by Jim McGee
July 23, 2009 at 1:34 am
· Filed under Innovator Interviews
Back in late May I got an email from Renee Callahan who edits Strategy and Innovation asking if I wanted to be part of a "blogger’s virtual book tour" for Scott Anthony’s soon to be released book, The Silver Lining: An Innovation Playbook for Uncertain Times. Who could resist? Especially for a book I was planning on reading anyway. I’m one of five bloggers speaking with Scott about his first solo book, The Silver Lining. The first three interviews can be found at
and Boris Pluskowski will wrap it up tomorrow at The Complete Innovator. One excellent fringe benefit of this effort is discovering four new bloggers worth following.
Scott is the President of Innosight, a boutique consulting firm founded by Clay Christensen of the Harvard Business School. I caught up with Scott two weeks ago just after his return from trips to England, Switzerland, and Singapore. Clearly Scott was going to benefit greatly from the virtual aspects of this book tour. You can find my review of The Silver Lining at Constraints and innovation – is there a silver lining? What follows is an edited transcript of our conversation. I’ve also added links to supporting ideas and materials that we referenced during our conversation.
Chunking innovation processes
The Silver Lining advocates breaking the innovation process down into smaller chunks so that you’re not betting on a single roll of the dice. What lessons do you think you’re learning about managing the innovation process?
Scott: If you break things down into enough component pieces, you increase the odds that luck will turn in your favor. And that too goes to the whole notion of having a portfolio. If any one thing doesn’t work out that’s OK because you’ve got something else right behind it.
Now, you can take that to an extreme. You couldn’t take the notion of "let a thousand flowers bloom" inside a company because they can’t manage that kind of complexity but there is something to be said for having eggs in more than one basket.
That’s an interesting observation about the organizational capacity to manage complexity and dealing with the tension between the level of granularity you might like to have vs. the level you’re capable of managing. What about the rhetoric pushing for more market like processes within organizations?
Scott: Even the poster child of the full market approach, Google, is saying ""Hey, something isn’t quite working here. We need to instill a bit more rigor and discipline in these innovation processes. Because while we appear to be great at inventing, we aren’t great at actually innovating and creating an income statement that has more than 3% of our income in something other than search based advertising."
Innovation factories and their limits
How has Innosight’s mix of work shifted from finding and designing individual innovation ideas to putting more structure and discipline around the innovation process?
Scott: Not surprisingly, the mix has shifted toward the latter, although the two are inextricably linked. Five years ago, 80-90% of our work was "I’ve got this ideas, what do I do with it?" or "I don’t have any ideas, can you help me come up with some?" Today,50- 60% of our mix is "I need to build capabilities so this isn’t a one shot deal. How can I create an ‘Innovation Factory’ so I can churn out businesses."
I’m always a bit suspicious of factory analogies around knowledge intensive processes. How have you managed to create disciplined innovation processes without killing real innovation?
Scott: It’s a really delicate balance, There has been academic research that shows that the better organizations get at six sigma kinds of processes, the better they get at incremental innovation and the worse they get at disruptive innovation.
The notion that there is discipline in innovation is absolutely critical. The notion that disruptive innovation can be managed and can be mastered is absolutely critical. But you have to also recognize that it’s an intensely human effort so you cannot treat it the same way as an assembly line. I use those metaphors with some caution inside companies, because I know someone will ask me for the forms to be filled out.
P&G is one of the companies I’ve drawn examples from in the book. I know them and they’ve been very generous in sharing their experiences.That’s one of the sources of tension inside the company. They are a very process focused organization and have great stage-gate capabilities. What we’re telling them is that for some of these things you’ve got to trust the gut and intuition of a human being. If you don’t do that, you’re going to make the wrong decision. Some people are comfortable with that and some people are getting there.
Lessons learned about innovation processes
Have you found methods or practices in the way you deliver your intellectual capital or ways to structure the process and its metrics that have proven particularly effective?
Scott:If you go back to The Innovator’s Guide to Growth, which we published last year, versions of the qualitative measures we talked about in Chapter 6 are proving helpful. These qualitative and light quantitative measures help
The other thing we’ve come to believe is that it’s hard to do disruptive innovation in particular democratically; to be something that works at a grassroots level. Senior leaders either need to create a situation where there’s a great deal of organizational autonomy and people don’t have to go through standard operating procedures, or they’ve got to get personally involved. Otherwise, the efforts just stall out at some point.That was always in the literature, but from the field experience we believe it even more strongly.
