovation and Blue Ocean Strategy as separate entities we hope to provide a comprehensive distinction in how the concepts are perceived. This would give us an in-depth understanding of the fundamental differences between traditional competition-based theories and the theories and methodologies of Blue Ocean Strategy.

 

In this section we provide the commonly used definitions and understandings of innovation, as well as its connection to the term entrepreneur. Peter Drucker, author and scholar, and Joseph Schumpeter, economist and political scientist, offer the most popular understandings of innovation and entrepreneur. The field of innovation is roughly fifty years old.

 

Drucker describes innovation as what entrepreneurs do - innovation represents the specific tool of entrepreneurs, the means by which they exploit change as an opportunity for a different business or difference service. Innovation involves, changing the value and satisfaction obtained from resources by the customer. More specifically, Drucker defines innovation as the specific instrument of entrepreneurship…the act that endows resources with a new capacity to create wealth. Entrepreneurs are described by Drucker as inviduals who create something new or different or “opportunity seekers.”

 

Schumpeter defines innovation as the introduction of new goods, new methods of production, the opening of new markets, the conquest of new sources of supply and the carrying out of a new organization of any industry. Schumpeter is also popularly known for his theory of “creative destruction.” Schumpeter described creative destruction as brought on by entrepreneurs who constantly overturn the economic status quo.

 

For reference purposes other popular definitions include, “the act of introducing something new” (American Heritage Dictionary) and “a new method or device” (Webster Online).

 

In this section of the composition we provide the definition and brief background of Blue Ocean Strategy. The terms included in this section will be explained further as comparable to innovation pertaining to sections. Blue Ocean Strategy is the systematic approach for making competition irrelevant by creating new marketspaces through the simultaneous achievement of differentiation and low cost. The three key conceptual building blocks of Blue Ocean Strategy are value innovation, tipping point leadership and fair process. Blue Ocean Strategy is the result of a decade-long study of 150 strategic moves spanning more than 30 industries over 100 years (1880-2000). The concepts of Blue Ocean Strategy were developed by INSEAD professors W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne and published in the form of a book by Harvard Business Press in 2005. 

 

This section compares and contrasts the fundamental difference between the traditional innovation belief that innovation is random, driven by an entrepreneur and Blue Ocean Strategy as a systematic approach that is patterned. Although there is a need for constant innovation it has often been viewed as random – an idea dependent upon genius. Schumpeter argues that innovation is a random process where entrepreneurs and spin-offs are the primary drivers.

 

In contrast, Blue Ocean Strategy offers systematic and reproducible methodologies and processes in pursuit of blue oceans by both new and existing firms. The Blue Ocean Strategy research gathered suggests that value innovation was found to be the underlying logic behind all successful moves studied and formed the cornerstone of Blue Ocean Strategy. Value Innovation focuses on making the competition irrelevant by creating a leap in value for buyers and the company, thereby opening up new and uncontested market space. Value Innovation places equal emphasis on value and innovation. Innovation without value tends to be technology driven, market pioneering, or futuristic. Value innovation only occurs when companies are able to align innovation with utility, price and cost position.

 

Traditionally, innovation has been viewed to be trial and error – learn from failure. Innovation theories, welcome failure. You have to be willing to take the risk – you need to pursue failure if you want to innovate and consequently succeed. The thought – opportunities and risks come together and you learn from failure. Blue Ocean Strategy does just the opposite. Blue Ocean Strategy minimizes risks while maximizes opportunity for highly profitable growth because it is a systematic process.

 

Leading us to the next section of our analysis – the belief innovation is the result of DNA or a corporate innovation culture. The belief that you have to hire innovative geniuses to come up with an idea. The American Heritage Dictionary acknowledges the term, intrapraneur, as a person within a large corporation who takes direct responsibility for turning an idea into a profitable finished product through assertive risk-taking and innovation. Intrapreneurship is now known as the practice of a corporate management style that integrates risk-taking and innovation approaches, as well as the reward and motivational techniques that are more traditionally thought of as being the province of entrepreneurship. Blue Ocean Strategy upends this traditional theory because it offers analytical frameworks that make up the systematic process. The tools and frameworks provided by authors Kim and Mauborgne include the strategy canvas, value curve, four actions framework, six paths, buyer experience cycle, buyer utility map and blue ocean idea index.

 

This section explores the belief that innovation relies on units of experimentation and the use of a subsystem approach. Companies experiment to find out what strategic approach works for them, rather than determining the appropriate structural condition in which to operate. In contrast, Blue Oceans Strategy emphasizes the systems strategic alignment as an integrated approach to strategy. Blue Ocean Strategy requires organizations to develop and align the three strategy propositions: value proposition, profit proposition and people proposition. Value proposition refers to the utility buyers receive from an offering minus the price they pay for it. Profit Proposition refers to the revenues an organization generates from an offering minus the cost to produce and deliver it. People Proposition refers to the positive motivations and incentives put in place for people needed to support and implement the strategy. By achieving strategy alignment companies eliminate units of experimentation. As a result, the right strategic approach for the company can be chosen.

 

In conclusion of this composition we attempted to create a comprehensive distinction between traditional innovation theories and Blue Ocean Strategy, Innovation has most popularly been viewed as a random experimental process driven by entrepreneurs, a trial and error process that accepts opportunities and risks come together and it must be within a corporate culture. While, Blue Ocean Strategy offers a systematic approach for making the competition irrelevant by creating uncontested marketspaces through the simultaneous achievement of differentiation and low cost.

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: How Is Business Like Fighting A War?

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

What are the common mistakes companies make when developing a business strategy?

 

Most companies lean towards capturing and redistributing wealth as opposed to creating it. In today’s business battle these companies may be fighting over the same old customer base without trying to create new customers. Its no coincidence the typical organizational chart is constructed parallel to the military chain of command.

 

Companies can learn from how the military approaches strategy.

 

Fighting head-on against rivals only results in a bloody red ocean of competition and a shrinking profit pool. A good strategy can help companies move beyond the same land war and annex new business from outside the existing battlefield.

 

Let’s consider some of the corresponding terminologies like “company headquarters” and “troops on the front line.” When described this way strategy focuses on confronting competition over a piece of land that is both fixed and constant. In business terms this fixed land refers to the existing market demand.

 

Typically, companies tend to battle over a defensible position against the competition by building advantages over them by assessing what competitors do and then striving to do it better.

