This is a speech I delivered in Peru in July 2013 at the Generacion X: Latinoamerica Innova conference. It's about finding your "right fit" approach to innovation.
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Presenting Your Hack - Channeling your Inner Peggy OlsonKristine Howard
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Building and Scaling Smaller Startups Within Etsy, Emily Smith, Senior Manage...Lean Startup Co.
Founded in 2005, Etsy has grown into a public company with over 1,000 employees. It's no longer a startup but, in many ways, Etsy still thinks and builds like one. This presentation will walk through examples of how Etsy takes Lean Startup approaches to smaller, startup-like products within the company, including how these smaller teams are formed, how their work is tested, and how they exist within the larger company ecosystem to allow for constant iteration and innovation by the brand. Included here will be tips for supporting internal startups within established companies."
Build on "Believe-Bash-Build", a hands-on, learn-by-doing approach to innovation in which you create a culture of belief that innovation drives growth, bash ideas on an innovation project and develop real-world solutions. http://www.cim.co.uk/courses/innovation-bootcamp/
Believe. Bash. Build. -- A Roadmap for InnovationBash and Build
A straightforward and inspiring path to finding your right-fit innovation. It begins with creating a culture of belief in innovation. It is followed by bashing ideas and in order to do that be able to understand types of ideas, where those ideas can be found, the importance of creating the right environment and some examples of ideas that have grown in movements. Finally, you need to be able to build and with 3D printing, rapid prototyping is now within everyone's reach. And yes there is one more thing...how will you measure success? Have a look and find out.
Today startups seem to be all the rage and arguably the next big thing. Only they aren't. As in they always WERE the big thing. So how should brands be thinking about partnering with startups? Or should they be collaborating at all in the first place? And what's in it for the startups? Perhaps the best place to begin as the point at which these two diametrically worlds come together: marketing.
Presenting Your Hack - Channeling your Inner Peggy OlsonKristine Howard
A talk I gave at the Feb 11, 2014 Girl Geek Sydney event at Atlassian. The evening was themed around the upcoming "She Hacks" female hackathon event, and my talk was on the importance of being able to present and sell your idea.
The Ruby world has been protagonist of a new era of entrepreneurship in the technology market. There are many techniques, new specifications and conventions that are designed to facilitate and enhance the development of applications, especially on the web. But this new context completely changes the way we were used to develop. Currently, the role of the Ruby developer goes beyond programming, and progresses within the product creation process, innovation, and effective participation in decisions that may determine the success or failure of an application. In this talk, I will demonstrate how you can expand the mindset from application development to product development.
Building and Scaling Smaller Startups Within Etsy, Emily Smith, Senior Manage...Lean Startup Co.
Founded in 2005, Etsy has grown into a public company with over 1,000 employees. It's no longer a startup but, in many ways, Etsy still thinks and builds like one. This presentation will walk through examples of how Etsy takes Lean Startup approaches to smaller, startup-like products within the company, including how these smaller teams are formed, how their work is tested, and how they exist within the larger company ecosystem to allow for constant iteration and innovation by the brand. Included here will be tips for supporting internal startups within established companies."
Build on "Believe-Bash-Build", a hands-on, learn-by-doing approach to innovation in which you create a culture of belief that innovation drives growth, bash ideas on an innovation project and develop real-world solutions. http://www.cim.co.uk/courses/innovation-bootcamp/
Believe. Bash. Build. -- A Roadmap for InnovationBash and Build
A straightforward and inspiring path to finding your right-fit innovation. It begins with creating a culture of belief in innovation. It is followed by bashing ideas and in order to do that be able to understand types of ideas, where those ideas can be found, the importance of creating the right environment and some examples of ideas that have grown in movements. Finally, you need to be able to build and with 3D printing, rapid prototyping is now within everyone's reach. And yes there is one more thing...how will you measure success? Have a look and find out.
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Slides presented during Entrepreneurship class at Università Cà Foscari from Venice.
