Creating the Conditions for Sustainable Innovation The Leadership Imperative ...Meghan Daily
Organizations need innovation to survive and thrive. Thus, they need leaders who excel at driving innovation. But many leaders fall short when it comes to fostering ideas. This report doesn’t question if leaders themselves will be the source of your next great idea. Rather, when that idea arises—from a team member, a customer, or some other source—will leaders be able to foster it an bring it to fruition?
Over the past few years, DDI has worked with the LUMA Institute to teach leaders to foster innovation. We found to be effective, leaders must:
Inspire Curiosity
Challenge Current Perspectives
Create Freedom
Drive Discipline.
For nine years in a row, Apple has been the most innovative company on the planet.
That designation comes care of Boston Consulting Group, the elite consultancy.
Since last year’s list, Google climbed over Samsung to take the second spot, sliding the South Korean manufacturer into third.
Three companies vaulted into the top 50: The Japanese conglomerate Hitachi landed at No. 37, Marc Benioff‘s SalesForce.com landed at No. 40, and the Chinese phone maker Xiaomi made it all the way to No. 35.
Innovation GE Global Innovation Barometer 2018 - Summary ReportPatrick Barrabé® 😊
Emerging Players : New Actors Driving Innovation, Emerging Confidence, Working in a Protectionist World
Emerging Technologies : The Potential of Additive, Maximizing the Return on Innovation (ROI), Hype vs. Reality of Impact
Emerging Challenges : Future of Work, More Challenging Environment
pwc.to/1b4fZV1
Nous avons demandé à plus de 1700 cadres à travers le monde ce qu'ils considéraient comme la place de l'innovation au sein de leur entreprise et comment ils la voyaient évoluer au cours des cinq prochaines années.
Au cours des 3 dernières années, les innovateurs leaders ont progressé a un niveau 16 % plus élevé que les moins innovants.
Informe PwC: Encuesta Mundial de Innovación 2013PwC España
Informe basado en la Encuesta Mundial de Innovación realizada por PwC en todo el mundo a 1757 ejecutivs de empresas de más de 25 países en todo el mundo.
For the 10th year, Silicon Valley Bank is proud to present
our Startup Outlook Report. The innovation economy has
expanded greatly in the US and abroad in the past decade,
and so has Startup Outlook. In our first report, we surveyed
300 people, most of them in California. The 2019 report
includes the perspectives of nearly 1,400 technology and
healthcare founders and executives primarily in major
innovation hubs across the US, the UK, China and, for the
first time, Canada.
The outlook for the Chinese tech sector is strong, with a large number of startups saying they expect more M&A opportunities. Access to talent and raising capital remain challenging. Compared to the US and UK, a higher percentage of Chinese startups have women in senior company roles and at least one woman on
the founding team.
A hedge fund just bought 5 percent of your company. The fund partners clearly see value in what you’re doing, and, as a member of the management team, you take heart in that assessment. But you also know life is about to get more difficult. The fund partners are well-known activists. They have already asked for board seats. Now they’re proposing some dramatic strategic and financial changes, confidently assuring you and your shareholders that these moves will drive the company’s stock price higher. If you don’t comply and boost margins in a timely fashion, they will quickly bring in a management team that will.
For many company leaders, this is not a scary hypothetical — it is reality. It may also be an opportunity. In any case, activist shareholder campaigns are proliferating. According to the journal Activist Insight, 300 companies around the world were publicly targeted by activist investors between January and June 2015, about 25 percent more than in the same months the previous year. Since 2013, hedge fund managers have demanded change at hundreds of companies. The most widely publicized have included Apple, DuPont, General Motors, Microsoft, PepsiCo, Sony, Sotheby’s, and Yahoo.
One reason activism is growing is the rich rewards it earns for investors. On average, hedge funds with an activist approach have outperformed most other types of investment funds since 2010. The data analysis firm Hedge Fund Research reported recently that activist funds returned 12.5 percent a year between August 2012 and August 2015, while other funds, on average, earned returns in the single digits. No wonder investors increasingly demand activist funds in their portfolios, while the managers of those funds search diligently for new targets. No one can assume his or her company is immune.
We've distilled 10 principles for cost transformation that can help companies play the role of gadfly investor for themselves.
Creating the Conditions for Sustainable Innovation The Leadership Imperative ...Meghan Daily
Organizations need innovation to survive and thrive. Thus, they need leaders who excel at driving innovation. But many leaders fall short when it comes to fostering ideas. This report doesn’t question if leaders themselves will be the source of your next great idea. Rather, when that idea arises—from a team member, a customer, or some other source—will leaders be able to foster it an bring it to fruition?
Over the past few years, DDI has worked with the LUMA Institute to teach leaders to foster innovation. We found to be effective, leaders must:
Inspire Curiosity
Challenge Current Perspectives
Create Freedom
Drive Discipline.
For nine years in a row, Apple has been the most innovative company on the planet.
That designation comes care of Boston Consulting Group, the elite consultancy.
Since last year’s list, Google climbed over Samsung to take the second spot, sliding the South Korean manufacturer into third.
Three companies vaulted into the top 50: The Japanese conglomerate Hitachi landed at No. 37, Marc Benioff‘s SalesForce.com landed at No. 40, and the Chinese phone maker Xiaomi made it all the way to No. 35.
Innovation GE Global Innovation Barometer 2018 - Summary ReportPatrick Barrabé® 😊
Emerging Players : New Actors Driving Innovation, Emerging Confidence, Working in a Protectionist World
Emerging Technologies : The Potential of Additive, Maximizing the Return on Innovation (ROI), Hype vs. Reality of Impact
Emerging Challenges : Future of Work, More Challenging Environment
pwc.to/1b4fZV1
Nous avons demandé à plus de 1700 cadres à travers le monde ce qu'ils considéraient comme la place de l'innovation au sein de leur entreprise et comment ils la voyaient évoluer au cours des cinq prochaines années.
Au cours des 3 dernières années, les innovateurs leaders ont progressé a un niveau 16 % plus élevé que les moins innovants.
Informe PwC: Encuesta Mundial de Innovación 2013PwC España
Informe basado en la Encuesta Mundial de Innovación realizada por PwC en todo el mundo a 1757 ejecutivs de empresas de más de 25 países en todo el mundo.
For the 10th year, Silicon Valley Bank is proud to present
our Startup Outlook Report. The innovation economy has
expanded greatly in the US and abroad in the past decade,
and so has Startup Outlook. In our first report, we surveyed
300 people, most of them in California. The 2019 report
includes the perspectives of nearly 1,400 technology and
healthcare founders and executives primarily in major
innovation hubs across the US, the UK, China and, for the
first time, Canada.
The outlook for the Chinese tech sector is strong, with a large number of startups saying they expect more M&A opportunities. Access to talent and raising capital remain challenging. Compared to the US and UK, a higher percentage of Chinese startups have women in senior company roles and at least one woman on
the founding team.
A hedge fund just bought 5 percent of your company. The fund partners clearly see value in what you’re doing, and, as a member of the management team, you take heart in that assessment. But you also know life is about to get more difficult. The fund partners are well-known activists. They have already asked for board seats. Now they’re proposing some dramatic strategic and financial changes, confidently assuring you and your shareholders that these moves will drive the company’s stock price higher. If you don’t comply and boost margins in a timely fashion, they will quickly bring in a management team that will.
For many company leaders, this is not a scary hypothetical — it is reality. It may also be an opportunity. In any case, activist shareholder campaigns are proliferating. According to the journal Activist Insight, 300 companies around the world were publicly targeted by activist investors between January and June 2015, about 25 percent more than in the same months the previous year. Since 2013, hedge fund managers have demanded change at hundreds of companies. The most widely publicized have included Apple, DuPont, General Motors, Microsoft, PepsiCo, Sony, Sotheby’s, and Yahoo.
One reason activism is growing is the rich rewards it earns for investors. On average, hedge funds with an activist approach have outperformed most other types of investment funds since 2010. The data analysis firm Hedge Fund Research reported recently that activist funds returned 12.5 percent a year between August 2012 and August 2015, while other funds, on average, earned returns in the single digits. No wonder investors increasingly demand activist funds in their portfolios, while the managers of those funds search diligently for new targets. No one can assume his or her company is immune.
We've distilled 10 principles for cost transformation that can help companies play the role of gadfly investor for themselves.
For the first time, SVB surveyed technology and life science entrepreneurs based in Canada. Like their counterparts in the US, UK and China, Canadian startups are optimistic about the year ahead even amid economic volatility. And while eager to hire and fundraise, they recognize the challenges they face. Most startups say Canadian government support of the innovation economy is having a positive impact. When it comes to gender parity, 60 percent of Canadian startups have at least one woman in an executive position. Looking ahead, we asked which technologies will have the most promise a decade from now: Canadian startups say AI and life science.
Business Pulse - Dual perspectives on the top 10 risks and opportunities 2013...EY
Business Pulse explores the top 10 risks and opportunities faced by global organizations over the next few years.
Ernst & Young’s Business Pulse report is based on a large sample survey of companies in 21 countries and across various industry sectors.