 

It is essential to see your business and environment from a different perspective. As a result, you can approach your market in a different manger to create new demand instead of fighting over the same existing market demand.

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Smart Grid Development

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

The increase in energy demands, as well as the rising costs to provide and manage energy over the years has led to smart grid development around the world.

But, the high costs associated with smart grid development infrastructure and the various different technical standards around the world have created a competitive marketspace for the industry. As players strive to out-do their competitors they may want to consider Blue Ocean Strategy.

What is a smart grid?

Smart grids are used and promoted by many governments as a way of creating energy independence – particularly issues such as global warning and emergency resilience issues. Smart grids delivers electricity from suppliers to consumers using two-way digital technology to control appliances at consumers’ homes to save energy, reduce cost and increase reliability and transparency. Smart grids have an information and metering system which overlays electricity distribution grids to control the amount of energy used.

What is Blue Ocean Strategy?

Blue Ocean Strategy, developed by INSEAD professors W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne, is the proven system for making competition irrelevant by creating new market spaces through simultaneous achievement of differentiation and low cost. Instead of being locked in red oceans of fierce, bloody competition, you can apply Blue Ocean Strategy to move to clear waters of uncontested market space.

Electrical grids are an aggregate of multiple networks and multiple power generation companies. They require many operators employing varying levels of communication and coordination, most of which is manually controlled. Smart grids increase the connectivity, automation and coordination between these suppliers, consumers and networks that perform either long distance transmission or local distribution tasks.

This paradigm is changing as businesses and homes begin generating more wind and solar electricity, enabling them to sell surplus energy back to their utilities. Modernization is necessary for energy consumption efficiency, real time management of power flows and to provide the bi-directional metering needed to compensate local producers of power. Although transmission networks are already controlled in real time, many in the US and European countries are antiquated by world standards, and unable to handle modern challenges such as those posed by the intermittent nature of alternative electricity generation, or continental scale bulk energy transmission.

High costs.

What tends to happen in a technology-driven industry is that technology demands directly drive up costs. This is the particular case for smart grid development because of the different standards and technological requirements around the world. Here lies the potential Blue Ocean Strategy opportunity. The value should directly tie with a low cost structure.

Value innovation - the cornerstone of Blue Ocean Strategy.

Value innovation is the simultaneous pursuit of differentiation and low cost. It is called value innovation because instead of focusing on trying to beat the competition, you focus on making the competition irrelevant by creating a leap in value for buyers and your company, thereby opening up new and uncontested market space.

Value innovation places equal emphasis on value and innovation. Value without innovation tends to focus on value creation on an incremental scale and innovation without value tends to be technology-driven, often shooting beyond what buyers are ready to accept and pay for. If the focus is not on low cost the industry is sure to fall into fierce competition where competitors will move in and imitators reduce profit margins.

The different global standards.

The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) is responsible for mandating and monitoring North America metering standards .This body defines the physical form factor of socketed meters, the specifications for metrology and timing accuracy, and the appropriate performance and safety testing for meters. The European standards are defined by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and the Measuring Instrument Directive (MID). The differences between these standards do not affect the overall smart grid architecture, but they create requirements for different products in Europe and the U.S.

Communications standards. Most North American smart grid systems use a combination of TCP/IP addressing and communications to communicate with meters that use ANSI C12.18 and C12.22 communications. The European equivalent also uses TCP/IP—and this commonality creates a strong architectural commonality between North American and European solutions. The European meters, however, typically use IEC communications including the DLMS/COSEM suite of standards, so much of the head-end software and low-level communications components are different in the U.S. and Europe.

Radio emission standards. In North America, wireless mesh networks between electricity meters largely have won the day. This is partially because of the flexible regulations around use of public, unlicensed radio communications bands as regulated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). European regulations are somewhat different—communications in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz band are restricted to a lower power level and must use frequency- or channel-hopping technologies to be approved for use in the EU. This has delayed the introduction of wireless mesh technology into Europe, which is one reason PLC and digital cellular communications have been more popular. Recent pilots of wireless mesh technologies in the unlicensed 2.4 GHz band have shown promising results, so we expect an architectural convergence in the U.S. and Europe, even with the different radio emission standards.

The different global standards result in different technologies and infrastructure. This most likely will only lead to higher costs. The major smart metering hardware sellers and makers of software like Echelon, General Electric, Itron, IBM, Cisco and Honewell entering the market have an ample Blue Ocean Strategy opportunity.

One United States Department of Energy study calculated that internal modernization of US grids with smart grid capabilities would save between 46 and 117 billion dollars over the next 20 years. In 2009, the smart grid industry was valued at about $21.4 billion — by 2014, it will exceed at least $42.8 billion. Given the success of the smart grid’s in the U.S., the world market is expected to grow at a faster rate, surging from $69.3 billion in 2009 to $171.4 billion by 2014.

Furthermore, the push for smart grid development would increase GDP by creating more new, green-collar energy jobs related to renewable energy industry manufacturing, plug-in electric vehicles, solar panel and wind turbine generation, energy conservation construction.

The increase in energy demands, as well as the rising costs to provide and manage energy over the years has led to smart grid development around the world.

As the charge for global smart grid development ameliorates as do the high costs associated with smart grid development infrastructure and the various different technical standards around the world. As a result, these challenges have created a competitive marketspace for the industry. But, as companies strive to out-do their competitors they should consider how Blue Ocean Strategy can address global smart grid concerns.

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: How America Can Create Jobs

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

Article by Andy Grove via Business Week

 

The former Intel chief says “job-centric” leadership and incentives are needed to expand U.S. domestic employment again

Recently an acquaintance at the next table in a Palo Alto (Calif.) restaurant introduced me to his companions, three young venture capitalists from China. They explained, with visible excitement, that they were touring promising companies in Silicon Valley. I’ve lived in the Valley a long time, and usually when I see how the region has become such a draw for global investments, I feel a little proud.

Not this time. I left the restaurant unsettled. Something did not add up. Bay Area unemployment is even higher than the 9.7 percent national average. Clearly, the great Silicon Valley innovation machine hasn’t been creating many jobs of late—unless you’re counting Asia, where American tech companies have been adding jobs like mad for years.