Interesting…in other areas, such as the Enterprise 2.0 space that Andrew McAfee describes and the organizational changes triggered by new forms of collaboration technology, you see an argument that the grassroots is the place to start. Is it the particular characteristics of disruptive innovation that means you’re going to need a level of organizational air cover to succeed?
Scott: I’m absolutely sure that is the case. There’s a classification scheme out there which would make it clear how to handle a particular innovation. It could be fit with the business model, or degree of certainty you have, it could be degree of fit with your current capabilities. It’s certainly clear that there are things that not only can be done at the grassroots, but have to be done at the grassroots to work. But there are other things where if you don’t have the ”grasstops" leading in the right way, it just will not work. You need to have that supportive environment or the grassroots just wither and die.
Isn’t there a third level where you have to have a level of senior leadership engagement beyond the level of simply providing a supportive environment?
Scott:I’ve seen two benefits from this. One, a senior leader can do things that other can’t. A senior leader can route around existing processes in ways that a line manager can’t.
There’s a second thing a senior leader is able to do. Typically senior leaders haven’t got where they are by accident. They got a lot of informed judgment and intuition about industry space. Now, for some people that can lead to them having blinders on, but for others it gives them a tremendously good feel for a market space. That makes them hugely value-added team members, if you can get them to act in that kind of role. They know a lot from their accumulated experience and that allows them to say "that might work, but you need to do it this way" or "we tried this in 1973 and it didn’t work. If we made this change it might work today."
Value of shared frameworks about disruptive innovation
Isn’t the challenge there to equip senior leaders with a better feel for the underlying intellectual capital? To make sure they’re equipped with the right vocabularies and distinctions so that they don’t short circuit the process with "we tried that in 1973 and it’s not going to work."
Scott: There’s a huge role in all of this in having a common language in order to support the necessary culture change. It’s important to have those common frameworks, those common guides to discussion. The other thing that I really strongly urge senior leaders to do is to make sure they are bringing in different voices to these types of discussions.
It’s very easy to fall into the 73 trap of "we tried that and it’s not going to work." An outside person can say "yes, but it’s now 2009 and these are the three things that are different." You just don’t understand the unstated assumptions you are making until someone states them.
Jobs to be done
I’m struck by how the notion of "jobs to be done" appears to be a centerpiece of your work. It feels a lot like Ted Levitt’s old observation that people don’t buy drills because they like drills but because they need to make a hole somewhere. I’m curious as to what you see as the strengths of that element of your intellectual capital and where you see the limits and edges of that particular idea.
Scott: "Jobs to be done" isn’t a new notion at all. You can reference Levitt and you can go back to Drucker’s observation that your customer is rarely buying what you think you’re selling. In the world of innovation Dick Foster had pointed out many of the same phenomena in his work in the early 1980s. The hard part in these things and what Christensen did was to get the causal mechanisms and language right. He gave people a language to talk about it and tools to do something with it in a useful way.
That to me is the hard part about the ‘jobs to be done’ notion. The concept is easy. The hard part is what do I actually do with these intuitively appealing stories as a line manager? Providing that next level down to break this apart into a fundamental problem of a job to be done, some performance metrics to measure how well its being done, the barriers customers face, and some potential new solutions for them is the challenge. I think we’re maybe in the second or third inning of at least nine to go in terms of developing the tools and approaches that can really help people crack the nut on this one.
To be honest, I’ve been surprised about this. I remember back in 2002 when I was working with Clay and he was working on The Innovator’s Solution. In a very early draft of the book, Clay thought that the biggest idea in the book was the notion of jobs to be done. He wanted to call the book "Getting the Innovation Job Done." I told him he was crazy. The idea was too simple and I had to believe that people had already solved this problem.
As I’ve since learned, Clay’s intuitions were right. It’s an elegantly simple idea and not a new one at all. What Clay did was provide a language system and tools to work with the idea in a useful way.
I have to keep reminding myself of what Bob Sutton and Jeff Pfeffer pointed out in The Knowing-Doing Gap. Having the right tool or framework only solves about 5% of the problem. It’s why we exist as an organization. If people could just read books and have the answers to everything, there would be no need for them to hire Innosite, McKinsey, Bain, or any other consulting firm. The knowledge is all out there, but actually doing it inside a large, complicated organization is very challenging.