The report takes the pulse of:
• Current thinking on risks and opportunities and emerging challenges
• Dual perspective on the themes arising from the top 10 lists
• Expectations from industry executives and Ernst & Young specialists
Read this presentation to conduct a self-assessment for your business and download the report at: http://goo.gl/CSKGQ
For more, please visit http://bit.ly/1FCNNpl
Trade and investment ties are going to become stronger and more complex
An infographic from The Economist Intelligence Unit
PwC's 18th Annual Global CEO Survey 2015: Exploring the importance of technol...James Woodworth
Rethinking the business you’re in
We live in an era of unprecedented digital change – the type of change that’s reshaping the relationship between customers and companies, breaking down the walls between industry sectors and, by extension, prompting forward-thinking CEOs to question the very business they’re in.
Watch this short video to hear about what CEOs had to say on the global economic outlook and their own growth prospects for the months and
One year ago business leaders’ feelings towards growth were sombre across the globe. A year later, and while Australian CEOs are feeling mildly more up-beat than their global peers, significant concerns still remain.
This year, we asked executives about their thoughts across key issues including partnerships, digital, talent and diversity, growth, capabilities, tax and regulation.
There is a dichotomy of perspectives across the board – with CEOs seeing as many threats to their business today as there are opportunities.
In this issue of JEGI’s Client Briefing Newsletter, JEGI provides highlights from the sixth annual Outsell Signature Event co-produced by JEGI and held October 3-5, 2012 at the Four Seasons Hotel in Hampshire, UK. This global conference brings together senior executive leaders from both strategic companies and private equity firms across the information industry. Also in this issue is an insightful article on successfully integrating digital acquisitions authored by Christopher Vollmer, Gregory Springs and Harry Hawkes of Booz & Co. JEGI provides excerpts from “The Social Media Ecosystem – Rise of Users, Intelligence and Operating Systems”, a report on social media prepared by Amir Akhavan, a JEGI Director and published by the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB). JEGI’s M&A update shows that deal activity reached impressive highs through the first three quarters of 2012, despite economic and political uncertainty. Smaller deals have dominated the market (91% of transactions were less than $50 million in value), and strategic companies were buyers on 85% of deals in 2012 through September, as they continue to invest in higher growth revenue streams and new services for their customers. JEGI also highlights its exceptional transaction experience across its core sectors, including the recent sale of InfoGroup’s OneSource to Cannondale Investments and GTCR; the sale of DMGT’s Evanta to Leeds Equity; and many others.
Hays Journal 20 – How to capture a culture of innovation: lessons from the CO...Hays
Hays Journal 20 - How to capture a culture of innovation: lessons from the COVID-19 crisis
In order to quickly respond to new demands bought on by the pandemic, many businesses have been forced to adopt a more innovative mindset.
And while many of us look forward to the world returning to what will be the new normal, this inventive way of thinking is something that many organisations will want to hold onto.
Read the Hays Journal to find out more: www.hays-journal.com
http://bit.ly/CEO-Survey-jan15
Selon la 18e édition de l’étude mondiale annuelle « Global CEO Survey » de PwC, dans le cadre de laquelle plus de 1 300 dirigeants ont été interrogés, 37 % d’entre eux estiment que la croissance mondiale sera meilleure en 2015, contre 44 % l'année dernière. Cependant, ils restent confiants dans leur capacité à générer une croissance du chiffre d’affaires de leur propre entreprise (39%, un niveau identique à celui de l’année dernière).
Les dirigeants soulignent que les menaces auxquelles ils sont confrontés ont augmenté ces trois dernières années : ils insistent notamment sur la montée en force de la concurrence, avec un marché qui devient sans frontières et l’arrivée de nouveaux concurrents issus de secteurs d’activité différents.
Pour rester compétitifs, les dirigeants identifient trois leviers essentiels : la transformation digitale, le renforcement des partenariats et la diversité des talents.
Les résultats de cette étude sont rendus publics aujourd'hui à l'ouverture du Forum économique mondial à Davos, en Suisse.
Pour cette 18e édition de l’étude mondiale annuelle de PwC « Global CEO Survey », 1 322 interviews ont été conduites dans 77 countries entre septembre et décembre 2014. 459 entretiens ont été menés en Asie-Pacifique, 455 en Europe, 147 en Amérique du Nord, 167 en Amérique latine, 49 en Afrique et 45 au Moyen-Orient.
18th Annual Global CEO Survey - Technology industry key findingsPwC
Tech CEOs are optimistic about the global economy and both near term and future revenue growth. They view strategic alliances, including partnering with competitors, as a primary means to grow their businesses. We invite you to explore the analysis and contact us to discuss how we can help your business capitalise on the new - but challenging - opportunities for growth. Learn more http://pwc.to/1DaolqY
Website: http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/ceo-survey/2015/industry/technology.jhtml
strategy+business
ISSUE 81 WINTER 2015
REPRINT 00370
BY BARRY JARUZELSKI, KE VIN SCHWARTZ,
AND VOLKER STA ACK
THE GLOBAL INNOVATION 1000
Innovation’s
New World Order
Asia is now the top regional destination for R&D spending,
followed by North America and Europe.
featu
re in
n
ovation
1
Il
lu
st
ra
ti
on
b
y
M
ar
ti
n
O
’N
ei
ll
The geographic footprint of innovation is changing dramatically as
research and development programs become more global. An overwhelming
94 percent of the world’s largest innovators now conduct elements of their
R&D programs abroad, according to the 2015 Global Innovation 1000
study, our annual analysis of corporate R&D spending. These companies
are shifting their innovation investment to countries in which their sales
and manufacturing are growing fastest, and where they can access the right
technical talent. Not surprisingly, innovation spending has boomed in China
and India since our 2008 study, when we first charted the global flows of
corporate R&D spending. Collectively, in fact, more R&D is now conducted
in Asia than in North America or Europe.
Perhaps more unexpectedly, innovation spending in the U.S. has held
relatively steady as a share of global innovation spending, despite increases
in the amount of R&D that U.S. firms conduct in Asia. This is due in part
to companies from other countries increasing their R&D activity in the
United States; Silicon Valley, in particular, has been a powerful draw.
Innovation spending in Europe, in contrast, grew more modestly and
unevenly, with some countries, such as France and the U.K., showing net
decreases in domestic R&D spending from 2007 to 2015. More European
companies are choosing to expand their R&D operations elsewhere, in both
low-cost countries in Asia (defined as countries where the average annual
engineering salary is less than US$35,000) and high-cost countries such as
the United States.
Asia is now the top regional destination
for R&D spending, followed by North
America and Europe.
by Barry Jaruzelski, Kevin Schwartz,
and Volker Staack
Innovation’s
New World
Order
1000
featu
re in
n
ovation
2
st
ra
te
g
y+
b
u
si
n
e
ss
is
su
e
81
3
For leading companies, implementing a global in-
novation strategy is paying off. We found that fi rms that
favor a more global R&D footprint outperform their
less globalized competitors on a variety of fi nancial mea-
sures. This is important, because, as in previous years,
we found no statistically signifi cant evidence that higher
levels of spending guarantee better results (see “The 10
Most Innovative Companies,” page 9). Our refrain has
long been that it’s not how much you spend on research
and development, but how you spend it. But it’s also
where you spend that determines your success — and
our 2015 study shows that decisions about R&D loca-
tion look very different today than they did less than a
decade ago (see Exhibit 1).
Wor.
In this year's 10th anniversary of the Global Innovation 1000 study, we looked back at a decade's worth of data on R&D spending patterns and surveys of innovation executives, and we looked ahead to the next decade, asking our respondents how they expect their innovation practices to evolve. We've identified the core strategies that can improve a company's return on its R&D investment--and we've witnessed some convergence around the key success factors that drive results. For more information, visit: http://strat.bz/gap6jsj
This Working Paper was published by United Nations University Maastricht Economic and social Research Institute on Innovation and Technology (UNU-MERIT). It seeks to provide insights about the main characteristics of innovative firms and to gather new evidence with regard to the nature of the innovation process in the Latin American and Caribbean region. This Paper analyses data from a number of CARICOM countries.
For the first time, SVB surveyed technology and life science entrepreneurs based in Canada. Like their counterparts in the US, UK and China, Canadian startups are optimistic about the year ahead even amid economic volatility. And while eager to hire and fundraise, they recognize the challenges they face. Most startups say Canadian government support of the innovation economy is having a positive impact. When it comes to gender parity, 60 percent of Canadian startups have at least one woman in an executive position. Looking ahead, we asked which technologies will have the most promise a decade from now: Canadian startups say AI and life science.
Business Pulse - Dual perspectives on the top 10 risks and opportunities 2013...EY
Business Pulse explores the top 10 risks and opportunities faced by global organizations over the next few years.
Ernst & Young’s Business Pulse report is based on a large sample survey of companies in 21 countries and across various industry sectors.
The report takes the pulse of:
• Current thinking on risks and opportunities and emerging challenges
• Dual perspective on the themes arising from the top 10 lists
• Expectations from industry executives and Ernst & Young specialists
Read this presentation to conduct a self-assessment for your business and download the report at: http://goo.gl/CSKGQ
For more, please visit http://bit.ly/1FCNNpl
Trade and investment ties are going to become stronger and more complex
An infographic from The Economist Intelligence Unit
PwC's 18th Annual Global CEO Survey 2015: Exploring the importance of technol...James Woodworth
Rethinking the business you’re in
We live in an era of unprecedented digital change – the type of change that’s reshaping the relationship between customers and companies, breaking down the walls between industry sectors and, by extension, prompting forward-thinking CEOs to question the very business they’re in.