The underlying problem isn’t simply lower Asian costs. It’s our own misplaced faith in the power of startups to create U.S. jobs. Americans love the idea of the guys in the garage inventing something that changes the world. New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman recently encapsulated this view in a piece called “Start-Ups, Not Bailouts.” His argument: Let tired old companies that do commodity manufacturing die if they have to. If Washington really wants to create jobs, he wrote, it should back startups.

Friedman is wrong. Startups are a wonderful thing, but they cannot by themselves increase tech employment. Equally important is what comes after that mythical moment of creation in the garage, as technology goes from prototype to mass production. This is the phase where companies scale up. They work out design details, figure out how to make things affordably, build factories, and hire people by the thousands. Scaling is hard work but necessary to make innovation matter.

The scaling process is no longer happening in the U.S. And as long as that’s the case, plowing capital into young companies that build their factories elsewhere will continue to yield a bad return in terms of American jobs.

What Went Wrong?

Scaling used to work well in Silicon Valley. Entrepreneurs came up with an invention. Investors gave them money to build their business. If the founders and their investors were lucky, the company grew and had an initial public offering, which brought in money that financed further growth.

I am fortunate to have lived through one such example. In 1968 two well-known technologists and their investor friends anted up $3 million to start Intel (INTC), making memory chips for the computer industry. From the beginning we had to figure out how to make our chips in volume. We had to build factories, hire, train, and retain employees, establish relationships with suppliers, and sort out a million other things before Intel could become a billion-dollar company. Three years later the company went public and grew to be one of the biggest technology companies in the world. By 1980, 10 years after our IPO, about 13,000 people worked for Intel in the U.S.

Not far from Intel’s headquarters in Santa Clara, Calif., other companies developed. Tandem Computers went through a similar process, then Sun Microsystems, Cisco (CSCO), Netscape, and on and on. Some companies died along the way or were absorbed by others, but each survivor added to the complex technological ecosystem that came to be called Silicon Valley.

As time passed, wages and health-care costs rose in the U.S. China opened up. American companies discovered that they could have their manufacturing and even their engineering done more cheaply overseas. When they did so, margins improved. Management was happy, and so were stockholders. Growth continued, even more profitably. But the job machine began sputtering.

The 10X Factor

Today, manufacturing employment in the U.S. computer industry is about 166,000, lower than it was before the first PC, the MITS Altair 2800, was assembled in 1975). Meanwhile, a very effective computer manufacturing industry has emerged in Asia, employing about 1.5 million workers—factory employees, engineers, and managers. The largest of these companies is Hon Hai Precision Industry, also known as Foxconn. The company has grown at an astounding rate, first in Taiwan and later in China. Its revenues last year were $62 billion, larger than Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Dell (DELL), or Intel. Foxconn employs over 800,000 people, more than the combined worldwide head count of Apple, Dell, Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Intel, and Sony (SNE).

Until a recent spate of suicides at Foxconn’s giant factory complex in Shenzhen, China, few Americans had heard of the company. But most know the products it makes: computers for Dell and HP, Nokia (NOK) cell phones, Microsoft Xbox 360 consoles, Intel motherboards, and countless other familiar gadgets. Some 250,000 Foxconn employees in southern China produce Apple’s products. Apple, meanwhile, has about 25,000 employees in the U.S. That means for every Apple worker in the U.S. there are 10 people in China working on iMacs, iPods, and iPhones. The same roughly 10-to-1 relationship holds for Dell, disk-drive maker Seagate Technology (STX), and other U.S. tech companies.

You could say, as many do, that shipping jobs overseas is no big deal because the high-value work—and much of the profits—remain in the U.S. That may well be so. But what kind of a society are we going to have if it consists of highly paid people doing high-value-added work—and masses of unemployed?

Since the early days of Silicon Valley, the money invested in companies has increased dramatically, only to produce fewer jobs. Simply put, the U.S. has become wildly inefficient at creating American tech jobs. We may be less aware of this growing inefficiency, however, because our history of creating jobs over the past few decades has been spectacular—masking our greater and greater spending to create each position. Should we wait and not act on the basis of early indicators? I think that would be a tragic mistake, because the only chance we have to reverse the deterioration is if we act early and decisively.

Already the decline has been marked. It may be measured by way of a simple calculation—an estimate of the employment cost-effectiveness of a company. First, take the initial investment plus the investment during a company’s IPO. Then divide that by the number of employees working in that company 10 years later. For Intel this worked out to be about $650 per job—$3,600 adjusted for inflation. National Semiconductor (NSM), another chip company, was even more efficient at $2,000 per job. Making the same calculations for a number of Silicon Valley companies shows that the cost of creating U.S. jobs grew from a few thousand dollars per position in the early years to a hundred thousand dollars today. The obvious reason: Companies simply hire fewer employees as more work is done by outside contractors, usually in Asia.

The job machine breakdown isn’t just in computers. Consider alternative energy, an emerging industry where there’s plenty of innovation. Photovoltaics, for example, are a U.S. invention. Their use in home energy applications was also pioneered by the U.S. Last year, I decided to do my bit for energy conservation and set out to equip my house with solar power. My wife and I talked with four local solar firms. As part of our due diligence, I checked where they get their photovoltaic panels—the key part of the system. All the panels they use come from China. A Silicon Valley company sells equipment used to manufacture photo-active films. They ship close to 10 times more machines to China than to manufacturers in the U.S., and this gap is growing. Not surprisingly, U.S. employment in the making of photovoltaic films and panels is perhaps 10,000—just a few percent of estimated worldwide employment.

There’s more at stake than exported jobs. With some technologies, both scaling and innovation take place overseas.

Such is the case with advanced batteries. It has taken years and many false starts, but finally we are about to witness mass-produced electric cars and trucks. They all rely on lithium-ion batteries. What microprocessors are to computing, batteries are to electric vehicles. Unlike with microprocessors, the U.S. share of lithium-ion battery production is tiny.

That’s a problem. A new industry needs an effective ecosystem in which technology knowhow accumulates, experience builds on experience, and close relationships develop between supplier and customer. The U.S. lost its lead in batteries 30 years ago when it stopped making consumer electronics devices. Whoever made batteries then gained the exposure and relationships needed to learn to supply batteries for the more demanding laptop PC market, and after that, for the even more demanding automobile market. U.S. companies did not participate in the first phase and consequently were not in the running for all that followed. I doubt they will ever catch up.

