Google’s 90 days planning

When i was attending Le Web in Paris in December 2009, i attended one of the Google sessions.

To the question “what is your roadmap”, the Google speaker answered:

 

“As you probably know

we do not use

any roadmaps anymore”

 

Just last week, i found this interesting blog from Don Dodge on how Google sets goals and measures success. Yep, that’s the same guy that wrote that article on Failure is not an Option, and that i reproduced and commented on my blog here.

Don knows what he talks about. Like me, he was at Microsoft, and if there is one thing that you learn at Microsoft is to work with numbers and living through the “rhythm of the business”. When i was there, you had in essence YEARLY planning sessions, complemented with mid-year reviews. It’s way more complex than that with lots of consultations back to the field, but for this moment remember one-year plan and mid-year reviews.

Some countries (Russia, China, etc) go through much longer planning cycles. Who does not remember the Russian 5-years plans and strategies ?

Some corporations still apply 5 year strategies, especially companies of a co-operative nature. 5-year plans with yearly operating plans.

Here comes Google: 90-days plans ! It’s not only about the timing, it’s also about the aggressively setting the objectives.

OKRs are Objectives and Key Results. I submitted my Q1 OKRs with what I thought were aggressive yet achievable goals. Not good enough. My manager explained that we needed to set stretch goals that seemed impossible to fully achieve. Hmmm…I said “This is just a 90 day window and we can predict with reasonable accuracy what is achievable. Why set unrealistic goals?” Because you can’t achieve amazing results by setting modest targets. We want amazing results.

We want to tackle the impossible.

 

Don is then adding some meat to the Failure is not an Option discussion.

“Taking great risks, pushing innovation, and striving to achieve the impossible will never happen at companies like that have a culture of FNAO”

Don has also some words on rewarding success at Google:

Financial rewards are significant, but they are not the primary motivator. Working with the best people in the world and achieving greatness is the ultimate reward.

At the next strategy meeting, ask yourself:

  • “do we have the very very best people on board to achieving greatness and innovation ?”
  • “do we have the very best people on our leadership and executive committees to celebrate experiment and innovation?”

A lot of companies have every day discussions and big statements that innovation is important and about how innovative we should become. A lot of it is theory.

The only reality check is when you actually “ship” something innovative.

Ask yourself: “What is the last time we shipped something innovative that added substantial NEW value to our customers?”

I have tried to input some “sharper” vocabulary like “radical” innovation vs. “incremental” innovation into numerous consultation rounds. Same about innovating in “the Core” and “Beyond the Core”.

It is surprising to see how through these consultation/review process all the sharpness gets deleted, to end up with something very grey. The “best” argument i have heard recently was “you bring too much new terminology into the company, you have to express your ideas in a language they understand”.

  • I am convinced leadership IS open for this new vocabulary. It just gets filtered out before it reaches them.
  • I am convinced that the age of consensus is over.

I have not given up, on the contrary. I am becoming more vocal, beyond the “resistance” that one has to play the blueprint, that one has to remain invisible and behave.

You need more polarized discussions, and dare to go for the ideas that cause this polarization.

Don’t go for the obvious, go for the impossible.

I was quite proud that in my recent 360° review my polarization was seen as something negative. It encourages me that i am on the right track.(see also Guy Kawasaki’s speech at Sibos 2009).

  • I have a strong opinion that you can NOT innovate without polarizing
  • I have a strong opinion that you have to bring in new young blood
  • I have a strong opinion that innovating also includes bringing a new culture of “celebrate failure and experiment”.
  • I have a strong opinion that we have to explore the edges of our natural eco-system
  • And that innovation comes with a new vocabulary.

Innovation is about agility. By making decisions fast. By planning 90 days ahead not 5 years. By daring to take risks and celebrate the experiment.

It’s about radical innovation. It’s about polarizing. It’s about strong language. It’s about kicking ass.

Innovation is about following your own daemon (or “genius” as Seth Godin calls it) and about breaking through the resistance of “behaving normally”

How real is your Innovation ?