Watch this short video to hear about what CEOs had to say on the global economic outlook and their own growth prospects for the months and
One year ago business leaders’ feelings towards growth were sombre across the globe. A year later, and while Australian CEOs are feeling mildly more up-beat than their global peers, significant concerns still remain.
This year, we asked executives about their thoughts across key issues including partnerships, digital, talent and diversity, growth, capabilities, tax and regulation.
There is a dichotomy of perspectives across the board – with CEOs seeing as many threats to their business today as there are opportunities.
In this issue of JEGI’s Client Briefing Newsletter, JEGI provides highlights from the sixth annual Outsell Signature Event co-produced by JEGI and held October 3-5, 2012 at the Four Seasons Hotel in Hampshire, UK. This global conference brings together senior executive leaders from both strategic companies and private equity firms across the information industry. Also in this issue is an insightful article on successfully integrating digital acquisitions authored by Christopher Vollmer, Gregory Springs and Harry Hawkes of Booz & Co. JEGI provides excerpts from “The Social Media Ecosystem – Rise of Users, Intelligence and Operating Systems”, a report on social media prepared by Amir Akhavan, a JEGI Director and published by the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB). JEGI’s M&A update shows that deal activity reached impressive highs through the first three quarters of 2012, despite economic and political uncertainty. Smaller deals have dominated the market (91% of transactions were less than $50 million in value), and strategic companies were buyers on 85% of deals in 2012 through September, as they continue to invest in higher growth revenue streams and new services for their customers. JEGI also highlights its exceptional transaction experience across its core sectors, including the recent sale of InfoGroup’s OneSource to Cannondale Investments and GTCR; the sale of DMGT’s Evanta to Leeds Equity; and many others.
Hays Journal 20 – How to capture a culture of innovation: lessons from the CO...Hays
Hays Journal 20 - How to capture a culture of innovation: lessons from the COVID-19 crisis
In order to quickly respond to new demands bought on by the pandemic, many businesses have been forced to adopt a more innovative mindset.
And while many of us look forward to the world returning to what will be the new normal, this inventive way of thinking is something that many organisations will want to hold onto.
Read the Hays Journal to find out more: www.hays-journal.com
http://bit.ly/CEO-Survey-jan15
Selon la 18e édition de l’étude mondiale annuelle « Global CEO Survey » de PwC, dans le cadre de laquelle plus de 1 300 dirigeants ont été interrogés, 37 % d’entre eux estiment que la croissance mondiale sera meilleure en 2015, contre 44 % l'année dernière. Cependant, ils restent confiants dans leur capacité à générer une croissance du chiffre d’affaires de leur propre entreprise (39%, un niveau identique à celui de l’année dernière).
Les dirigeants soulignent que les menaces auxquelles ils sont confrontés ont augmenté ces trois dernières années : ils insistent notamment sur la montée en force de la concurrence, avec un marché qui devient sans frontières et l’arrivée de nouveaux concurrents issus de secteurs d’activité différents.
Pour rester compétitifs, les dirigeants identifient trois leviers essentiels : la transformation digitale, le renforcement des partenariats et la diversité des talents.
Les résultats de cette étude sont rendus publics aujourd'hui à l'ouverture du Forum économique mondial à Davos, en Suisse.
Pour cette 18e édition de l’étude mondiale annuelle de PwC « Global CEO Survey », 1 322 interviews ont été conduites dans 77 countries entre septembre et décembre 2014. 459 entretiens ont été menés en Asie-Pacifique, 455 en Europe, 147 en Amérique du Nord, 167 en Amérique latine, 49 en Afrique et 45 au Moyen-Orient.
18th Annual Global CEO Survey - Technology industry key findingsPwC
Tech CEOs are optimistic about the global economy and both near term and future revenue growth. They view strategic alliances, including partnering with competitors, as a primary means to grow their businesses. We invite you to explore the analysis and contact us to discuss how we can help your business capitalise on the new - but challenging - opportunities for growth. Learn more http://pwc.to/1DaolqY
Website: http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/ceo-survey/2015/industry/technology.jhtml
strategy+business
ISSUE 81 WINTER 2015
REPRINT 00370
BY BARRY JARUZELSKI, KE VIN SCHWARTZ,
AND VOLKER STA ACK
THE GLOBAL INNOVATION 1000
Innovation’s
New World Order
Asia is now the top regional destination for R&D spending,
followed by North America and Europe.
featu
re in
n
ovation
1
Il
lu
st
ra
ti
on
b
y
M
ar
ti
n
O
’N
ei
ll
The geographic footprint of innovation is changing dramatically as
research and development programs become more global. An overwhelming
94 percent of the world’s largest innovators now conduct elements of their
R&D programs abroad, according to the 2015 Global Innovation 1000
study, our annual analysis of corporate R&D spending. These companies
are shifting their innovation investment to countries in which their sales
and manufacturing are growing fastest, and where they can access the right
technical talent. Not surprisingly, innovation spending has boomed in China
and India since our 2008 study, when we first charted the global flows of
corporate R&D spending. Collectively, in fact, more R&D is now conducted
in Asia than in North America or Europe.
Perhaps more unexpectedly, innovation spending in the U.S. has held
relatively steady as a share of global innovation spending, despite increases
in the amount of R&D that U.S. firms conduct in Asia. This is due in part
to companies from other countries increasing their R&D activity in the
United States; Silicon Valley, in particular, has been a powerful draw.
Innovation spending in Europe, in contrast, grew more modestly and
unevenly, with some countries, such as France and the U.K., showing net
decreases in domestic R&D spending from 2007 to 2015. More European
companies are choosing to expand their R&D operations elsewhere, in both
low-cost countries in Asia (defined as countries where the average annual
engineering salary is less than US$35,000) and high-cost countries such as
the United States.
Asia is now the top regional destination
for R&D spending, followed by North
America and Europe.
by Barry Jaruzelski, Kevin Schwartz,
and Volker Staack
Innovation’s
New World
Order
1000
featu
re in
n
ovation
2
st
ra
te
g
y+
b
u
si
n
e
ss
is
su
e
81
3
For leading companies, implementing a global in-
novation strategy is paying off. We found that fi rms that
favor a more global R&D footprint outperform their
less globalized competitors on a variety of fi nancial mea-
sures. This is important, because, as in previous years,
we found no statistically signifi cant evidence that higher
levels of spending guarantee better results (see “The 10
Most Innovative Companies,” page 9). Our refrain has
long been that it’s not how much you spend on research
and development, but how you spend it. But it’s also
where you spend that determines your success — and
our 2015 study shows that decisions about R&D loca-
tion look very different today than they did less than a
decade ago (see Exhibit 1).
Wor.
In this year's 10th anniversary of the Global Innovation 1000 study, we looked back at a decade's worth of data on R&D spending patterns and surveys of innovation executives, and we looked ahead to the next decade, asking our respondents how they expect their innovation practices to evolve. We've identified the core strategies that can improve a company's return on its R&D investment--and we've witnessed some convergence around the key success factors that drive results. For more information, visit: http://strat.bz/gap6jsj
This Working Paper was published by United Nations University Maastricht Economic and social Research Institute on Innovation and Technology (UNU-MERIT). It seeks to provide insights about the main characteristics of innovative firms and to gather new evidence with regard to the nature of the innovation process in the Latin American and Caribbean region. This Paper analyses data from a number of CARICOM countries.
Start-up losses are mounting and innovation is slowing, but venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, consultants, university researchers, and business schools are hyping new technologies more than ever before. This hype is facilitated by changes in online media, including the rise of social media. This paper describes how the professional incentives of experts and the changes in online media have increased hype and how this hype makes it harder for policy makers, managers, scientists, engineers, professors, and students to understand new technologies and make good decisions. We need less hype and more level-headed economic analysis and this paper describes how this economic analysis can be done. Here is a link to the journal, Issues in Science & Technology: www.issues.org
Chinese firms have become more active in mergers and acquisitions since the global financial crisis that began in 2008, as economic distress has thrown up attractive deals around the world. Between 2005 and 2011, the number of China's overseas acquisitions tripled to 177 and jumped five-fold in value to $63 billion.
This paper has come about following a survey of more than 1,600 people across the United States, the United Kingdom and France and extensive discussions with numerous advisors and business leaders from lawyers and accounting consultants with global M&A practices to Chairmen and CEOs such as Li Shifu of Geely.
While the M&A conversion rates do not appear to differ greatly on paper, anecdotal feedback and the results of a survey MSLGROUP conducted among the public in Europe and North America suggest that Chinese companies face much more significant challenges in closing international transactions than those from other territories. Furthermore, Chinese companies pay premium of up to 15 to 20 percent simply because of origin.
Leveraging insights into perception issues China faces in key markets around the world, this report explores the communications issues Chinese companies should address when considering outbound M&A.
GE Reports recently released its 2018 Global Innovation Barometer, gauging the state of innovation around the world. The report is based on responses from 2,090 executives in 20 countries.
Among the key findings: a shift from small businesses to large multinationals as drivers of innovation; confidence in the transformative power of lower-profile technologies such as energy grids, virtual healthcare, and smart cities; concerns about the skills gap; and optimism about the potential of 3D printing.
A majority of respondents found protectionist policies beneficial, and results show Japan and China taking on a greater leadership role as champions of innovation.