Permalink
18 Tweets
10 Other Comments
Am very curious about application of Scott’s thoughts to small businesses. It seems that in attempt to avoid the innovation obstacles introduced by complex hierarchies, smaller organizations tend to be overly inclusive in the decision making process, unncecessarily introducing collaboration and consensus which may often back-fire when trying to promote new solutions/products? Thoughts
One of the topics we at brightidea talk with senior executives about is helping their company “increase the potential to innovate”. Innovation is by its nature chaos, so the only thing you really can do it increase the potential for the chaos to generate and implement new ideas. This involves people, software and a true desire to innovate.
My own sense is that small businesses are generally less process bound. A good idea/potential innovation has fewer arbitrary barriers to overcome. On the other hand, by definition a small business has fewer resources to redirect toward multiple innovations.
The biggest problem I encountered in smaller organizations was managing to maintain focus on what we had the capacity to execute. Consensus building was rarely the core issue in my own experience.
 |
QMSltdJuly 23rd, 2009 at 3:29 am |
The FASTForward Blog » Innovating innovation: An Interview with …: Scott: It’s a really delicate balance, .. http://bit.ly/s9fBh
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/1XEBZ
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
I…N…N…O…V…A…T…I…O…N… http://ow.ly/hZ5d
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Interesting review of Scott Anthony’s book on innovation process http://bit.ly/qhYBG
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @lhoesel: Interesting review of Scott Anthony’s book on innovation process http://bit.ly/qhYBG
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @JanelleTNoble: RT @lhoesel: Interesting review of Scott Anthony’s book on innovation process http://bit.ly/qhYBG
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Innovating #innovation: Interview w/Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/2FCYb (and why “jobs to be done is not easy”)
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @wimrampen: Innovating Interview w/Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/2FCYb (and why “jobs to be done is not easy”) (i) @jmcgee
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @rotkapchen RT @wimrampen: Innovating Interview w/Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/2FCYb (and why “jobs to be done is not easy”)
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
 |
bhc3July 23rd, 2009 at 2:56 pm |
Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/5pXbb Disruptive #innovation needs senior mgt support
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @bhc3: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/5pXbb Disruptive #innovation needs senior mgt support
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @bhc3: Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/5pXbb Great interview
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @GrahamHill @bhc3: Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/5pXbb
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
 |
ImmDshJuly 23rd, 2009 at 3:21 pm |
RT @bhc3: Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight http://bit.ly/5pXbb Great interview (via @GrahamHill)
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight ~ http://bit.ly/2gLvO
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
RT @belindaang Innovating innovation: An Interview with Scott Anthony of Innosight ~ http://bit.ly/2gLvO
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Great article. http://bit.ly/gac4r
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Scott Anthony is a really great thinker. Good points re: the “discipline” of innovation. http://bit.ly/gac4r
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Good analysis but I’ve never seen an agency do any of your three things well. True strategic thinking would have to divorce itself from the foregone conclusion that the agency will get to do ads and other big-ticket billable stuff. So what passes for strategic thinking is usually just a way of setting the hook, building momentum for the big gig.
I’ve seen lots of agencies that were good at client service in the sense of personal face-time to shield clients from the bumps and swerves of the creative process. But I’ve never seen an account exec who had so thoroughly internalized the client’s business that s/he could serve as an independent, objective source of intelligence and observation of trends, economic and demographic factors that a CEO would need to truly navigate in rough waters, etc. Every AE I’ve observed has ultimately had the agency’s interests and biases at heart, and their role has been to insulate the client from discomfort, not connect the client with gritty reality. Agencies tend to focus on changing customer perceptions, not changing the business.
And while agencies are often quite good at generating mediated content, finding clever ways to tell the brand story to particular audiences … I have never seen an agency teach itself out of a content-creating role. To do so would be economic suicide. I haven’t even seen agencies who were any good at hands-on content-creation themselves — actual filming or interviewing or editing. They tend to hire production companies to execute on their vision… but are uncomfortable if they cannot prescribe the result from the start. Allowing people to talk on film without scripting feels like an abdication of responsibility to every agency I have ever worked with.