I have been reading quite a lot on innovation lately. Books and blogs. But it looks to me that there is too much theory and too less practice.

I have read about many ideas to organize innovation, to do scouting, idea management, incubation, internal/external challenges, brand recognition programs. Grand theories about innovation in the core or beyond the core, or about innovation TO the core. About cultural change. About leadership and executive sponsorship.

All these are important components of a company wide Innovation Program, but all this ignores something very fundamental.

Does your company REALLY want to innovate ?

It’s more than wanting.

You must LOVE innovation

 

As mentioned elsewhere on my blog, i have something with “stage”. Well, maybe you do not know, but it just happens that Flanders is the host of the worldwide leader of stage-builders. The company is called STAGECO. They build the stages for U2, The Rolling Stones, Rock-Werchter, etc, etc. Oh boy, those guys are passionate about what they are doing ! So, i went to their site and look what i found:

image

 

The keyword is “loves”

Just this week, i stumbled upon this book from Jeanne Bliss.

I love you more than my dog

The book is a bit off-topic with respect to innovation “pur-sang”, but ask yourself the question:

 

“Do you love innovation

more than your dog ?”

 

And love is about a relationship. In my previous life at Microsoft, we once had a consultant Max McKeowen. At that time we were discussing “Love/Hate Relationships” with customers. How did it come that people love Apple and hate Microsoft ? It ended up in a very interesting write-up and in the end a company wide program to create these Love-relationships with customers.

So, i went back to that write-up, and there was something about

 

 HOT or NOT

image

Imagine the same HOT or NOT questions about your Innovation.

 

Is your Innovation HOT ?

 

I also suggest that we all turn-on our bullshit-detector. To find out what Guy Kawasaki calls the “Bull Shiitake” of your Innovation Programs.

 

Guy Kawasaki

 

Such a detector comes really cheap. Every human with some basic intelligence has it just built-in. In essence, your need a reality check-out your love for innovation

So, ask yourself the question:

“Does my company LOVE innovation ?”

 

So, ask yourself:

“are we really shooting for the innovation that Guy Kawasaki had in mind at Sibos 2009 when he spoke about “Jumping the next curve” ?

 

So, ask yourself what you did with

“Don’t let the Bozo’s grind you down”

 

I am also a big believer of “Radical Innovation” as described in Rowan Gibson’s book “Innovation to the Core.

Radical Innovation is not the same as “Risky” Innovation. By Rowan’s definition, an idea is truly radical if it passes one or more of the following three tests:

  • Does it have the power to dramatically reset customer expectations and behaviors?
  • Does it have the power to change the basis for competitive advantage?
  • Does it have the power to change industry economics?

If an idea does not meet the test of being truly radical, it is not going to have very much impact on either the top line or the bottom line. It still may be something that is perfectly worthwhile to do, but it’s unlikely to make much of a difference to revenue growth.

For many executives, the word radical is too, well . . . radical. It makes them feel nervous and uncomfortable. Sometimes they feel more comfortable with “Impactful” rather than “Radical” Innovation.

This is very much related to the thinking of Mark Raison from Yellow Ideas. I already mentioned Mark in my previous blog on Google and Finance 2.0 when i wrote:

especially the implicit push for extreme – even “impossible” innovation. Last week, i was attending the 11th European Conference on Creativity and Innovation. One of the keynotes came from Mark Raison, titled “The Power of Impossible”

The Power Of Impossible By Mark Raison Yellow Ideas Eaci Ecci Creativity Congress 29 10 09

View more presentations from mark.raison.

One of his slides really summarizes this to it’s essence:

image 

So if you’re really serious about innovation, here is a checklist of do’s and don’ts (non exhaustive list 😉

 

Here are some good recipes for failure

– Don’t recognize your failures of the past

– Never invite your innovation guys to the company’s leadership off-sites

– Do invite external consultants who will say what you like and ideally repeat what you’ve been hearing about innovation the last 5 years. Everybody will feel proud on how much (old) innovation thinking is going on.