The geographic footprint of innovation is changing dramatically as research and development programs become more global. An overwhelming 94 percent of the world’s largest innovators now conduct elements of their R&D programs abroad, according to the 2015 Global Innovation 1000 study, our annual analysis of corporate R&D spending. These companies are shifting their innovation investment to countries in which their sales and manufacturing are growing fastest, and where they can access the right technical talent. Not surprisingly, innovation spending has boomed in China and India since our 2008 study, when we first charted the global flows of corporate R&D spending. Collectively, in fact, more R&D is now conducted in Asia than in North America or Europe.
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The UK country report that accompanies the global report highlights that UK business leaders have seen major improvements in the quality of big decision making over the past two years, especially among highly data-driven companies. However, data and analysis are only the third most important input into the decision making process for UK business leaders. Own experience and intuition, as well as the advice and experience of others internally, remain the main inputs into the decision making process at UK companies, and more so than in the rest of western Europe and globally.
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Will Stronger Borders Weaken Innovation?
1. strategy+business
ISSUE 89 WINTER 2017
REPRINT 17407
BY BARRY JARUZELSKI, VOLKER STAACK,
AND ROBERT CHWALIK
THE GLOBAL INNOVATION 1000
Will Stronger Borders
Weaken Innovation?
The flow of talent, investment, and ideas that has
boosted companies’ global R&D efforts may soon
be impeded by the rise of economic nationalism.
3. IllustrationbyPaulWearing
The flow of talent, investment,
and ideas that has boosted
companies’ global R&D efforts
may soon be impeded by the rise
of economic nationalism.
by Barry Jaruzelski, Volker Staack, and Robert Chwalik
The political rhetoric of economic nationalism has grown heated in re-
cent years. The clarion call often sounds for more restrictive trade or immi-
gration policies that supporters believe will promote growth and employment
at home. Studies have shown that a number of countries have embraced this
mind-set to varying degrees, adopting policies that favor domestic industry
and companies.
According to Global Trade Alert, the U.S., India, Russia, and Argentina
implemented the most protectionist measures from November 2008 to
June 2017. The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation re-
ported in early 2017 on “mercantilist innovation policies” from the previous
year, citing local data storage and technology transfer measures in China,
Russia, Indonesia, and Vietnam, among others. China, though it relaxed
some of its restrictions in 2016 after the data was collected, was ranked
second out of 62 nations (behind the Philippines) in the OECD’s 2017 FDI
regulatory restrictiveness index, which measures various foreign investment
constraints. Then there are the headline-grabbing events that have both
been fed by and contributed to the rise of economic nationalism: the U.K.’s
decision in June 2016 to leave the European Union, the election of U.S.
president Donald Trump last November on an “America First” platform,
and the rise in uncertainty surrounding the future of various multilateral
trade agreements.
Will StrongerBorders
Weaken Innovation?
featureinnovation
2
4. 3
strategy+businessissue89
Barry Jaruzelski
barry.jaruzelski@pwc.com
is a thought leader with
Strategy&, PwC’s strategy
consulting business, where
he advises senior high-tech
and industrials executives
on corporate and innovation
strategy. In 2005, he created
the Global Innovation 1000
study, and in 2013 was named
one of the Top 25 Consultants
by Consulting magazine. He is
a principal with PwC US and is
based in Florham Park, N.J.
Volker Staack
volker.staack@pwc.com
is a leading practitioner
in Strategy&’s innovation
practice, working with
automotive, industrials, and
technology companies, to
help them build competitive
innovation capabilities from
strategy to execution. He is a
principal with PwC US and is
based in Miami.
Robert Chwalik
robert.t.chwalik@pwc.com
is an advisor to executives in
the automotive, industrials,
and oil and gas industries
for Strategy&, helping them
improve both top-line growth
and bottom-line performance
in such key operational and
strategic areas as global
engineering and product
innovation. He is a principal
with PwC US and is based in
New York.
Economic nationalism is motivated by a range of in-
tentions, many of which continue to be debated. But
it has an unanticipated consequence that has received
less attention to date: As many politicians and poli-
cymakers in the world’s major economic powers look
inward, the realm of innovation has been thrown into
uncertainty. The global innovation model long em-
braced by leading multinationals, one based on the
free flow of information, money, and talent across bor-
ders, is at risk. The policies inspired by economic na-
tionalism may prove self-defeating, in part by disrupt-
ing R&D activities for the new products and services
that will generate the jobs, growth, and wealth of the
future. The danger of this new reality is exacerbated
by the overall global trend of declining public-sector
R&D spending growth.
Two years ago, in the 2015 Global Innovation 1000
study, our annual analysis of corporate R&D spending
among the 1,000 largest publicly traded companies in
the world, we mapped the development of the global in-
novation model. We found that more and more compa-
nies look for talent outside their headquarters country
and set up R&D centers close to their target markets.
They have grown skilled at managing these distributed
elements, and are connecting them to a strong central
R&D organization while maintaining fluidity through-
out the network. Our study revealed that 94 percent of
the largest R&D spenders follow such a global innova-
tion model. The study also found that companies that
deployed 60 percent or more of their R&D spending
outside their headquarters country earned a premium
of 30 percent on operating margin and return on assets,
and 20 percent on growth in operating income over
their more domestically focused competitors.
Going forward, multinational companies are un-
certain whether the current political rhetoric will turn
into policies with the potential to disrupt their global
R&D networks. They are carefully watching the situa-
tion unfold, as they plan their business and innovation
strategies. Although the goals of corporate innovation
would likely not change if economic nationalism con-
tinues to proliferate, the global innovation model would
need to evolve. At many companies, what is now a nim-
ble, interdependent network may become a group of
autonomous hubs. Unfortunately, in this scenario, com-
panies are likely to lose efficiency, create redundancies,
and take on higher costs.
“Even before [the events of 2016], the world has
seen a declining rate of growth in R&D expenditure
at both government and business levels,” says Soumitra
Dutta, dean of the SC Johnson College of Business at
Cornell University and coauthor of the annual Global
Innovation Index (GII). “With the increased focus on
nationalism and some protectionist tendencies, there’s a
real fear that this downward trend might continue and
that the gains from the globalization of R&D, which
we all have benefited from, might not be as strong or
might in fact become weaker going forward.” (The GII
measures innovation performance in 127 economies,
rather than the 1,000 top corporate spenders featured
in our study.)
In fact, although corporate R&D spending among
the Global Innovation 1000 continued to increase
steadily in 2017 (see “Profiling the Global Innovation
1000,” page 5), our study shows that many companies
are already feeling the effects of economic nationalism.
A majority said a continued trend toward economic na-
tionalism would have a significant or moderate effect
featureinnovation
3
5. featurestitleofthearticle
4
on their R&D operations. Further, if more nationalistic
policies are adopted, many said they will make changes
to their R&D operations within the next two years, and
three-quarters said they will act in the next five years.
“Restrictions on visas, restrictions on talent move-
ment, how easy it is to share technology and knowledge
— none of these were issues we were talking about be-
fore our 2016 strategy review, and now they’re on our
radar screen,” says Robert Pagano, chief executive of-
ficer of Watts Water Technologies, a U.S.-based global
provider of products and solutions for the plumbing,
heating, and water quality industry. Watts Water Tech-
nologies conducts R&D in North America, Europe,
and Asia. As companies plan for their future R&D ac-
tivities, says Pagano, “they will need to look at various
scenarios based on the current and potential environ-
ment. The key is that you have to be flexible now, and
careful not to commit [over the] long term to potential
political hot spots. Uncertainty breeds uncertainty.”
Facing the Unknown
Major companies have been conducting some R&D
outside their headquarters countries for decades. IBM
founded its first overseas research center in 1956 in
Switzerland, and Japanese auto companies began open-
ing design centers in the U.S. in the 1960s. Beginning
in the late 20th century, however, the movement toward
global corporate R&D accelerated, both as business it-
self became increasingly globalized and as Web-based
communications came of age. The main drivers for in-
novators were the ability to tap into wider talent pools
and the opportunity to locate R&D facilities closer to
growing markets and production facilities.
But economic nationalism is forcing companies
headquartered around the globe to question the sus-
tainability of their integrated global networks. Over-
all, 52 percent of respondents said that a general move
toward economic nationalism will have a moderate or
significant impact on their companies’ R&D efforts.
Japanese respondents, relative to those in other regions,
think the impact would be highest, with 58 percent
envisioning moderate to severe effects. They are fol-
lowed by respondents in Europe and the countries in
our “rest of world” category, at 52 percent, and in North
America, at 48 percent.
Although nearly two-thirds of companies surveyed
said they have not experienced pressure to change their
approach to innovation in their headquarters country,
30 percent of respondents said that they’ve already felt
pressure to change either where or how they conduct
innovation work. In addition, 23 percent said they ex-
perienced such pressure in another country (outside
their headquarters country). And nearly a third of com-
panies surveyed reported that they have already felt the
effects of economic nationalism on their R&D talent
acquisition or retention because of visa or work restric-
tions — causing them to either lose employees, see less
talent available, or hire more local talent.
An executive at one Europe-based multinational
that conducts innovation over a large network in Eu-
rope, North America, and Asia explains that “our con-
cern is more about what politicians are saying, rather
than [about] what they’ve done at this point. A long-
term worry is that if countries…in the future started
limiting their people’s ability to work abroad — or if
the U.S. encouraged reshoring of production or R&D,
and others followed — we could come into a very fixed
and inflexible world in terms of access to talent, and we
Economic nationalism is forcing companies
to question the sustainability of their global
R&D networks.
