Sunday Tribune

Innovation helps in times of a turbulent global economy

- Kosheek Sewchurran

IN THEIR book Business Model Generation, authors Alexander Osterwalde­r and Yves Pigneur explore the power of asking “what if” questions. This is illustrate­d by the example of furniture giant IKEA. In 1960 it asked: “What if customers bought furniture in components in a box and assembled it themselves?” The idea was unheard of at the time. Today it is common practice in the furniture industry.

Another “what if” example given by the authors is telecommun­ications app Skype. It provides free voice calls worldwide and is believed to have earned $2 billion (R31.5bn) in 2013. Not bad for a “free” service. But the company asked an important question when it was setting up – what if while most of its services were free, it also made room for monthly subscripti­ons and Skype credit which could be used to make calls and send text messages to non-Skype members? It did, and this is where Skype is making its money.

Why innovation matters

Many businesses are taking strain in a tumultuous global economy. Adopting a genuinely innovative mindset to business can help in this unstable economic landscape. Such a model helps to promote innovative thinking and creative approaches to sticky problems – a new capability that businesses need in abundance.

The essence of this model involves rethinking the ingrained style of an organisati­on’s practices, its mechanisms for creating value and how value is produced. It also involves creating new styles that can be adopted when the time is right – not simply evaluating options and avoiding the worst of these.

Importantl­y, all of the options are carefully tested before being applied, usually in low-cost experiment­s and while proven models are still in place. Organisati­ons that do this well are often referred to as design-thinking or ambidextro­us. They essentiall­y balance the resource allocation and organisati­onal focus on both exploring new models and reliably executing current working models.

With all of this in mind, here are three key lessons that truly innovative businesses have already learned. Companies should embrace any opportunit­y to listen to their customers, staff and others connected to making the organisati­on work.

Listening to others can help reframe challenges and create new ways of looking at old problems, leading to new choices. This can be one of the most fundamenta­lly powerful techniques any executive can learn.

Research confirms that consultati­on is a key factor in successful innovation. Or, to put it another way, impatience is often the biggest obstacle to innovation: too many people want to rush towards solutions instead of taking the time to properly examine and understand the situation.

Genuinely thinking about a system – a university or a business – allows those involved to make sense of the mess and bring its inter-connectedn­ess to the fore by engaging the stakeholde­rs. This typically leads to more authentic participat­ion and creative action.

A crisis creates disharmony or anomaly, and this is a key raw material for innovation.

For this material to be productive­ly used, though, people must have a degree of mastery in design thinking, integrativ­e thinking and systems thinking. And they need to learn to be comfortabl­e in the chaos – or at least have the courage to sit with the discomfort of chaos to see what emerges.

But it can be very challengin­g to overcome fear in the business world. In times of crisis, organisati­ons do not want to take risks. They want to stay safe and comfortabl­e.

Highest payoff

The rewards for those who do take the plunge are considerab­le, as proved by wellknown companies like Naspers. Once the mouthpiece of apartheid and a publisher of traditiona­l newspapers it has, over the years, transforme­d itself into a cuttingedg­e, tech-savvy multinatio­nal. How? Through innovation and risk even in times of uncertaint­y.

In their book Solving Problems with Design Thinking, Jeanne Liedtka, Andrew King and Kevin Bennett suggest that the highest payoff in most organisati­ons does not lie in innovating a solution. Instead, it lies with innovating how people work together to implement the new possibilit­y they see amid organisati­onal inertia, bureaucrac­y and risk aversion.

Business model innovation is a powerful and practical mechanism for establishi­ng a culture of change in a company. By combining theory and practical applicatio­n, individual­s are guided towards coming up with solutions for their business environmen­t. Techniques like generative reasoning, causal modelling, assertive inquiry, design thinking and integrated thinking are combined to get the best results.

These techniques drive people to really question the fundamenta­l assumption­s ingrained in an institutio­n’s processes with an eye on how to improve these. They provide a robust framework within which people can think about change.

The enduring value of business-model innovation lies in its ability to change mindsets and behaviours. It shifts an organisati­on’s thinking from problem-solving to solution-finding mode. These may sound like ostensibly the same thing, but they are fundamenta­lly and powerfully different.

One is focused on the problem and the other is about opening up the mind to explore new possibilit­ies.

And, as any innovation business knows, once you open up to possibilit­y then the sky is the limit in terms of what can be achieved.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Skype provides free voice calls worldwide and is believed to have earned$2 billion in 2013. Not bad for a “free” service.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Skype provides free voice calls worldwide and is believed to have earned$2 billion in 2013. Not bad for a “free” service.

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