The agency ethos as I have observed it always involves what David Galenson calls conceptual innovation — dreaming up ideas that fulfill a creative or branding goal. I’ve never seen agencies that were good at what Galenson calls experimental innovation, which is the kind of content development I think you are looking for in the fully interactive, scale-the-rock-face-without-a-rope world of social media dialog, Tac.
The truth is that Waggener Edstrom is the first PR or Advertising agency I’ve ever encountered that seems to have a feel for experimental innovation, and is therefore the only agency I’ve ever thought I’d like to be associated with.
When you talk about agencies, plural, doing these three things, I wonder if you realize how radically different your culture is from most influence firms…. and how refreshing that difference is for those of us who dislike the "madmen" model.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Good analysis but I’ve never seen an agency do any of your three things well. True strategic thinking would have to divorce itself from the foregone conclusion that the agency will get to do ads and other big-ticket billable stuff. So what passes for strategic thinking is usually just a way of setting the hook, building momentum for the big gig.
I’ve seen lots of agencies that were good at client service in the sense of personal face-time to shield clients from the bumps and swerves of the creative process. But I’ve never seen an account exec who had so thoroughly internalized the client’s business that s/he could serve as an independent, objective source of intelligence and observation of trends, economic and demographic factors that a CEO would need to truly navigate in rough waters, etc. Every AE I’ve observed has ultimately had the agency’s interests and biases at heart, and their role has been to insulate the client from discomfort, not connect the client with gritty reality. Agencies tend to focus on changing customer perceptions, not changing the business.
And while agencies are often quite good at generating mediated content, finding clever ways to tell the brand story to particular audiences … I have never seen an agency teach itself out of a content-creating role. To do so would be economic suicide. I haven’t even seen agencies who were any good at hands-on content-creation themselves — actual filming or interviewing or editing. They tend to hire production companies to execute on their vision… but are uncomfortable if they cannot prescribe the result from the start. Allowing people to talk on film without scripting feels like an abdication of responsibility to every agency I have ever worked with.
The agency ethos as I have observed it always involves what David Galenson calls conceptual innovation — dreaming up ideas that fulfill a creative or branding goal. I’ve never seen agencies that were good at what Galenson calls experimental innovation, which is the kind of content development I think you are looking for in the fully interactive, scale-the-rock-face-without-a-rope world of social media dialog, Tac.
The truth is that Waggener Edstrom is the first PR or Advertising agency I’ve ever encountered that seems to have a feel for experimental innovation, and is therefore the only agency I’ve ever thought I’d like to be associated with.
When you talk about agencies, plural, doing these three things, I wonder if you realize how radically different your culture is from most influence firms…. and how refreshing that difference is for those of us who dislike the “madmen” model.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Thanks for zeroing in on the gist of my awkwardly worded post of last night! I agree with all you say in reply… there have got to be other agencies that think a lot like WE… I’ve just never encountered any and the kind of fresh thinking I’ve observed at WE probably doesn’t permeate all client relationships even there. In fact, a lot of it depends on the clients themselves… what they expect or need. Plus, you’re in a more progressive part of the country. I’ve worked mostly with large midwest agencies and New York & Boston firms. I’m sure clients as well as agency cultures are different in the Northwest.
Galenson is an economist who has been studying creativity for a good while. His most recent book is Old Masters and Young Geniuses. Among artists, Picasso and Cezanne are two masters who illustrate the difference in style. Galenson ties it to the age of the artist but my thinking is it doesn’t matter how old guys are, there are always 2 distinct ways of approaching creative challenges. For example, among movie directors Francis Ford Coppola, Quentin Tarantino, Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock and Martin Scorsese typify the conceptual innovator type, who know exactly what they want inside their mind when they start.
More collaborative, "experimental innovators" would be Ron Howard, Barry Levinson, Steven Spielberg, Lasse Hallstrom, Norman Jewison, Rob Reiner, Harold Ramis, Peter Weir, Spike Lee, Nora Ephron.
I’m not really sure which category Clint Eastwood and Robert Redford fall into. I’d guess they know exactly what they want ahead of time, and see it in their mind, but are highly adept at letting actors and cinematographers make minor contributions without having to throw their directorial weight around on the set. Actors’ directors who can give the illusion of collaboration… and use low-key persuasion. The best of both worlds.