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Finding Your "Right Fit" Innovation Strategy
1. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 1
“Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 1
ONE SIZE DOES NOT FIT ALL
Finding the “right-fit” innovation for Latin America
18-19 de julio 2013
Lima, Peru
3. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 3
This was my
suit 12 years
ago...
4. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 4
…and the
lesson
learned!
5. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 5
Innovation is
not for
everyone!
6. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 6
Choose your
innovation
suit carefully.
7. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 7
Even the
best can get
their identity
wrong
8. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 8
Before they
get it right
9. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 10
How can you find your right fit innovation?
Understand
the role
innovation can
play in your
business
strategy.
Look for your
innovation
inspiration in
what makes
you special.
Find your right
fit. It only needs
to be new to
your world.
10. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 11
“Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 11
YOUR RIGHT FIT STRATEGY
11. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 12
Define your
innovation
growth
strategy
Grow volume or value share
(ie. “take a larger slice of the pie”)
Grow the size of the category in
volume or value
(i.e. “take the same size slice of a bigger pie”)
Grow volume / value from a different
category
(ie. “steal from someone else’s pie”)
12. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 13
Make
strategic
choices
13. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 14
Not making
choice is a
choice
14. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 15
Define the
initial
problem
• What we know
– Who?
– What?
– Where?
– When?
• What we think we know
– Why?
– How?
15. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 16
Know your
consumer’s
unmet needs
16. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 18
Identify the
true nature
of the
problem
17. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 19
Create an
innovation
agenda
How big is the
gap we need to
fill?
Will we adopt
open innovation
or a closed
innovation
approach?
Will this be a
one-off or a
sustained
initiative with a
pipeline?
What will be
delivered in the
short-term, mid-
term and long-
term?
How will we
measure
success?
18. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 20
“Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 20
YOUR RIGHT FIT INSPIRATION
20. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 22
Innovation is a
“remix”
“Copy, transform and combine. It’s who we are,
it’s how we live and of course, it’s how we
create. Our new ideas evolve from the old ones”
-- Kirby Ferguson, “Embrace the Remix”
21. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 23
Innovation…or
inspiration?
22. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 24
Being first
doesn’t
always pay
23. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 25
…but doing it
right does.
24. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 26
Look for
solutions in
the most
unlikely
places
Shell “Eureka”
25. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 28
Embrace
your Eureka
moment
Can begin with a
challenge or
nagging idea in
your mind
When ideas
collide….either
new or old ones
or both.
The usual way of
working /
resolving it does
not work.
You ask yourself
the “What if”
question
Get a spark of a
simple solution to a
complex market
Can be something that
happens outside of
work that you can
apply at work.
Can be too
late…when you
see your idea in
the market!
26. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 29
Innovate
from your
mission
27. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 31
Innovate
from your
vision
28. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 33
Innovate
from a
benefit
29. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 35
Innovate on
every day
items
30. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 37
“Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 37
YOUR RIGHT FIT WORLD
31. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 38
Is anything
really new?
32. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 39
Begin by
setting your
destination
33. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 40
Set the
culture for
innovation
Creativity Competency
Disruption Discipline
34. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 41
Be curious
& challenge
conventions
35. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 42
Feed your
appetite for
innovation
36. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 43
Pick the right
teams
37. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 44
“Don’t be a
six foot one-
year old”
38. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 45
Create
amazing
innovation
experience
39. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 46
Use
everything at
your disposal
40. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 48
Are you ready
to start your
innovation
adventure?
41. “Innovation One Size Does Not Fit All” | @forrestgumping | 49
Any questions? Thank you.
Let’s review…
Creativity Competency
Disruption Discipline
Editor's Notes
Forrest Gump [pause]….Peter Pan [pause]…..Daniel Craig [pause]
What do they have in common?
All recognizable figures for Gen X.
All expressions of figures who live in a dream world.
All blazing their own trails.
All wearing a different suit. A suit that identifies them.