– Make sure that you always insert at least one of your most conservative guys from the past in any of your innovation strategy teams to ensure there are enough brakes on innovative thinking

– Focus your innovation on incremental changes

– Make sure that you “detach” your innovation resources to help supporting this year’s business priorities

– Ask your innovation resources to help selling.

And here are some suggestions for “real” success

– Keep yourself honest. Make sure you feel 100% ok when telling your innovation story to yourself. Try it: talk to yourself in the mirror. I hope you don’t fool yourself.

– If you are serious about innovation, be bloody serious about it: put at least the same budget and resources as for your Six Sigma, Quality, or other Efficiency programs.

– Make sure that your innovation efforts are exclusively and rigorously focused on radical innovation. All the rest is just window dressing and peace of mind and “peace of board”.

– Have a monthly 1/2 day quality time slot with your full Executive Team ànd your full Innovation Team to discuss and progress your Innovation program.

– Hire lots young people. Let them incubate and propose radical innovation. With some exceptions, innovation will NOT come from the 40+ years old.

– Build an Innovation-Force of young (< 35 years) high potentials (HIPO’s)

– Make sure that your HIPO Innovators have a seat on ALL your decision bodies and committees.

– Have an HR program that focuses on building the creative and innovative skills in your company. Consider setting-up an Innovation University together with other innovators from within or outside your industry.

– Have innovation exchange programs of your HIPOs with other companies.

– Protect innovators in your company. And be VERY vocal about this protection. And do something with the appraisal of those who have the courage to stick out their neck.

– Create the annual “stick-out-your-neck” Award. With a hefty monetary prize attached to it.

– Celebrate Innovation Achievements

– I already pointed at the key role of HR on this. See Emotional Zombies and HR and Innovation and Brand, Workforce and Innovation.

And last but not least, forbid any of the following 29 Idea Killers to be used to challenge any idea in your company:

Innovation_killers

Keep yourself honest. Look in your mirror, and ask yourself “How real is our Innovation ?”

Cubicle 3B23: Let me entertain you

 

The idea for this blog post emerged when a colleague visited my cubicle.

I will from now on refer to my cubicle as “cubicle 3B23”. The idea developed to write regular post under the title “Cubicle 3B23”, reporting about the good, the bad and the ugly of corporate life. This is the first in a series. Maybe it’s the first and only one. But i thought the idea was “cute” to try it out, to see where it goes and to let the future emerge.

The initial idea was to do a one-off under a different title (go the the very end of the blog to find out), but a friend told me that “Let me entertain you” makes you want to read on. So here we go.

Sometimes people come to cubicle 3B23 for some good fun brainstorming: “Do you have 5 minutes, I want to pick your brain ?”. Others put their head into cubicle 3B23 and say something like “Oh, i see you’re busy, i will come back later”. The latter usually have something “sad” in their eyes.

These are the moments to connect. In both cases i know this connection will make somehow a difference.

The other day, Joe was the one with sad eyes.

He was doubting himself, and wondering whether he should do his own thing, or continue to shut-up and play the game of being mister nice-guy.

samrt-swine-flu-mask-4 

Joe was responsible for a program incentivizing staff to think out of the box. At TEDx Brussels, i heard a better expression for that: “burn the box”.

 

image

In the planning for the new year, he was asked to run the program again. But he felt it was just not right. He felt he would be cheating the people joining the program. He was doubting whether it really mattered. He felt that he would not be able to look those folks in the eyes at the end of the program as the expectations created were just over the top. It’s a bit like the subtle difference between lying and not fully telling the truth. Both don’t feel right, and appeal to your ethical compass.

He was tired. In search for his real purpose in life. Fed up with playing games.

We had a long chat. He kept on complaining about the artificial aspects in corporate life. Somewhere 1/2 way in our discussion, i asked Joe what really kept him going. What was giving him energy. In what circumstances he felt he could be his true self. Not the self that you construct/imagine to be in synch with the big bad world out there. No, the self that silently is waiting inside you to be discovered. To be stumbled upon is probably a better way to say this.