(continued on page 7)
featureinnovation
4
6. strategy+businessissue89
Profiling the
Global Innovation
1000
The companies in the Global
Innovation 1000 increased
their R&D spending by 3.2 percent in
2017, pushing it to an all-time high
of US$702 billion. This marked a
resumption of meaningful growth in
innovation spending following flat re-
sults in 2016, and a reversion toward
the mean compound annual growth
rate of 4.8 percent of the last dozen
years. Global private-sector R&D
spending is now 2.7 times as high as it
was in 1999, the first year for which we
assembled data.
The rise in R&D spending came
despite a 2.5 percent decline in
revenue for the Global Innovation
1000 companies. This slump can be
attributed largely to a 14.5 percent
decrease in revenue in the chemicals
and energy industry, which experi-
enced a second year of depressed oil
prices. The combination of overall
R&D spending growth among the
Indexed to 2005
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
2.0
2005 20152010
R&D and Revenue
R&D intensity reached a record high in 2017
among the Global Innovation 1000.
Source: Bloomberg data, Capital IQ data,
Strategy& analysis
Revenue
R&D Spending
R&D Spending
as a % of Revenue
2017 2016
Note: Sums may not equal totals shown due to rounding.
Source: Bloomberg data, Capital IQ data, Strategy& analysis
The Top 20 R&D Spenders
RANK
Company Industry2017
US$ Billions
Change
from 2016
% of
Revenue
Headquarters
R&D Spending
$16.1
$13.9
$12.7
$12.7
$12.1
$12.0
$11.4
$10.1
$10.0
$9.6
$9.3
$9.1
$8.1
$7.9
$7.3
$6.9
$6.8
$6.3
$6.2
$5.9
$194.5
Software and Internet
Software and Internet
Computing and Electronics
Computing and Electronics
Auto
Software and Internet
Healthcare
Healthcare
Computing and Electronics
Healthcare
Auto
Healthcare
Auto
Healthcare
Auto
Auto
Software and Internet
Computing and Electronics
Auto
Software and Internet
28.3%
13.6%
5.0%
–0.1%
–7.7%
–0.5%
14.0%
51.0%
24.5%
0.6%
5.7%
0.5%
8.0%
2.4%
9.0%
3.3%
17.8%
1.4%
13.3%
22.9%
9.4%
11.8%
15.5%
21.5%
7.6%
5.3%
14.1%
21.9%
25.4%
4.7%
19.4%
3.8%
12.7%
4.9%
14.9%
4.8%
4.2%
18.1%
12.8%
4.9%
21.4%
8.8%
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
3
4
5
2
1
6
7
14
11
8
10
9
13
12
15
16
20
17
23
27
Amazon
Alphabet
Intel
Samsung
Volkswagen
Microsoft
Roche Holding
Merck
Apple
Novartis
Toyota
Johnson & Johnson
General Motors
Pfizer
Ford
Daimler
Oracle
Cisco
Honda
Facebook
North America
North America
North America
South Korea
Europe
North America
Europe
North America
North America
Europe
Japan
North America
North America
North America
North America
Europe
North America
North America
Japan
North America
TOP 20 TOTAL
Amazon moved from the number three position in 2016 to become the largest R&D spender in 2017. On the top 20 list, it is one of nine high-tech
companies and one of 13 companies headquartered in the United States.
Companies in RED have been among the top 20 R&D spenders every year since 2005.
featureinnovation
5
7. 1000. Thirteen of the top 20 spenders
in 2017 were headquartered in the
United States, reflecting U.S. domi-
nance in the high-tech and healthcare
industries, which tend toward high
R&D intensity.
The top four industries by R&D
spending — computing and electron-
ics, healthcare, auto, and software
and Internet — together accounted
for more than 75 percent of all R&D
spending by the Global Innovation
1000 companies. But looking ahead,
the top four are in line for a shakeup.
Healthcare companies increased
R&D outlays by 5.9 percent in 2017,
and are on track to supplant comput-
ing and electronics as the top R&D
industry spender in 2018 (see “Top
Spenders by Industry”). Meanwhile,
growth in R&D spending for soft-
ware and Internet companies, at 16.1
percent, was once again the fastest
— by far — of all industries. Given
their current trajectory, software
Global Innovation 1000
and lower revenues
resulted in a record-
high rate of R&D inten-
sity (R&D spending as a percentage
of revenues) of 4.5 percent (see “R&D
and Revenue”).
For the first time in the study’s
13-year history, a software and In-
ternet company — Amazon — led the
top 20 R&D spenders, with outlays of
$16.1 billion, followed by Alphabet
(see “The Top 20 R&D Spenders”).
In fact, all the software and Internet
companies in the top 20 either stayed
at their position or rose on the spend-
ing list in 2017, and for the first time,
numbers one through four of the top
20 spenders list were high-tech
companies. Honda and Facebook
joined the ranks of the top 20 spend-
ers in 2017 in the 19th and 20th
places, respectively, replacing two
pharmaceutical firms, AstraZeneca
and Bristol-Myers Squibb.
As a group, the companies of the
top 20 spent $194.5 billion on R&D
in 2017; this figure represented 28
percent of the total spending of all the
companies in the Global Innovation
and Internet companies will take the
number three industry position in
2018, surpassing auto companies.The
software and Internet and healthcare
industries also added the largest
number of companies to the Global In-
novation 1000 in 2017: 13 new arrivals
from the software and Internet sector,
and nine from the healthcare sector.
On the other side, the industri-
als, computing and electronics, and
chemicals and energy sectors saw
the largest number of companies ex-
iting the Global Innovation 1000. Com-
panies in those three sectors, as well
as consumer companies, decreased
their R&D spending in 2017. Here we
can contrast innovation spending on
the hardware side of the digital world
with that of spending on software. Al-
though recording just a small dip this
year, R&D spending by computing and
electronics companies has dropped
by 5.2 percent since 2013.
Top Spenders by Industry
Healthcare companies are on track to become
the biggest R&D spenders by 2018.
Source: Bloomberg data, Capital IQ data,
Strategy& analysis
$0
$50
$100
$150
$200
Auto
Industrials
US$ Billions
2005 2015 20192010
est.
Computing
and
Electronics
Software
and
Internet
Healthcare
The Geography of R&D
North America has the largest number of companies in the sectors with the fastest rate of R&D
spending growth: the software and Internet and healthcare sectors.
Europe
Rest of
World
China
Japan
North
America
TOTAL COMPANIES
Note: Percentages may not total 100 due to rounding.
Source: Bloomberg data, Capital IQ data, Strategy& analysis
96
Auto
18%
24%
31%
18%
9%
167
Industrials
18%
26%
22%
26%
8%
116
Software
and Internet
62%
13%
2%
17%
6%
173
Healthcare
53%
28%
10%
2%
6%
220
Computing
and Electronics
41%
13%
15%
12%
19%
(continued on next page)
featureinnovation
6
8. 7
strategy+businessissue89
have similar worries about how knowledge sharing and
knowledge transfer could be affected.”
Uncertainty about economic nationalism may al-
ready be affecting companies’ strategic planning. One
of the key characteristics of the most successful inno-
vators, which we have studied in past years, is the de-
gree of alignment companies achieve between their
innovation strategies, which tend to be long term, and
their business strategies, which tend to be short term.
Our analyses have shown that when these strategies are
closely aligned, companies consistently and significantly
outperform their rivals on key financial metrics.
From 2014 through 2016, the percentage of survey
respondents reporting that their company’s innovation
strategies and business strategies were highly aligned
rose steadily, from 27.7 to 31.8 percent. But in 2017,
the percentage dropped to 25.8 percent — a 19 percent
decline in a single year. We believe uncertainty about
global economic and trade policy is the likely culprit.
No other major changes in the business or economic
landscapes explain this rapid decline.
Mapping Vulnerability
We asked our survey respondents which countries’
economies have the most to lose if economic national-
ism affects R&D, and which will gain. In “The Net
Risk Index,” we show respondents’ predictions about
how countries will fare (we assigned each country a
net risk index score based on the net calculation of re-
spondents’ perceived economic risk and gain for each
country) compared with countries’ structural risk. The
latter is represented by the amount of corporate R&D
conducted in each country by companies that are head-
quartered in other countries; we think of this as the
amount of R&D in any country that is, in effect, “im-
ported.” According to our survey respondents, the U.S.
(continued from previous page)
Among regions, North America
has the largest number of compa-
nies in the healthcare, computing
and electronics, and software and
Internet industries in the Global In-
novation 1000. Europe and China have
the largest numbers of industrials
companies, and Japan and Europe
have the largest numbers of auto
companies (see “The Geography of
R&D,” previous page).
R&D spending at Japanese com-
panies rose 5.9 percent in 2017 — the
first increase for these companies in
five years. Companies in the “rest of
world” group upped R&D spending by
1.5 percent in 2017 (see “R&D Spend-
ing by Region”). Meanwhile, R&D
spending rose at companies head-
quartered in North America by 3.8
percent in 2017, although that was less
than half the 8 percent rate of growth
in 2016. At European companies,
spending rose 2.9 percent, partially
offsetting a 9 percent decrease in 2016.
Finally, in China, R&D spending
decelerated sharply. After growing
consistently at double-digit rates
since we began studying the Global
Innovation 1000 in 2005, R&D spend-
ing at Chinese companies declined
for the first time, by 3.3 percent. This
decrease reflects the 11.4 percent
drop in R&D spending in China’s in-
dustrials sector — still the country’s
highest-spending industry — which
has been affected by China’s general
economic slowdown and increasing
financial constraints.