The Key to Job Creation

Scaling isn’t easy. The investments required are much higher than in the invention phase. And funds need to be committed early, when not much is known about the potential market. Another example from Intel: The investment to build a silicon manufacturing plant in the ’70s was a few million dollars. By the early ’90s the cost of the factories that would be able to produce the new Pentium chips in volume rose to several billion dollars. The decision to build these plants needed to be made years before we knew whether the Pentium chip would work or whether the market would be interested in it.

Lessons we learned from previous missteps helped us. Some years earlier, when Intel’s business consisted of making memory chips, we hesitated to add manufacturing capacity, not being all that sure about the market demand in years to come. Our Japanese competitors didn’t hesitate: They built the plants. When the demand for memory chips exploded, the Japanese roared into the U.S. market and Intel began its descent as a memory chip supplier. Despite being steeled by that experience, I still remember how afraid I was as I asked the Intel directors for authorization to spend billions of dollars for factories to produce a product that did not exist at the time for a market we could not size. Fortunately, they gave their O.K. even as they gulped. The bet paid off.

My point isn’t that Intel was brilliant. The company was founded at a time when it was easier to scale domestically. For one thing, China wasn’t yet open for business. More importantly, the U.S. had not yet forgotten that scaling was crucial to its economic future.

How could the U.S. have forgotten? I believe the answer has to do with a general undervaluing of manufacturing—the idea that as long as “knowledge work” stays in the U.S., it doesn’t matter what happens to factory jobs. It’s not just newspaper commentators who spread this idea. Consider this passage by Princeton University economist Alan S. Blinder: “The TV manufacturing industry really started here, and at one point employed many workers. But as TV sets became ‘just a commodity,’ their production moved offshore to locations with much lower wages. And nowadays the number of television sets manufactured in the U.S. is zero. A failure? No, a success.”

I disagree. Not only did we lose an untold number of jobs, we broke the chain of experience that is so important in technological evolution. As happened with batteries, abandoning today’s “commodity” manufacturing can lock you out of tomorrow’s emerging industry.

Wanted: Job-Centric Economics

Our fundamental economic beliefs, which we have elevated from a conviction based on observation to an unquestioned truism, is that the free market is the best of all economic systems—the freer the better. Our generation has seen the decisive victory of free-market principles over planned economies. So we stick with this belief, largely oblivious to emerging evidence that while free markets beat planned economies, there may be room for a modification that is even better.

Such evidence stares at us from the performance of several Asian countries in the past few decades. These countries seem to understand that job creation must be the No. 1 objective of state economic policy. The government plays a strategic role in setting the priorities and arraying the forces and organization necessary to achieve this goal. The rapid development of the Asian economies provides numerous illustrations. In a thorough study of the industrial development of East Asia, Robert Wade of the London School of Economics found that these economies turned in precedent-shattering economic performances over the ’70s and ’80s in large part because of the effective involvement of the government in targeting the growth of manufacturing industries.

Consider the “Golden Projects,” a series of digital initiatives driven by the Chinese government in the late 1980s and 1990s. Beijing was convinced of the importance of electronic networks—used for transactions, communications, and coordination—in enabling job creation, particularly in the less developed parts of the country. Consequently, the Golden Projects enjoyed priority funding. In time they contributed to the rapid development of China’s information infrastructure and the country’s economic growth.

How do we turn such Asian experience into intelligent action here and now? Long term, we need a job-centric economic theory—and job-centric political leadership—to guide our plans and actions. In the meantime, consider some basic thoughts from a onetime factory guy.

Silicon Valley is a community with a strong tradition of engineering, and engineers are a peculiar breed. They are eager to solve whatever problems they encounter. If profit margins are the problem, we go to work on margins, with exquisite focus. Each company, ruggedly individualistic, does its best to expand efficiently and improve its own profitability. However, our pursuit of our individual businesses, which often involves transferring manufacturing and a great deal of engineering out of the country, has hindered our ability to bring innovations to scale at home. Without scaling, we don’t just lose jobs—we lose our hold on new technologies. Losing the ability to scale will ultimately damage our capacity to innovate.

The story comes to mind of an engineer who was to be executed by guillotine. The guillotine was stuck, and custom required that if the blade didn’t drop, the condemned man was set free. Before this could happen, the engineer pointed with excitement to a rusty pulley, and told the executioner to apply some oil there. Off went his head.

We got to our current state as a consequence of many of us taking actions focused on our own companies’ next milestones. An example: Five years ago a friend joined a large VC firm as a partner. His responsibility was to make sure that all the startups they funded had a “China strategy,” meaning a plan to move what jobs they could to China. He was going around with an oil can, applying drops to the guillotine in case it was stuck. We should put away our oil cans. VCs should have a partner in charge of every startup’s “U.S. strategy.”

The first task is to rebuild our industrial commons. We should develop a system of financial incentives: Levy an extra tax on the product of offshored labor. (If the result is a trade war, treat it like other wars—fight to win.) Keep that money separate. Deposit it in the coffers of what we might call the Scaling Bank of the U.S. and make these sums available to companies that will scale their American operations. Such a system would be a daily reminder that while pursuing our company goals, all of us in business have a responsibility to maintain the industrial base on which we depend and the society whose adaptability—and stability—we may have taken for granted.

I fled Hungary as a young man in 1956 to come to the U.S. Growing up in the Soviet bloc, I witnessed first-hand the perils of both government overreach and a stratified population. Most Americans probably aren’t aware that there was a time in this country when tanks and cavalry were massed on Pennsylvania Avenue to chase away the unemployed. It was 1932; thousands of jobless veterans were demonstrating outside the White House. Soldiers with fixed bayonets and live ammunition moved in on them, and herded them away from the White House. In America! Unemployment is corrosive. If what I’m suggesting sounds protectionist, so be it.

Every day, that Palo Alto restaurant where I met the Chinese venture capitalists is full of technology executives and entrepreneurs. Many of them are my friends. I understand the technological challenges they face, along with the financial pressure they’re under from directors and shareholders. Can we expect them to take on yet another assignment, to work on behalf of a loosely defined community of companies, employees, and employees yet to be hired? To do so is undoubtedly naïve. Yet the imperative for change is real and the choice is simple. If we want to remain a leading economy, we change on our own, or change will continue to be forced upon us.

 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: BYD Dreams of Electric Cars

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Image by Google

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

China-based BYD wants to be the first to deliver a mass-produced, electric-powered, plug-in vehicle. It might just do it, too.