Seth Godin’s recent TED talk on Tribes starts with just how big a paradigm shift communicators need to make… and I think the whole game is being turned upside-down faster than most agencies can adapt. In fact, most agencies won’t even be needed or wanted within the next 20 years.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Hey Tac!
For the past year and a half we’ve been working with Mike Manuel of Voce. They have put up with our frequent strategy / goal shifts, and been a great partner as we gain widespread acceptance of the importance of social media at the company. They have done great strategy / planning work for us, as well as top-notch monitoring (usually using Radian6 as a tool.)
I’m aware of the tactics that other agencies use in making their clients almost dependent upon them. While the guys at Voce have probably had the urge to help us reach out more than we do, they have NEVER proposed posting “on our behalf.” Instead they use every arrow in their quiver to try to empower us to engage on our own. We’re getting there ; )
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Good analysis but I’ve never seen an agency do any of your three things well. True strategic thinking would have to divorce itself from the foregone conclusion that the agency will get to do ads and other big-ticket billable stuff. So what passes for strategic thinking is usually just a way of setting the hook, building momentum for the big gig.
I’ve seen lots of agencies that were good at client service in the sense of personal face-time to shield clients from the bumps and swerves of the creative process. But I’ve never seen an account exec who had so thoroughly internalized the client’s business that s/he could serve as an independent, objective source of intelligence and observation of trends, economic and demographic factors that a CEO would need to truly navigate in rough waters, etc. Every AE I’ve observed has ultimately had the agency’s interests and biases at heart, and their role has been to insulate the client from discomfort, not connect the client with gritty reality. Agencies tend to focus on changing customer perceptions, not changing the business.
And while agencies are often quite good at generating mediated content, finding clever ways to tell the brand story to particular audiences … I have never seen an agency teach itself out of a content-creating role. To do so would be economic suicide. I haven’t even seen agencies who were any good at hands-on content-creation themselves — actual filming or interviewing or editing. They tend to hire production companies to execute on their vision… but are uncomfortable if they cannot prescribe the result from the start. Allowing people to talk on film without scripting feels like an abdication of responsibility to every agency I have ever worked with.
The agency ethos as I have observed it always involves what David Galenson calls conceptual innovation — dreaming up ideas that fulfill a creative or branding goal. I’ve never seen agencies that were good at what Galenson calls experimental innovation, which is the kind of content development I think you are looking for in the fully interactive, scale-the-rock-face-without-a-rope world of social media dialog, Tac.
The truth is that Waggener Edstrom is the first PR or Advertising agency I’ve ever encountered that seems to have a feel for experimental innovation, and is therefore the only agency I’ve ever thought I’d like to be associated with.
When you talk about agencies, plural, doing these three things, I wonder if you realize how radically different your culture is from most influence firms…. and how refreshing that difference is for those of us who dislike the "madmen" model.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Karen,
Mike and the whole crew at Voce are great guys, agreed. Plus, with you as a
client it can’t be all that bad
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
I gotta say I don’t have a whole lot of agency experience outside of WaggEd
so I can’t speak to others but to me it seems like a no brainer. Having sat
at the other side of the table I have seen the worst of the “Mad Men” type.
WE may be in the minority but we’re not alone. There are several great
agencies.
I’m not familiar with David Galenson but I’ll have to check out his work.
Agency Bias is a real problem. For me it’s as much of a joke as Journalism
Bias. They both try to pretend it doesn’t exist but both would be better
served just admitting it up front and let their audience/clients make
educated discussions based on full transparency.
As always, thanks for the comments.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Karen,
Hear, hear. I’m so with you on this one, but I’ll resist the urge to retype and quote your whole post.
I’d also say that agencies should be the "training wheels" for their clients, using their expertise to teach the companies to fish for themselves (sorry for the mixed metaphor).
You are DEAD right that the biggest hurdle to social media adoption and success in companies is *cultural*, not operational. I believe that pretty passionately, and am always glad for someone who shares that view. Keep on fighting the good fight.
Best,
Amber Naslund
Director of Community, Radian6
@ambercadabra
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Our job is to teach companies how to fish using their own fishing rod, not to take their rod and apply our expertise because we know what we’re doing.
Humility is key and in short supply on both sides of the equation.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Humility and the ability to do what’s right long term not just profitable short term.
This comment was originally posted on New Comm Biz
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.
Additional comments powered by BackType