Europe
Japan
North America
Change
2016–17
Rest of World
R&D Spending by Region
After years of double-digit growth, R&D
spending by Chinese companies declined
in 2017.
Note: Use of local currency would result in different
year-over-year changes.
Source: Bloomberg data, Capital IQ data,
Strategy& analysis
$0
$50
$100
$150
$200
$250
$300
$350
US$ Billions
2013 2015 201720162014
+3.8%
+2.9%
+5.9%
+1.5%
–3.3%
China
(continued from page 4)
featureinnovation
7
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8
is the country where R&D operations are, by far, most
vulnerable to rising economic nationalism. It is followed
by the U.K., China, Mexico, and India.
As noted earlier, the global innovation model is
powered by the relative free flow of information, mon-
ey, and talent. The U.S. has the largest dollar volume
of “imported” corporate R&D spending, according to
our 2015 report on global innovation flows. China is the
second-largest importer of R&D spending, but China’s
imports make up a much larger percentage of total in-
country corporate R&D spending (81 percent, versus 36
percent in the U.S.), making the country’s innovation
efforts far more dependent on companies based overseas.
The United States. The U.S. is particularly vulner-
able to disruptions in flows of talent. “Hiring talent is
the most important thing we do in our organization,”
says the chief technology officer of a U.S.-based elec-
tronics components manufacturer. “There’s a cost asso-
ciated with hiring talent; it’s not easy, and it takes time.”
Although the company’s talent acquisition efforts have
The Net Risk Index
Each country's index score corresponds to the net level of economic risk or gain that survey respondents believe the country will face if economic
nationalism affects its R&D efforts. The potential impact of this score is illustrated by considering how much R&D spending a country imports.
0
5
–10
–20
–30
GAIN
RISK
Risk/Gain Index:
Imported Corporate
R&D (2015):
U.K.
–20.8
$19.5
U.S.
–31.7
$52.5
billion
China
–17.4
$44.2
Mexico
–5.0
$1.5
India
–3.2
$28.1
Japan
–2.3
$16.0
Russia
–1.4
$5.9
Singapore
–1.3
$7.1
South
Korea
–1.3
$5.7
Brazil
–0.5
$5.1
Australia
1.6
$3.9
France
1.8
$7.9
Germany
2.0
$15.9
Canada
2.7
$9.8
KEY
BAR HEIGHT:
Country’s net risk/gain
if economic nationalism
affects R&D efforts
BAR WIDTH:
Total corporate R&D
imported into country,
in US$ billions
Source: Strategy& analysis, 2015 Global Innovation 1000 study
Imported corporate
R&D as a % of
in-country corporate
R&D spending (2015)
81–100%
0–20%
21–40%
41–60%
61–80%
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The 10
Most Innovative
Companies
R&D in 2017 — a mere 4.7 percent of
its revenues. Apple spends up to 60
percent less on R&D as a percentage
of revenue than do other top comput-
ing and electronics companies.
Amazon moved from fifth
place in 2016 to third in 2017. This
is perhaps not surprising given the
company’s reach and ambitions,
which expanded to include retail
grocery with its June 2017 acquisition
of Whole Foods. Tesla, which made
headlines with the launch of its mass-
market electric sedan and lithium–
ion battery program, maintained its
number four position. It remains the
only auto company on the list. For
the first time, a Chinese company —
e-commerce giant Alibaba — was
ranked among the most innovative,
coming in at number 10. It is the sec-
ond online retailer (after Amazon) to
be selected by respondents. Making a
departure from the list this year was
3M, which had been a member of the
top 10 since 2010.
Eight of the 10 most innovative
companies this year are headquar-
tered in the United States. It is also
Alphabet (formerly Google)
was selected as the world’s
most innovative company by respon-
dents to our 2017 Global Innovation
1000 survey (see “The 10 Most Inno-
vative Companies”).
The company had been steadily
closing the gap with Apple, which had
held the number one spot since we
first asked respondents to identify
the most innovative company, in 2010.
Alphabet’s top ranking comes just
two years after Google announced its
holding company structure, separat-
ing its more mature businesses from
new ventures in such fields as au-
tonomous vehicles and life sciences.
Apple, at number two, has its
own distinction: It is by far the most
efficient innovator among major play-
ers in the computing and electronics
and software and Internet sectors.
The company spent US$10 billion on
noteworthy that half of the 10 most
innovative companies were founded
within just the last 25 years — Ama-
zon in 1994, Alphabet (as Google) in
1998, Alibaba in 1999, Tesla in 2003,
and Facebook in 2004. But General
Electric, founded more than a century
ago by innovation wizard Thomas
Edison, is holding strong at number
seven (up from number nine in 2016).
As in all previous years, the 10
most innovative companies outper-
formed the 10 biggest R&D spenders
on a variety of financial metrics (see
“Innovating vs. Spending”). (Six of the
10 companies on the most innova-
tive list — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple,
Facebook, Microsoft, and Samsung
— also appear on the top 20 R&D
spenders list.) The 10 most innova-
tive once again beat the top 10 R&D
spenders by double digits on both
average five-year revenue growth and
market cap growth, and also posted
slightly higher five-year EBITDA as a
percentage of revenue.
The 10 Most Innovative Companies
Survey respondents continued to look to the high-tech sector for the most innovative companies,
promoting Alphabet to the number one position in 2017 and naming Alibaba — the first Chinese
company to appear on the list — as number 10.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
RANK
Source: Strategy& analysis
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Apple
Alphabet
Samsung
Amazon
Tesla
GE
Microsoft
IBM
Facebook
Alibaba
3M
P&G
Intel
Toyota
48
Innovating vs.Spending
Companies selected by survey respondents as
the most innovative continue to outperform the
top R&D spenders.
Source: Bloomberg data, Capital IQ data,
Strategy& analysis
NORMALIZED PERFORMANCE
OF INDUSTRY PEERS
69 67
EBITDA as %
of Revenue
5-yr. Avg.
52
39
Market Cap
Growth
5-yr. CAGR
HIGHEST
POSSIBLE
SCORE: 100
LOWEST
POSSIBLE
SCORE: 0
Revenue
Growth
5-yr. CAGR
39
TOP10SPENDERS
50
TOP10INNOVATORS
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not been affected so far, the executive notes that “any
overly restrictive policy to granting student or working
visas to qualified foreign talent — and ultimately ac-
cessibility to green cards — will have adverse effects on
global corporations’ hiring strategies and should be a
concern for U.S. policy leadership.”
Immigrants in the U.S. make up only 16.9 percent
of the overall workforce, but they hold an outsized share
of jobs in the high-tech, science, and engineering sec-
tors. They account for 32 percent of workers in comput-
er- and mathematics-related positions and 24 percent in
other sciences and engineering, according to the Migra-
tion Policy Institute.
Among graduate students in the U.S., the propor-
tion of international students in engineering and com-
puter science programs (the prime recruiting pool for
many corporate R&D positions) is far higher than the
proportion of immigrants in the overall population.
Eighty-one percent of graduate students in U.S. electri-
cal engineering programs are from other countries, as
are 79 percent of those in computer science programs;
75 percent in industrial engineering; and 62 percent
in mechanical engineering, according to the National
Foundation for American Policy.
“The U.S. doesn’t churn out enough engineers by
far — either in quality or in quantity, and has been
making up the difference with imports of foreign tal-
ent, usually starting with people coming out of U.S.
universities,” says the electronics components executive
quoted above.
The United States’ turn toward economic nation-
alism has already affected applications to U.S. institu-
tions from foreign students. Although comprehensive
data on national applications and enrollments won’t be
available until early 2018, a survey conducted in March
2017 by the American Association of Collegiate Reg-
istrars and Admissions Officers, in partnership with
several other education organizations, found that about
39 percent of institutions had seen significant declines
in international applications. Anecdotal evidence from
specific graduate schools shows declines in international
applications in the range of 10 to 30 percent.
At San Jose State University, for example — where
the Charles W. Davidson College of Engineering is a
major supplier of R&D talent for Silicon Valley com-
panies — applications from overseas graduate students
were down 15 percent for the 2017–18 school year, al-
though the school was still able to maintain its enroll-
ment levels of international students. Potential students
from overseas and their families are concerned about
safety in the U.S., about possible visa difficulties, and
about the ability to pursue job opportunities in the U.S.
after graduation, according to school officials.
“We’re in the same wait-and-see mode as corpo-
rations,” says Sheryl Ehrman, dean of the engineering
school at San Jose State. “Any change in visa or work
training requirements would be a huge concern for us,
and likewise [for] our industry partners who hire our
students.” Adds Ehrman, “I grew up in the Valley, and
I know the contribution that immigrants have made
at all levels to the booming economy here. If we don’t
have that influx of people, and a welcoming environ-
ment where people can contribute, we’re going to lose
our economic edge.”
Economic nationalism may be an even bigger is-
sue for smaller schools not located near major cities. At
Texas Tech University, in Lubbock, applications from
international students are down 20 percent for 2017,
“If we don’t have that influx of [immigrants],
and a welcoming environment where
people can contribute, we’re going to lose
our economic edge.”
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and admissions of international students are down 7
percent. Brandon Weeks, associate dean of research and
graduate programs, says, “There’s a lot of angst among
students about what’s going to happen in the future,
and I think mid-tier universities like Texas Tech are
probably going to feel the pain first — and I think we’re
starting to feel it.”