Joe gave it a long thought, and said: “when i can inspire other people, and make them happy”. (it was another answer, but then i would reveal too much about that person).

There was a short silence, and went to my PC, searched my music collection, started a song and said: “This is you, Joe !”

The song was right on. I could see the emotional impact on Joe. The song was “Let me entertain you” by Robbie Williams.

Robbie Williams' 'You Know Me' Music Video Debuted

I am an all-time fan of Robbie Williams. He is a great performer – once saw a concert of him in Wembley stadium – and you can love or hate him, but for me he is really authentic. Even if he puts on his rabbit/bunny head on. But i deviate. Although, this post is mainly about authenticity.

“Let me entertain you” is a high tempo energizing pop/rock song, but the real secret in Williams’ are often the lyrics.

Hell is gone and heaven’s here
There’s nothing left for you to fear
Shake your arse come over here
Now scream
I’m a burning effigy
Of everything I used to be
You’re my rock of empathy, my dear
So come on let me entertain you
Let me entertain you

I could see the sparkles in Joe’s eyes. “Yes, that’s what i want !” he said. “I want to entertain people ! Make them happy. Make them move/shake their arse.”

I have to say, me too.

But for me it translates into having this strange connection with “stage”

album_large_2215503

When i was young (…), i used to be a quite successful DJ. I organized rock concerts. I was on one of the first free-radio stations (end seventies). I even was singer :-/ in a rock-band.

I was always attracted by “stage”. The good buddies feeling with the roadies. The equipment being set-up. A great show. The after party.

Also today, when we do “events”, i love being close to the stage. I love to put together a program like Innotribe, and see how that resonates with the audience. Maybe we should do a TEDx @ Sibos 😉

I love to have and to apply authentically that soft “power” to move people emotionally. I even have that “stage” feeling when i try to do a good presentation in PowerPoint, Prezi, Adobe or whatever. Always in search for some good metaphors, good supporting images, have some “rhythm”, add some music to it.

But the last couple of weeks, it started smelling “like a trick”.

24_09092008ikugtf

It has become “too easy” to put a presentation together that is “different” than the average.

On my blog, i often experiment a very little with fonts, font colors and sizes, left/right indents etc. But it all starts smelling like a “trick”. Starts smelling like on auto-pilot. That’s why in this blog post no “tricks” with fonts. I don’t feel that way today.

I once was told that one recognizes the best the feelings of others when you recognize them with yourself. For ex if you easily spot arrogant people, that’s probably because you’re arrogant yourself. Projection that is called, i believe.

That’s why i feel a bit like Joe. I recognize the feeling. I can do more with my skills. I am in search for that something extra. Like Joe, I am not happy anymore with just well executing a job.

I want to make a difference. Not just a ripple but a wave.

My wife sometimes asks me: “Peter, why don’t you settle down ? Look at the others. They don’t worry that much.” But i can’t. And i doubt. Is this my true self ? Is this who i really am ? Or is this the image that i’d like people to have from me ?

By now you probably get a feel of the initial title of this blog post. It was “doubting my impact”. Doubting my impact when working for this or that particular company. For this or that particular audience. Not doubting my skills or my added value.

I know i have the holy fire and can ignite others.

But doubting my added value and whether at the end of the day it’s all worth it. Whether at the end of the day it all made a difference. Whether at the end of the day there is some new meat on the bone. Whether it really matters.

lov-story

This blog is often walking a thin balance between telling from the field, and packaging/romanticizing the story a bit that it just triggers the intelligent reader to do something with it but without going in “full contact”. The thin balance between private and public when you go public with a blog.

One of my bosses used to say “Management is a full contact sport”.

Ouch !

Do i want to be there ? Not in the way he meant it.

But yes, i want to go “full contact” in the connection. In keeping the doors of cubicle 3B23 open. To pick my brain or to share your pain.

Who feels the same ? Who wants to share his story ? Who wants to follow ?

Sean Park’s Sixth Paradigm

As preparation of 2010, i very strongly recommend to get familiar with Sean Park’s The Sixth Paradigm post of 28 Dec 2009.