 

For years, industry watchers have been betting on which company would produce the first reliable, plug-in, electric-powered car. Most experts assumed it would be whichever auto manufacturer first developed a battery powerful enough to run its cars. Would it be General Motors and its Chevy Volt? Or maybe Tesla Motors’ Model S?

 

As it turns out, the pundits may have gotten things backwards. If all goes according to plan, battery-maker BYD could be the first company to deliver a mass-produced, electric-powered, plug-in vehicle, ahead of Detroit, Stuttgart, or Tokyo.

 

If you don’t know the company, open the back of your mobile phone. Chances are the battery powering the device was produced by BYD, a 15-year-old company based in Shenzhen, China. Today, BYD is the leading supplier of batteries to Nokia (NOK), Samsung, and Motorola (MOT). Now it wants to be the leading supplier of power plants for a family of sedans, subcompacts, and sports coupes that will bear its name. Already BYD has attracted quite a following. Among those interested in the company: Warren Buffett, who plunked down more than $200 million to buy 10 percent of BYD in 2008.

 

Why would BYD be interested in the auto industry? Opportunity. The market for cars is on the cusp of an immense transition—from gas guzzlers to fuel-efficient and environmentally friendly vehicles. BYD senses a once-in-a-lifetime chance to shake up the established world order. Company leaders believe that newcomers have as good a shot at capturing the market as the incumbents. And what an opportunity it could be: According to various estimates, the worldwide market for electric vehicles could be as large as 10 million cars per year by 2016. That’s more than 12 percent of the global market for automobiles. “It’s almost hopeless for a latecomer like us to compete with GM and other established automakers with a century of experience in gasoline engines,” says BYD’s ambitious founder and chairman, Wang Chuanfu. “With electric vehicles, we’re all at the same starting line.”

 

An Especially Difficult Leap

 

To get to that starting line, Wang had to embrace a completely new business model to complement its existing model, something nearly impossible for most companies. To make the leap from invisible components to branded products, BYD had to develop a new workforce, create a consumer brand, ramp up government relations to engage national safety commissions, and create an entirely new supply chain. Any one of these can bury a company looking to augment its business model. And for good reason: These are extremely difficult challenges to overcome, all the more so in mature industries.

 

Despite the difficulty, some companies persevere. They do so because they believe new business models are the key to enormous value in the form of access to new markets, customers, investment capital, and profits. Take Disney (DIS): Within the Magic Kingdom are theme parks, television networks, cruise ships, merchandising operations, and film studios, among other interests. Although they have different financial models, success metrics, and fundamentals, they nonetheless provide Disney an unrivaled footprint in entertainment.

 

Most companies never achieve anything close to this level of diversification. But even big companies with broad portfolios need to remain attuned to the importance of business model innovation. Multiple business models provide a company a buffer against downturns in any one sector and an extra lift when times are good. They provide entry into adjacent markets and thus expand a company’s opportunity and preserve its longevity should one of its revenue streams come under threat from increased competition, regulatory changes, or even internal challenges.

Article by Business Week

 

 

 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Entrepreneurs with 35,000 Ideas for BP

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

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Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

BP has received almost 35,000 ideas in just over a month on how best to clean up the millions of gallons of oil from the biggest spill in U.S. history. So far, only four have made it into testing.

 

That has left people such as Ken Griffin and James Reindl frustrated. Both run companies that specialize in oil cleanup products they say are more efficient and less toxic than what’s in use in the Gulf. They contacted BP through its online suggestion box to offer help. Griffin on May 29 received a form letter saying his product is being considered, a month after he submitted it. Reindl has heard nothing, he said. “We think we have something to contribute,” Griffin said. “It’s just not at all clear what the chain of command is down there.”

 

The proposals face a grueling—some say sclerotic—vetting, called the Alternative Response Technology Triage Process. The suggestions gathered through phone calls and the website, run jointly by BP and the U.S. government, are fielded by 70 workers. The most promising are then reviewed by 43 engineers from BP, the U.S. Coast Guard, and other U.S. agencies, according to Graham MacEwen, a BP spokesman.

 

If the ideas—which range from soaking up oil with human hair to enlisting oil-eating microbes—are seen as practical and don’t overlap with proposals already being explored, they’re sent to smaller teams of engineers to see if they can be applied, MacEwen said. About 800 proposals have made it to this stage, with just one-half of 1 percent of those in testing, he said. Most are duplicative or infeasible, MacEwen said.

 

Reindl is co-owner of Ecser Holding, maker of a devulcanized-rubber product called Spill-Cure that can absorb up to eight times its weight in petroleum products, he said. Reindl understands it’s tough sorting through so many suggestions. “Still,” he said, “it’s frustrating for a group like us. It’s like, ‘Guys, we’re right here.’ ” Griffin’s company, Impact Services, makes Pristine Sea, a clay-based product that binds crude into soft clumps that can be skimmed from the water. The company says it has been tested in the Baltic Sea, and Louisiana State University is currently testing Pristine Sea on samples from the Gulf spill. “When things like the spill happen, everybody comes out of the woodwork with their own brand of magic dust, but often it hasn’t been tested,” says Greg Broda, executive vice-president at Impact Services. “We have a viable, tested, nontoxic product, and we’re having a problem getting anyone to listen to us.”

 

One of the few ideas already in testing is centrifuge technology developed by actor Kevin Costner and his scientist brother Dan. The Costners didn’t go through the technology triage process. They had help from Billy Nungesser, president of Plaquemines Parish, a district in Louisiana. Nungesser sent a letter on Costner’s behalf to Doug Suttles, BP chief operating officer for exploration and production.

Director James Cameron, whose film Titanic gave him experience with the use of underwater remote vehicles, was invited to the Environmental Protection Agency with a group of scientists June 1 to discuss possible solutions. Even with help, Costner’s firm has met with delays, and open-water testing won’t start until this week.

 

The bottom line: Ideas on how to clean up the Gulf spill have been flooding in. But few have made it into actual testing, frustrating entrepreneurs.

Article Business Week

 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Trying to Reinvent the Wheel

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Stop Trying to Reinvent the Wheel

Image by Business Week

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

“Not Invented Here” is a common organizational attitude that wastes a lot of time.