Meanwhile, other countries have responded to such
developments in the U.S. by courting international stu-
dents for their own universities, publicizing their more
welcoming and transparent immigration policies. Both
Canada and Australia have revamped their policies for
international students, offering streamlined application
processes, easier visa and work–study rules, and more
certain paths to citizenship for students who want to
remain after graduation. China has made major invest-
ments to fund its higher education system in order to
develop, attract, and retain its own R&D talent base
since the 1990s.
The United Kingdom. The second most vulnerable
country, according to our survey, is the United King-
dom. With the Brexit negotiations under way, it’s still
not clear how much the pending withdrawal from the
European Union will inhibit the recruiting ability of
British companies and universities. In the run-up to
the Brexit vote, Britain’s Institution of Engineering and
Technology, one of the world’s largest engineering or-
ganizations, warned that the country’s existing short-
age of skilled workers could hit a crisis point if com-
panies face barriers to recruiting engineers from other
E.U. countries. In addition, British university officials
have warned that applications from E.U. students will
be down in 2017, after having risen steadily in previ-
ous years. In late 2016, Cambridge University reported
a drop of 17 percent in E.U. undergraduate applications
for 2017.
Weaker R&D programs in the U.K. could also have
a ripple effect across the region. Although the end re-
sult of Brexit in the U.K. is unclear, the European ex-
ecutive quoted above expressed concern that if the U.K.
becomes more isolated, “the economic power and skill
of the U.K. might deteriorate, and Europe as a whole
— not necessarily the European Union — will become
weaker compared with Asia and the Americas.” It’s
worth noting that Europe’s overall position in global in-
novation has already deteriorated over the past decade.
Our 2015 analysis of global innovation flows revealed
that between 2007 and 2015, R&D spending in Eu-
rope had fallen from first place among regions to third,
after Asia and North America.
China. The third most frequently cited country at
risk is China. This is understandable: Total corporate
R&D spending in China grew 120 percent from 2007
to 2015 (to US$55 billion), but more than 80 percent
of that R&D spending in 2015 ($44 billion) was per-
formed by companies headquartered in other countries,
with the largest single source being the United States.
In addition, although domestic corporate R&D spend-
ing in China had been growing at double-digit rates for
many years, that trend reversed in 2017. R&D spend-
ing by China-based companies declined by 3.3 percent
— the first decrease since we created the Global Inno-
vation 1000 in 2005. Together, these trends make the
country particularly vulnerable to disruptions of R&D
investment that may come from abroad.
However, 25 percent of our respondents believe
that China’s economy would benefit from the impact
of economic nationalism on global R&D (compared
Automation doesn’t address the problem
of not being able to relocate (or hire) top
talent in the highest-value R&D locations.
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with 43 percent who thought it was at risk). China still
has many attractions as an R&D location, including its
proximity to a high-growth market and key manufac-
turing sites, as well as low development costs. If immi-
gration and trade policies in other regions, including the
U.S., were to become less welcoming for R&D opera-
tions, China could be a beneficiary of increased innova-
tion flows from companies based in Australia, Canada,
or Europe, or even those in the United States and the
United Kingdom.
Other countries that are at risk or may gain. Our
survey respondents believe several other countries are
also at risk from economic nationalism, though to a
smaller degree than the U.S., U.K., and China. R&D
spending in Mexico, for example, could be affected
by U.S. policy actions, given the country’s close trade
relations with the United States. India’s R&D spend-
ing is dominated by investment from multinationals
based in other countries, making it vulnerable. Total
R&D spending in India grew 115 percent from 2007
to 2015, to $28 billion; that growth was driven almost
entirely by companies from other countries as India
became the leading global destination for offshored
software R&D. However, it is worth noting that In-
dia was ranked number four in both potential risk and
potential gain by our respondents. It’s possible that
countries may decide to double down on their software
R&D in India, setting up larger and more autonomous
innovation hubs in the country.
Our survey additionally indicates that R&D in sev-
eral countries would be likely to benefit modestly if eco-
nomic nationalism and protectionism rise. At the top of
this list is Canada, which, as previously noted, is aiming
to attract international innovation talent to its univer-
sity system as the U.S. tightens visa and immigration
programs. And Canada is already an attractive North
American alternative for multinationals. Microsoft, for
example, opened an R&D center in 2016 in downtown
Vancouver, just across the U.S. border, with 750 R&D
positions and an estimated economic impact of US$180
million per year. Second most likely to benefit, accord-
ing to our respondents, is Germany, which has point-
edly reiterated its pro-globalization policy stance. Such
openness is important to the German economy; exports
make up close to 47 percent of Germany’s GDP. Ger-
many is followed by France, where newly elected presi-
dent Emmanuel Macron ran on a platform stressing
the importance of innovation for the French economy.
Both countries are being eyed by companies that may
need to relocate U.K.-based hubs; several major banks
have already announced plans to transfer jobs from
London to Frankfurt.
Preparing to Respond
The executives we interviewed underscored the fact that
they would act in the best interests of their company if
pressures from economic nationalism were to constrain
talent availability in their headquarters countries. Arthur
Orduña, executive vice president and chief innovation
officer of Avis Budget Group, a global provider of mo-
bility solutions whose brands include Avis, Budget, and
Zipcar, says: “We have not yet seen any direct effect on
R&D talent acquisition from a software and engineer-
ing perspective. If policy changes led to talent acquisi-
tion challenges, we would take the appropriate steps to
meet our business objectives.”
Our survey respondents said if economic nation-
alism continues to rise, they will make a range of
changes to keep their companies’ R&D operations
vibrant, and the potential actions they cited most fre-
quently help us envision how global R&D models may
evolve as a result. The key finding is that in an envi-
ronment where talent mobility is challenged, compa-
nies would be most likely to hire specialized talent in
local regional markets rather than in their headquarters
country (reported by 37 percent of respondents), and
would open future R&D locations in regional markets
(33 percent).
Other respondents (18 percent) cited reducing staff
and increasing automation as a likely response if eco-
nomic nationalism takes hold. Of course, automation is
a solution to a different problem. It can lower costs that
build up as a result of the redundancies and inefficien-
cies that come with having to set up a more autonomous
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strategy+businessissue89
innovation model. Automation doesn’t, however, address
the problem of not being able to relocate (or hire) your
top talent in the most appropriate, highest-value R&D
locations. The evolving model would also depend even
more on digital collaboration tools, and people would be
less able to move freely throughout the network. Of our
respondents, 59 percent said that economic nationalism
would lead them to increase their use of such tools.
Perhaps reflecting the uncertainty about potential
policy changes, our respondents reported mixed opin-
ions about the effects on intellectual property policies:
20 percent said they would be more willing to share
intellectual property across borders, whereas 16 percent
said they would be more likely to limit such sharing. The
political uncertainty is creating planning uncertainty.
When we dig deeper and examine responses on the
basis of companies’ performance level and their inno-
vation strategy, differences emerge in individual needs
and abilities. For example, the middling and lower-per-
forming companies among our survey respondents were
the most doubtful that economic nationalism would
necessitate changes in their R&D operations — 35 and
34 percent of respondents in these two groups, respec-
tively, reported that they did not believe there would be
any changes as a result of economic nationalism. This
compares with 23 percent of respondents from high-
performing companies who held this belief. (Company
performance level was self-reported by respondents,
who were asked if their organization’s revenue growth
was faster than, slower than, or the same as that of their
key competitors.)
The high performers, then, are more likely to an-
ticipate changes. And they are also more likely to take
action. Forty-one percent said they would open future
R&D centers in regional markets, compared with
only 25 percent of low-performing companies. And 39
Methodology prices, we used the exchange rate on
the last day of the period.
All companies were coded into
one of nine industry sectors (or
“other”) according to Capital IQ’s
industry designations, and into one of
five regional designations, as deter-
mined by their reported headquarters
locations. To enable meaningful com-
parisons across industries, the R&D
spending levels and financial perfor-
mance metrics of each company were
indexed against the average values in
its own industry.
Finally, to understand the ways in
which global R&D is and will be con-
ducted at companies across multiple
industries, Strategy& conducted an
online survey of 562 innovation lead-
ers around the world. The companies
participating represented more than
US$100 billion in R&D spending, or
14.4 percent of this year’s total Global
Innovation 1000 R&D spending; all
nine of the industry sectors; and all
five geographic regions.
As it has in each of the past 12
editions of the Global Innovation
1000, this year Strategy&, PwC’s strat-
egy consulting business, identified
the 1,000 public companies around
the world that spent the most on R&D
during the last fiscal year, as of June
30, 2017. To be included, companies
had to make their R&D spending num-
bers public. Subsidiaries that were
more than 50 percent owned by a sin-
gle corporate parent during the period
were excluded if their financial results
were included in the parent company’s
financials. The Global Innovation 1000
companies collectively account for 40
percent of the world’s R&D spending,
from all sources, including corporate
and government sources.
In 2013, Strategy& made some
adjustments to the data collection
process in order to gain a more
accurate and complete picture of
innovation spending. In prior years,
both capitalized and amortized R&D
expenditures were excluded. Starting
in 2013, we included the most recent
fiscal year’s amortization of capital-
ized R&D expenditures for relevant
companies in calculating the total
R&D investment, while continuing to
exclude any non-amortized capital-
ized costs. We have now applied this
methodology to all previous years’
data; as a result, historical data
referenced in the studies from 2014
onward will not always align with
previously published figures for the
2005 through 2012 studies.