Who What When Where?: Me, Grown up, 12 years ago, Argentina
Context: Married, father of 2, good job with Coca-Cola lots of promise
Conflict: Still wanting to be innovative but realising that I wanted to be taken seriously.
Proposed resolution: Dress like a grown up. Good suits. Tie. Glasses. Look and feel smart.
Complication: It just wasn’t me. My ideas were strong but I was in a shell.
Final resolution: Have the confidence to do my own thing.
Lesson learned / Most Important Point: One size does not fit all. Suits weren’t for me, but innovation was. I just had to find my own innovation style.
So, what’s the transferable learning? Need to find innovation that suits your identity – who you are, who you have been and who you want to be. What will you be famous for?
If innovation is like a suit…are we all meant to look like Daniel Craig? And if we are, aren’t we just setting ourselves up to fail? What if we’re just not ready to grow up [Peter Pan…no suits] or choose to blaze own path [Forrest Gump…suit no tie].
If you go by what you hear, there is no time to waste and the consequences are dire… “innovation or die” , “…die trying”, “…perish” or as one consultancy refers to it “the innovation death spiral” (cue Darth Vader entrance). But innovation is not for everyone. Why should we feel obligated to go down the path others have carved out.
So, which suit do you wear? How do you make it your own? The innovation you deliver gives you credibility to do more innovation. Innovation in media, gives you credibility to develop product innovation and vice versa. On the flip side, if you get it wrong, or do innovation that people will not associate with you it is not only a waste of time and resources (missed opportunity) but it could be associated with your competitor (or other players in that space).
When it comes to innovation, organisations can have an identity crisis. Here’s an example of what not to do…examples of companies not being true to self / losing their way (eg New Coke…forgot that Coke wasn’t just the sum of its parts….tried to be like Pepsi).
[May need to show video because younger generations not aware of New Coke!]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4VNf9JtBeo
Low budget.
Global reach.
Based on a fundamental human insight.
100% on brand
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e4VNf9JtBeo
Low budget.
Global reach.
Based on a fundamental human insight.
100% on brand
Signpost. Have made the case for innovation and importance of making it true to your identity. This is the content we will cover today. 3 things: Strategy, inspiration, new to world.
Use the “pie” analogy – applied to volume or revenue
Get bigger slice of the pie
Grow the pie
Steal from someone else’s pie
Argentina and juices. Too much discipline. Simple answer. Find a good line up. Spend more time learning on the job. BASES was great….had Secret of New Product Success. Didn’t make strategic choices.
Who What When Where?: 2002, Launch of Cepita, Juices, Argentina
Context: Crisis, family values, efficiency
Conflict: Wanted to make the right call, not discard any bad ideas
Proposed resolution: STM, U&A’s quals, 60% jjuice, RTD, NRTD. 9 cell BASES II test.
Complication: Too many cells, too much complexity. Lost sight of key decisions
Final resolution: Stopped research, push back to marketing and simplified
Lesson learned / Most Important Point: Keep it simple!
Drivers and barriers
Behaviours that can be influenced
What lies beneath the problem?
“Voy a reir, voy a bailar, vivir mi vida, la la la” (4x)…. 30 sec – Marc Anthony
“ On va s'aimer / On va danser / C'est la vie lalalalala / (x4)
Mix of Baby Boomers, Gen Xers and Gen Y
Marc Anthony (Vivir Mi Vida), Khaled (C’est La Vie), Manu Chao (Mi Vida), Bon Jovi (It’s My Life), Bo Diddley (Live My Life), Billy Joel (My Life), 50 Cent (My Life)
All sing about their life.
All on a quest.
All doing blazing their own trails.
All wearing a different suit. A suit that identifies them.
First movers fail 90% of the time. Something to be said about being a “fast second”…if first depends on how fast you are at being first. Kodak invented the digital camera in 1975…gone. They innovated but didn’t act. Innovate on the pioneer and get out before it becomes acommodity. (eg Markides & Geroski book)
Lets look at Apple’s R&D…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iswiKQbtwXQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iswiKQbtwXQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFji6MbyxOI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFji6MbyxOI
Set the destination to get from point A to point B (e.g. business objective).