 

Right now, in meetings at corporations around the world, the wise are suffering. They are trapped in rooms where debate rages over how to solve a problem. The rub is that the problem has already been solved, just not by someone in the room—and solutions from outside are ignored. This is the disease known as “NIH,” or “Not Invented Here” syndrome, and it’s alive and well in 2010. Despite our many technological advancements in communication, none have eliminated this perennial waste of time. Why is this problem so hard to shake? Will we always be confronted with people who insist on reinventing wheels?

 

The key reason people look to reinvent things is that they don’t know what’s already been done. Ignorance, one way or another, is the leading cause of wasted effort everywhere. People who don’t spend time studying the problems they’re trying to solve are bound to reinvent something, and likely not nearly as well. There are only so many ways to design a website, a marketing campaign, or even a product strategy. Instead of driving minions into further brainstorming sessions, it would be wise to ask: Who else has tried to solve this problem? Can we learn from what they have done?

 

The second reason for reinvention pertains to ego and rewards. In many corporations there is more prestige to be gained for making something new than for reusing work done elsewhere in the company or industry. This is true even when the newly made thing is much worse that what already existed. An executive might proclaim the wonders of the new (worse) thing to his division without encountering anyone willing to stand up for the old (better) thing. It’s harder to inflate the importance of one’s own work if the key decision was to buy or borrow from elsewhere. The verbs “make,” “invent,” and “create” lead to more promotions than “reuse,” “borrow,” or “convert.” In Pavlovian terms, if a culture rewards unnecessary reinvention more than it honors wise reuse, the ambitious will follow suit. Asking people to behave one way while rewarding them for another has predictable results. The counter notion to NIH—”PFE,” or “Proudly Found Elsewhere”—has been talked about before, but I’ve rarely seen it thrive.

 

Even worse: “Never Anything New”

 

Some say that patent laws drive many to reinvent, but this is a cop-out. Anyone who has read a few patents knows that they are limited to very specific kinds of ideas. But the fundamentals of web design, product development, and team organization are problems that managers reinvent all the time. The solutions are well-explained on shelf after shelf at any bookstore. There are dozens of e-mail applications, cell phones, and department stores; it’s a reasonable bet that few of the things that make them good or bad are protected by patents. A wise competitor can study, learn, and apply those lessons without resorting to theft or copying.

 

Then, too, some organizations are plagued by NAN—”Never Anything New.” This is arguably worse than “NIH.” At least with the latter, there’s a chance of something better happening, however slim. For organizations stuck with NAN, there’s no chance for progress. If just one of your competitors learns from your best ideas, they’ll leave you in the dust.

 

Recently, the word “curation” has been rising in popularity, driven by the growing recognition that the way in which things are combined can transform the ordinary into the superior. Most people don’t think at the level of curation, and as a result obsess about minute details that are irrelevant to the goals—especially if those details are the only things for which they are responsible. If you put a sack of groceries in the hands of a talented chef, you’ll get a great meal. If you put the same sack in front of NIH-loving middle managers, they’ll insist on inventing their own vegetables.

 

Good leaders, like good designers or good curators, recognize the rare skill of combining things together well. They hire, lead, and reward with that in mind. There’s a time to reinvent and a time to reuse, and the best minds know that both approaches have their place.

Article by Business Week

 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: 100 Awesome Quotes on What it Really Takes to Innovate

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

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1. “I want to put a ding in the universe.” - Steve Jobs

2. “Ideas won’t keep. Something must be done about them.” - Alfred North Whitehead

3. “Intuition will tell the thinking mind where to look next.” - Jonas Salk

4. “If you have always done it that way, it is probably wrong.” - Charles Kettering

5. “If you can dream it, you can do it.” - Walt Disney

6. “Security is mostly a superstition. Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.” - Helen Keller

7. “You can’t solve a problem on the same level that it was created. You have to rise above it to the next level.” - Albert Einstein

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8. “Do not fear mistakes. There are none.” - Miles Davis

9. “The creation of something new is not accomplished by the intellect, but by the play instinct arising from inner necessity. The creative mind plays with the object it loves.” - Carl Jung

10. “There is only one thing stronger than all the armies of the world: and that is an idea whose time has come.” - Victor Hugo

11. “If you lose the power to laugh, you lose the power to think.”
- Clarence Darrow

12. “Ideas are like rabbits. You get a couple and learn how to handle them, and pretty soon you have a dozen.” - John Steinbeck

13. “To accomplish great things we must dream as well as act.” - Anatole France

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14. “It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas.”
- Charles Peguy

15. “There’s no good idea that cannot be improved on.” - Michael Eisner

16. “We don’t see things as they are, we see things as we are.” - Anais Nin

17. “We don’t know a millionth of one percent about anything.”
- Thomas Edison

18. “The best vision is insight.” - Malcolm Forbes

19. “Genius is infinite painstaking.” - Michelangelo

20. “Nothing will change the fact that I cannot produce the least thing without absolute solitude.” - Goethe

21. “Neither a lofty degree of intelligence, nor imagination, nor both together, go to the making of genius. Love, Love, Love. That is the soul of genius.” - Mozart

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22. “Swipe from the best, then adapt.” - Tom Peters

23. “Give me the young man who has brains enough to make a fool of himself.” - Robert Louis Stevenson

24. “You can expect no influence if you are not susceptible to influence.” - Carl Jung

25. “Whether or not you can observe a thing depends upon the theory you use. It is the theory which decides what can be observed.” - Albert Einstein

26. “Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.” - Goethe

27. “Sit, walk, or run, but don’t wobble.” - Zen proverb

28. “The greater the contrast, the greater the potential. Great energy only comes from a correspondingly great tension of opposites.” - Carl Jung

29. “We don’t know who discovered water, but we’re certain it wasn’t a fish.” - John Culkin

30. “I will act as if what I do will make a difference.” - William James

31. “There is no such thing as a long piece of work, except one that you dare not start.” - Charles Baudelaire

32. “What is now proved was once only imagined.” - William Blake

33. “Remember, a dead fish can float down a stream, but it takes a live one to swim upstream.” - W.C. Fields

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34. “99 percent of success is built on failure.” - Charles Kettering

35. “If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.” - Abraham Maslow

36. “Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts.” - Albert Einstein

37. “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.” - F. Scott Fitzgerald

38. “The ultimate creative thinking technique is to think like God. If you’re an atheist, pretend how God would do it.” - Frank Lloyd Wright