For each of the top 1,000 com-
panies, we obtained from Bloomberg
and Capital IQ the key financial met-
rics for 2012 through 2017, including
sales, gross profit, operating profit,
net profit, historical R&D expendi-
tures, and market capitalization. All
sales and R&D expenditure figures
in foreign currencies were converted
into U.S. dollars according to an
average of the exchange rate over
the relevant period; for data on share
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14
percent of high performers reported that they would
hire more specialized technical talent in local regional
markets, compared with 34 percent of low-performing
companies. Interestingly, low-performing companies
were most likely to take an action that could be harm-
ful to their overall R&D operations: 15 percent said
they would move R&D locations away from current
manufacturing or production centers, compared with
11 percent of high performers (see “Planning by Per-
formance Level”).
For the past 10 years, the Global Innovation 1000
study has tracked (along with other factors) the dis-
tinct innovation strategies companies use to create their
products and take them to market. Nearly every com-
pany, we have found, follows one of three fundamental
innovation strategies: Need Seekers focus on engaging
customers directly to generate new insights and develop
products and services based on superior end-user un-
derstanding, aiming to fill unarticulated needs. Market
Readers monitor competitors and customers closely to
create value by capitalizing on market trends as fast fol-
lowers to meet customers’ articulated needs. Technology
Drivers use their internal technological capabilities to
develop new products and services and seek to push
these technologies out into the market in search of de-
sirable applications.
For need seekers and technology drivers, innovation
spending is more central to the overall business model
and strategy than it is for other companies. Their R&D
spending as a percentage of revenue is about twice as
high as that of market readers. It’s therefore natural
that need seekers and technology drivers see more risks
to their operations from economic nationalism (when
asked how much their R&D would be affected by a
move toward economic nationalism, 56 percent and 54
percent, respectively, say that they perceive moderate to
significant impact) than market readers do (47 percent).
Both need seekers and market readers are slightly
more likely to hire specialized talent in local regional
markets or to open future R&D centers in regional
markets than technology drivers if economic nation-
alism proliferates. Although technology drivers are
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40%
Planning by Performance Level
High-performing companies are most likely to open more R&D centers
and staff them with local talent if economic nationalism takes hold,
whereas low performers are more likely to turn to automation.
Reduce staff
and replace
with automation
“I do not believe there will be any changes as a result of economic nationalism”
What changes would your company likely consider making to its R&D/
innovation efforts if there is a move toward greater economic nationalism?
Open future R&D
centers in
regional markets
High Performers
Middling Performers
Low Performers
35%
Middling
Performers
34%
Low
Performers
23%
High
Performers
Move to a more
autonomous regional
division model
Move R&D locations
away from current
production centers
Hire specialized
technical talent in
local markets
Source: Strategy& analysis
The middling and lower-performing
companies among our survey respondents
were the most doubtful that economic
nationalism would necessitate changes
in their R&D operations.
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strategy+businessissue89
most likely to think no changes will be needed, they
tend to be the companies with the largest engineering
centers, and are the most likely to turn to automation
if economic nationalism affects their operations (see
“Planning by Innovation Strategy”).
The Law of Unintended Consequences
Short of a prolonged global trade war on the scale of the
1930s, when countries vied with one another to erect
higher trade barriers as the world economy contracted
during the Great Depression, it seems certain that the
prevailing global innovation model developed over the
last several decades will not vanish. Luca Savi, execu-
tive vice president and chief operating officer of ITT
Corporation, a globally diversified high-technology en-
gineering and manufacturing company based in White
Plains, N.Y., told us that he sees few concerns about
R&D operations or talent acquisition from rising pro-
tectionism in the short term to medium term, and re-
mains confident that “common sense will prevail in the
long term.”
But if economic nationalism does take hold, the
global innovation model could be forced to change
to reflect the new normal. We believe that the result
would be the evolution of today’s integrated and inter-
dependent network into one with more self-sufficient,
fully functioning R&D nodes. These nodes will be
more autonomous in terms of both their decision rights
and their capabilities. Companies will need to look for
ways to manage the higher costs they will incur with
this model, for example, as a result of redundancies
that are created when top talent cannot move easily
throughout the network but instead needs to be hired
in each location.
We’ve seen a similar type of autonomous model
before. Two of the largest aerospace programs in his-
tory — Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter
and Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner — were developed in
long-term agreements with networks of partner coun-
tries and companies, in globally dispersed models for
sharing R&D and production costs. The benefits in-
cluded wider markets for the aircraft; reduced up-front
investment and risk; and closer relationships with for-
eign governments, suppliers, and customers. But these
arrangements also entailed complex program manage-
ment challenges and significant transfers of technology.
Hire specialized
technical talent in
local markets
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40%
Reduce staff
and replace
with automation
Planning by Innovation Strategy
Whether a company approaches innovation as a technology driver, need
seeker, or market reader will affect its response to the rise of economic
nationalism.
“I do not believe there will be any changes as a result of economic nationalism”
Need
Seekers
28%
Market
Readers
28%
What changes would your company likely consider making to its R&D/
innovation efforts if there is a move toward greater economic nationalism?
Technology
Drivers
35%
Open future R&D
centers in
regional markets
Technology Drivers
Need Seekers
Market Readers
Source: Strategy& analysis
Business leaders need to develop
contingency plans and prepare their R&D
centers to be more self-sufficient.
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Resources
Michael J. Coren, “The US is about to exclude the next generation of
immigrant entrepreneurs,” Quartz, Feb. 2, 2017: How changes in U.S.
immigration policy could impair Silicon Valley’s role as a magnet for
global innovation talent.
Soumitra Dutta, Bruno Lanvin, and Sacha Wunsch-Vincent, eds.,
The Global Innovation Index 2017 (Cornell University, INSEAD, WIPO,
2017): Annual study, for which Strategy& is a Knowledge Partner, of the
innovation performance of 127 countries and economies.
Barry Jaruzelski, Kevin Schwartz, and Volker Staack, “The Global Inno-
vation 1000: Innovation’s New World Order,” s+b, Oct. 27, 2015: In our
2015 study, we found that leading innovators had embraced a globalized
R&D model — and were reaping financial benefits.
Steven Lohr, “A Trump Dividend for Canada? Maybe in Its A.I. Industry,”
New York Times, May 9, 2017: How Canadian companies and universities
are capitalizing on the U.S. administration’s “America First” policy shift.
Kate Palmer, “Brexit will widen 1.8m engineering skills crisis, industry
heavyweights warn,” Telegraph, Apr. 23, 2016: How Brexit could make
an existing skills gap in the U.K. industry worse.
Links to all previous Global Innovation 1000 studies from 2005 to 2015,
as well as videos, infographics, and other articles: strategyand.pwc.com/
innovation1000
Strategy&’s Innovation Strategy Profiler allows you to evaluate your com-
pany’s R&D strategy and the capabilities it requires: strategyand.pwc.
com/global/home/what_we_do/services/innovation/thought-leadership/
innovation-strategy-profiler
More thought leadership on this topic:
strategy-business.com/innovation
Other industries and projects that are national priori-
ties — such as automotive, clean technologies, semicon-
ductors, and software — might find themselves facing
similar opportunities and politically driven challenges.
Meanwhile, the wait-and-see stance that many
companies are adopting is appropriate, as it remains
difficult to judge the degree to which the rhetoric of
economic nationalism and protectionism will translate
into policy actions. As Mike Sutter, president and CEO
of Chromalox, which specializes in advanced thermal
technologies and is a U.S. subsidiary of the U.K.-based
firm Spirax-Sarco, noted: “As we do our 2018 budget-
ing, we’re adding a placeholder for what we’re gener-
ally terming protectionism. It is not something we have
been concerned about in the past, and we don’t plan to
spend a whole lot of time on it, because there’s just such
a darned lack of clarity. It may turn out to be some-
thing, it may turn out to be nothing.”
But business leaders need to develop contingency
plans now. For example, they must consider the poten-
tial realignment of business and innovation strategies
and how a more autonomous and redundant R&D
network would operate. They need to consider how
they will staff and resource their R&D centers: Mov-
ing them away from their manufacturing and produc-
tion centers would be shortsighted. Instead, they should
prepare these centers to be more self-sufficient. They
must also consider whether they have access to the digi-
tal collaboration tools they will need to maintain com-
munications and efficiency and to manage rising costs.
Taking a step back, companies also must recognize that
economic nationalism can pose a strategic risk — of
which the risk to their ability to be effective innovators
is a critical component. Companies need to make sure
they are bringing the right people to the table alongside
their R&D leaders, to think through these issues and
their potential downside.
Even though companies are hedging their bets,
the executives we interviewed remain uniformly hope-
ful that the trend toward greater economic nationalism
will not continue. “My hope is that economic national-
ism doesn’t increase,” says Avis Budget Group’s Orduña.
“My personal experience is that the technology, engi-
neering, and science communities are inherently uni-
versal. There’s competitiveness, of course, but collabo-
ration and openness are cornerstones of each of these.”
As policies based on economic nationalism contin-
ue to be debated, the potential impact on companies’
R&D strategy and operations cannot be left out of the
discussion. The result of such policies could be innova-
tion programs that grow ever more costly and cumber-
some. That’s an unintended consequence that should be
approached with caution. Innovation fuels growth, it
improves lives, it creates jobs — and these are goals that
connect us all. +
Reprint No. 17407
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