Which road to take?
How long will it take?
What will it cost?
Many options, each with different consequences.
From an “internal” view to broader “external” business base as outlined below:
Internal
· company Volume & Revenue
· Brand Contribution
· Syndicated data (Nielsen, Canadean, panel)
· Briefing Books
· Scorecard
· Library…
External
· Analyst reports
· “Bottlers” Intelligence
· Competitor & Retail Profiles/Briefing Books
· Beverage industry innovation
· On-line Resources
· Strategic Planning industry benchmarks and best practices
FMCG companies expect high-performance results from agencies but don’t always have high performance teams. They are just people in the right function with a budget. Companies need to build culture.
Two anecdotes here. For example, Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, co-founders of Instagram. After 2 years, sold the business for $1 Billion and split it amongst the other employees…all 11 of them. When they returned to Stanford’s e-Corner and asked how big company should be…they said “Don’t be a 6-foot one year old” and “Don’t build past what you need to build”
THE GOAL: Kraft Foods came to Ogilvy&Mather with a unique request - to reintroduce Post's 67 year old1 "Shreddies" brand cereal as a leader, without having any news about the product to work with, and while keeping in mind that Focus Groups showed2 that Shreddies' customers liked it just the way it was. THE STRATEGY: Ogilvy&Mather rotated the Square-shaped Shreddie by 45 degrees, turning it into two adjacent Triangles rather than one Square, and calling the new product "Diamond Shreddies." Real-life market research videosthat you can view by clicking here show people finding the Triangular shape to be "better," "crunchier," and "more flavourful." All this was done "without changing Shreddies in design, formulation, size or any other way."3 THE RESULT: The campaign won the Canadian Marketing Association's 2008 "Best of the Best" Award, and took home gold medals in the "Creative Budget Over $100,000" and "Brand Advertising" categories. More than 2,000 marketing professionals from around the world gathered at the Harbour Castle Hotel4 to witness The CMA Awards Gala, the largest marketing awards event in Canada, for which more than 640 other brands competed.5 144 marketing experts served as Judges for this prestigious award. THE BOTTOM LINE: The Square-Turned-Triangle "Diamond Shreddies" campaign generated tremendous value for Kraft Foods. This campaign generated more than 265 press stories covering the "All New Diamond Shreddies," and Kraft Foods saw an immediate 18% increase in baseline sales of Shreddies within the first month alone, and for months thereafter.6 By turning a square shape into a triangular shape, Ogilvy&Mather reintroduced a 67 year old brand in a first class fashion, and established boosted sustainable profits for Kraft Foods.HOW VISUAL TARGETING PRINCIPLES EFFECTED THIS AD CAMPAIGN:This Case Study shows that by simply changing one Visual Element of your product to look more Triangular than Square, even an age-old established brand like Post's Shreddies Cereal can see immediate and sustainable growth of 18% in just one month. By more closely matching their target market's Visual Desires, Kraft Foods received an immediate boost in sales, resulting in millions upon millions in immediate, additional and ongoing profits. Visual Targeting methodologies have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt to raise bottom line visual advertising & design performance not by 18%, but by as much as 400%, by matching the entire and comprehensive set of any Target Market's Visual Desires. In fact, Visual Targeting technoogies research more than 33 unique elements for each Target Market - including Shape - and study their exact Visual Response Patterns.One can only imagine what can happen to the growth of newer innovative products, with using not just the Shape Preference to guide the design process - the move which made Shreddies famous all over again - but by relying also on the entire set of your Target Market's Visual Desires.
“Creativity is the ability to overcome self-imposed constraints”
Source: Ackoff and Vergara
“Spending more on R&D won’t drive results. The most crucial factors are strategic alignment and a culture that supports innovation.”
One size does not fit all
Set your strategy and make choices