39. “I start where the last man left off.” - Thomas Edison

40. “Never confuse motion with action.” - Ernest Hemingway

41. “The greatest invention in the world is the mind of a child.” - Thomas Edison

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42. “No matter how well you perform, there’s always somebody of intelligent opinion who thinks it’s lousy.” - Sir Laurence Olivier

43. “You must do the thing you think you cannot do.” - Eleanor Roosevelt

44. “I’ll play it first and tell you what it is later.” - Miles Davis

45. “The way to get good ideas is to get lots of ideas and throw the bad ones away.” - Linus Pauling

46. “Discovery is seeing what everybody else has seen, and thinking what nobody else has thought.” - Albert Szent-Gyorgi

47. “A pile of rocks ceases to be a rock pile when somebody contemplates it with the idea of a cathedral in mind.”- Antoine Saint-Exupery

48. “Without a deadline, baby, I wouldn’t do nothing.” - Duke Ellington

49. “You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.” - Wayne Gretzky

50. “In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities; in the expert’s mind there are few.” - Shunryu Suzuki

51. “Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.” - General George Patton

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52. “The man with a new idea is a crank - until the idea succeeds.” - Mark Twain

53. “A problem well stated is a problem half solved.” - Charles Kettering

54. “The best thinking has been done in solitude. The worst has been done in turmoil.” - Thomas Edison

55. “Don’t be afraid to take a big step when one is indicated. You can’t cross a chasm in two small jumps.” - David Lloyd George

56. “The silly question is the first intimation of some totally new development.” - Alfred North Whitehead

57. “A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labor and there is an invisible labor.” - Victor Hugo

58. “Money never starts an idea; it is the idea that starts the money.” - William J. Cameron

59. “Systems die; instincts remain.” - Oliver Wendell Holmes

60. “You will never find the time for anything. If you want time, you must make it.” - Charles Burton

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61. “Whenever anything is being accomplished, it is being done, I have learned, by a monomaniac with a mission.” - Peter Drucker

62. “One of the illusions of life is that the present hour is not the critical, decisive one.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

63. “The lightning spark of thought generated in the solitary mind awakens its likeness in another mind.” - Thomas Carlyle

64. “I failed my way to success.” - Thomas Edison

65. “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” - Margaret Mead

66. “The way to succeed is to double your failure rate.” - Thomas Watson, (Founder of IBM)

67. “Innovation opportunities do not come with the tempest but with the rustling of the breeze.” - Peter Drucker

68. “The enterprise that does not innovate ages and declines. And in a period of rapid change such as the present…the decline will be fast.” - Peter Drucker

69. “You can only be as good as you dare to be bad.” - John Barrymore

70. “No idea is so outlandish that it should not be considered.”
- Winston Churchill

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71. “Conclusions arrived at through reasoning have very little or no influence in altering the course of our lives.” - Carlos Casteneda

72. “After years of telling corporate citizens to ‘trust the system,’ many companies must relearn instead to trust their people - and encourage their people to use neglected creative capacities in order to tap the most potent economic stimulus of all: idea power.” - Rosabeth Moss Kanter

73. “If the creator has a purpose in equipping us with a neck, he surely would have meant for us to stick it out.” - Arthur Koestler

74. “If you do not express your own original ideas, if you do not listen to your own being, you will have betrayed yourself.” - Rollo May

75. “Nothing is more dangerous than an idea when it is the only one you have.” - Emile Chartier

76. “There’s always an element of chance and you must be willing to live with that element. If you insist on certainty, you will paralyze yourself.” - J.P. Getty

77. “Almost all really new ideas have a certain aspect of foolishness when they are just produced.” - A.N. Whitehead

78. “Our best ideas come from clerks and stockboys.” - Sam Walton

79. “The gift of fantasy has meant more to me than my talent for absorbing positive knowledge.” - Albert Einstein

80. “Every act of creation is, first of all, an act of destruction.” - Pablo Picasso

81. “Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.” - Groucho Marx

82. “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” - Albert Einstein

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83. “Genius, in truth, means little more than the faculty of perceiving in an unhabitual way.” - William James

84. “Vision is the art of seeing things invisible.” - Jonathan Swift

85. “The best way to predict the future is to create it.” - Alan Kay

86. “If you go to your grave without painting your masterpiece, it will not get painted. No one else can paint it.” - Gordon MacKenzie

87. “Taking a new step, uttering a new word, is what people fear most.” - Fyodor Dostoevsky

88. “There is a vitality, a life force, that is translated to you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium, and will be lost.” - Martha Graham

89. “We have approximately 60,000 thoughts in a day. Unfortunately, 95% of them are thoughts we had the day before.” - Deepak Chopra

90. “Confusion is a word we have invented for an order that is not yet understood.” - Henry Miller

91. “I refuse to be intimidated by reality anymore. What is reality? Nothing but a collective hunch.” - Lily Tomlin

92. “Now that we have met with paradox we have some hope of making progress.” - Niels Bohr

93. “Microsoft is always two years away from failure.” - Bill Gates

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94. “We’ve reached the end of incrementalism. Only those companies that are capable of creating industry revolutions will prosper in the new economy. - Gary Hamel

95. “If I have a thousand ideas and only one turns out to be good, I am satisfied.” - Alfred Noble

96. “I’ve been doing a lot of abstract painting lately, extremely abstract. No brush, no paint, no canvas, I just think about it.” - Steven Wright

97. “You can’t just ask customers what they want and then try to give that to them. By the time you get it built, they’ll want something new.” - Steve Jobs

98. “I am looking for a lot of people who have an infinite capacity to not know what can’t be done.” - Henry Ford

99. “You can have brilliant ideas, but if you can’t get them across, your ideas won’t get you anywhere.” - Lee Iacocca

100. “I can’t understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I’m frightened of the old ones.” - John Cage

Article by Alltop

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: Innovator Marthin De Beer

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

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Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

Article by Business Week

 

Cisco “telepresence” chief Marthin De Beer is trying to build seven more billion-dollar business units

Back in 2006, Cisco Systems (CSCO) CEO John Chambers asked Marthin De Beer to give up a successful 1,500-person business making office phones and start a two-person Emerging Technologies Group. The South African native at first felt deflated. He shouldn’t have. Though Cisco was buying startups left and right, it hadn’t developed a sizeable new business on its own since its original Internet router business in the 1980s and 1990s. Chambers wanted De Beer to rekindle the company’s ability to create innovations from scratch.

