Some years ago, I wrote a book about Strategy execution called Getting the Right Things Done. GRTD has found an audience, and I’ve worked with fine teams around the world implementing its core principles. Since 2017, I’ve also worked in Innovation hot spots like Singapore, helping companies ignited new Growth using Digital methods. How do these two powerful areas of practice relate to one another?
Here's what I have learned. The Strategy execution principles and methods described in GRTD remain fundamental and are the key to protecting our core business. But in the age of AI, we must also ignited new Growth using Digital methods. And that means building on our OpEx/Lean foundation with the methods & mindsets driving Innovation. Our book, Harnessing Digital Disruption, is a sister volume to GRTD set in Singapore and the high-flying world of international finance. Together GRTD & HDD illustrate how to both protect our core business – and ignited new Growth with Digital methods. The good news is that there is a strong synergy between these two essential streams of practice. Our challenge: the methods and mindsets informing each stream differ in important ways. In this and following pieces, I’ll take these ideas up in some detail.
Innovation does not begin with Technology. That’s one of my key lessons working with my friend & co-author Laurent Simon these past eight years on Innovation projects in east Asia. New growth, I’ve learned, does not begin with the proverbial ‘better mouse trap’, that fabulous new service or product you believe in. In fact, that’s a great way to go broke. New product launch failure rates are very high, with estimates ranging from 70% to 95%.
- Harvard Business School: Estimates that over 80% of new products fail to meet their objectives.
- Food Navigator-USA: Reports that failure rates can reach 90% in the Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) industry.
- MIT Professional Education: estimates that nearly 95% of new products miss the mark.
Why build something nobody wants? Is there a greater waste anywhere in industry?
Innovation begins with a need, a problem that a critical mass of people can’t solve. To be sure, often people don’t know they have the need, or face the problem. How then, do we start?
We begin with a deep, intuitive understanding of the customer: Who are they? What is their story? What do they believe in? What do they long for? What are the realities of their day-to-day existence? What are their pains & gains, hopes & aspirations?
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Laurent & Pascal at a hockey game in Toronto |
I thought I understood all this. I’m a Toyota-trained engineer, and our Toyota factory had won multiple JD Power Awards for Quality. I remembered the rigorous quality assurance methods we used to identify and reduce defects per unit. I remembered our commitment to Total Involvement and Continuous Improvement. I remembered the terrific visual management methods that each of the major production departments used to illustrate key defects, what caused them, and how we would eliminate them. Our Engine plant, Stamping, Welding, Paint, and Assembly plants were world class. We baked these lessons into standardized work and reinforced them with the methods and rigour of the Toyota Production System. Surely, if anybody understood our customers, it was us.
Working with Laurent’s innovation teams, sprint after sprint, I came to realize that I did not understand the customer. The so-called Lean/OpEx system & methods I had worked so hard to learn apply were essential for protecting your core business, but not sufficient to ensure new Growth and sustained prosperity.
‘We need to understand the customer better than they understand themselves,’ Laurent told me. And I thought, yeah right, that’s just marketing tosh. But as I internalized the methods and mindsets of 21 st century innovation, I had to admit that Laurent was right. When we achieved this level of customer understanding, and crafted an offering that met the unrealized need, customer response was strong and direct. “I love this offering, and I want it now! Here is my credit card, I want to one of the first to have it!”
Igniting new Growth, and ascending the famous ‘hockey stick curve’, entails answering three questions in succession:
- Does the offering Wow?
- Can we make money?
- Does it work?
Mental models informing OpEx/Lean and Innovation can differ in important ways. Getting the Right Things Done in a Digital World entails learning & integrating both.
Best wishes,
Pascal Dennis
E: pascal.dennis@leansystems.org
PS To learn more about my Strategy Execution program, Getting the Right Things Done in a Digital World, feel free to drop me a line.
In case you missed our last few blogs... please feel free to have another look…
Getting the Right Things Done in a Digital World
Igniting New Growth - My Improbable Journey, Part 2
Igniting New Growth - My Improbable Journey, Part 1
Year-End: Why Is Reflection So Difficult?