 

De Beer’s first in-house technology initiative, Cisco’s videoconferencing business, is on pace to bring in $175 million in sales a year. That revenue came from high-end “telepresence” systems that make you feel as if you’re in the room with people wherever they may be—a far cry from the low-res, hard-to-use videoconferencing gear that had given the industry a bad name for decades. “Cisco has elevated the world’s awareness of videoconferencing,” says Wainhouse Research analyst Andrew Davis.

 

Soon after he agreed to take the job, De Beer recruited a team of video experts and told them to spare no expense to create a high-def, low-pain experience. To maintain a startup-like zeal, he kept the project sequestered from Cisco’s engineering and sales bureaucracies, but took advantage of the company’s promotional muscle. Telepresence showed up as a product placement in TV shows such as 24.

 

Building on De Beer’s work, Cisco spent $3.2 billion to acquire Norwegian videoconferencing market leader Tandberg, which had $900 million in revenue last year. Now, De Beer dreams of making videoconferencing as widely available as e-mail. By Christmas, he vows, Cisco will be selling gear that lets anyone with an HDTV set join a telepresence session from their living room.

 

De Beer says he has five other projects under way that could one day bring in more than $1 billion a year, such as digital billboards and facial-recognition security systems. “Telepresence is the first proof point that we can take an idea and turn it into a very big, very profitable business,” says De Beer. None of his other initiatives are anywhere near 10 digits in sales. If De Beer repeats the success he had with videoconferencing, investors may even begin to think of Cisco as a growth company again.

 

IMPACT

Telepresence unit went from zero to $175 million in sales in four years

 

BACKGROUND

Grew up in South Africa. Studied at University of Pretoria

 

PERSONAL MOTTO

“Never be too proud to backtrack”

 

Blue Ocean Strategy & Innovation in the World Today: How Health Care Plans Can Accelerate Innovation

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Innovation has often been seen as a random experimental process. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation theories and offers systematic methodologies for creating blue oceans of uncontested market space and highly profitable growth. Blue Ocean Strategy challenges traditional innovation beliefs that innovation is trial and error must be done by an entrepreneur and opportunities and risks come together. Blue Ocean Strategy in contrast, offers analytical tools and frameworks that help organizations minimize risks while maximizing opportunities to achieve profitable growth.

Article by Harvard Busienss Review via Business Week

“The future is already here—it’s just unevenly distributed.” So says sci-fi writer William Gibson. Nowhere is that more true than in health care, which exhibits both pockets of stunning innovation and ghettos of mediocre performance.

The Harvard Business Review points out that innovation is a megatrend in health care. However, the rate at which innovations are being translated into actual improvements is agonizingly slow—a frustrating problem that dates back to the world’s first controlled clinical trial in 1754. It proved that lemons prevented sailors from getting scurvy, but it then took another 41 years for a navy to act on the results. Wind the clock forward to today, and 15 years or so after e-mail became common, it turns out that most patients still can’t communicate with their doctors that way.

That slowness to adopt new technologies and new ways of working partly explains health care’s cost problem. U.S. government data, for example, suggest that hospital productivity gains have been “small or negligible” over the past quarter century. (See the CMS Chief Actuary’s report of April 22, 2010 on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and this article.) Why is this? Three of the many reasons often suggested are:

The labor intensive nature of health care. The hands-on aspects of health care are sometimes said to prevent the kind of productivity gains seen elsewhere in the economy. (Economist William Baumol first identified this problem, pointing out by analogy that it takes the same number of musicians to play a Beethoven string quartet today as it did in the 1800s.)

Failure to spread organizational innovation. Information on new clinical treatments spreads across the world quite fast; research on a new cardiac procedure in this week’s New England Journal of Medicine will quickly be seen in Tokyo and London, not just Boston. But information on better ways of organizing the cardiology clinic in which that treatment might be provided does not get shared as widely, or acted on as quickly. Unlike in other industries—say auto or retail—these kinds of improvement opportunities often go unnoticed. That, in turn, is partly because of…

Barriers to new entrants in care delivery. Consolidation among care providers and barriers to entry for new hospitals mean that health-care delivery mostly relies on incumbents doing a bit better, as opposed to step changes in productivity from new entrants. Yet in the rest of the economy, new entrants unleash perhaps 20% to 40% of overall productivity advances.

So are the policy pessimists right that health systems are structurally incapable of rapid transformation? Or are the techno-optimists right that ‘disruptive megatrends’ will inexorably displace older, less effective modes of care? My take is neither is right. It’s certainly possible to do much better, but there’s nothing inevitable about it.

So, what will it take to get us there—and more specifically, how can health plans (i.e., the payers and health insurers) help? From my perspective, another megatrend in health care will be the changing role of health plans as they play a more active role in improving outcomes and reducing costs.

Here are some of the elements we need:

Increasingly, health plans should look to become ‘care system animators’ and not merely risk aggregators and transactional processors. Using their population health data, their information on clinical performance, their technology platforms, and their ability to structure consumer and provider-facing incentives, health plans have enormous potential to help improve health and the quality, appropriateness and efficiency of care. At UnitedHealth Group, our new Diabetes Health Plan, new telemedicine program, new eSync technology, and work on new models of primary care are all examples of what this can mean in practice.

Health plans should act as change agents, partnering with others to bring good ideas to scale. A recent example: about a quarter of Americans are either diabetic or pre-diabetic, and some years ago government research funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) demonstrated, through the success of a pilot initiative to help people with pre-diabetes lose weight, that even a 5% reduction can reduce their chances of developing diabetes by almost 60%. If this intervention were a drug, it would have flown through the Food and Drug Administration and would now be in mainstream use. But instead, it was an organizational innovation, in which at-risk individuals were encouraged to complete an evidence-based program involving coaching, exercise, and lifestyle modification. So despite its potential, very little was done within the health-care system to scale the program and offer it more widely. That has now changed, thanks to a new partnership between the CDC, YMCA of the USA, UnitedHealth Group, and Walgreens, which has begun rolling the program out across the country.

Of course, unleashing the sort of transformation our health care system needs will take patience, persistence, and partnership. But done right, we have every reason to think we can indeed improve outcomes and access while also tackling costs. Forward-thinking and progressive health plans have an important responsibility and opportunity to help lead that effort.

 

 


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