I am a big fan of Sean and his site the Park Paradigm. He was the guy who made the famous AmazonBay2015 video.

image

That was 2006.

Since a couple of days the video of his Oct 2009 presentation at Amsterdam eComm Europe is available on his post above and also the Prezi presentation is here.

The video of his presentation is 20 min. It’s worth your time.

Two extracts of this presentation should get your attention, and incentivize you to read on:

– What is the difference between a bank and a telecom company really ?

– The difference between bank messaging and telcos is disappearing.

image

 

image

I believe this presentation is VERY VERY relevant to financial services and concepts such a marketplaces for financial services.

This presentation gives you an absolute macro-evolution view on why this is a bound to be happen, and why the inherent structures of our current – usually vertical integrated – behemoth companies will struggle very hard to get their arms around this if they even ever succeed it spotting this as a HUGE opportunity.

 

The essence of the story is that those

vertically integrated companies

will be replaced/challenged

by horizontally connected entities

offering themselves

to the marketplace

via APIs

 

The innovation will happen

at the edges of the marketplace.

The marketplace is not even

innovative anymore.

It’s an essential piece of

the plumbing.

A lot of Sean’s thinking is based on the work of Carlota Perez and her book “Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital: The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages”

Professor Carlota Perez is a Venezuelan scholar and expert on technology and socio-economic development most famous for her concept of Techno-Economic Paradigm Shifts and her theory of great surges, a further development of the Kondratieff waves.

Carlota Perez Recurring Phases

 

Carlota Perez the 5 previous paradigms

Courtesy The Park Paradigm & Carlota Perez book.

 

Sean Park’s claim is that we are  now getting into the 6th paradigm, and this is also a switching point between 2 phases.

 

image

 

Sean Park believes the drivers will be 3-fold:

1) Cloud computing, with EVERYTHING as a Service

2) Exchange Ubiquity. The marketplace as plumbing, i would call this

3) Digitization

The last one “Digitization” seems “obvious”, unless you push this to the limits, as Sean Park does:

 

image

 

He takes the example of ISBN numbers as one of the success factors of Amazon’s book shop. Sure, there is big logistical tail to the book shop, the the core of the Amazon model is digitized, i.e the ISBN is just an identifier, linked to plenty of content and metadata, that can be accessed by an eco-system through APIs.

Where it even becomes more interesting, is where Sean mixes this up with theories of complex adaptive systems. It’s basically saying that

 

those horizontally integrated value chains

are chains of nearly decomposable services

And please read this in the context of nearly decomposable

financial services

 

And (traditional) vertically integrated companies (offering financial services) will not be able to compete successfully in rate of adaptation and fitness with these horizontally integrated “engines” or “eco-systems”.

 

image

 

Sean asks the question:

Where is the AppStore for Financial Services ?

here is the digital platform + API’s for the financial industry ?

Where are the decomposable financial services that can thrive on such marketplace ?

 

image

 

Sean has some other great disruptive statements. Like this one:

 

image

 

Its about the shift

 

from

image   To

image

 

It looks like Sean’s company is looking to invest in companies that understand how to build and offer these decomposable services.

 

But who should invest in the marketplace,

the plumbing,

the “dumb” but highly secure pipes

for the financial industry ?

 

We could let every Bank behemoth have it’s chance at it. That may be great for lock in. But in the long term, we will need something that is highly interoperable.

 

With interoperability

built-in

into the DNA

of this Digital Platform.

 

That is run as a service for the community. And to be the “invisible engine” for financial services cloud computing.

Invisible Engines: How Software Platforms Drive Innovation and Transform Industries

 

It’s only a very personal opinion, but i believe SWIFT is quite uniquely positioned to play this role.

 

Print

 

We are already in full prep for our 2010 SWIFT Innovation activities. It should be obvious from the above that we have Sean Park on our list of speakers to be contacted for our Innotribe event series, and who know at Sibos 2010 in Amsterdam ?

HR and Innovation

In my previous blog “Brand, Workforce and Innovation”, i started making a case for a leadership role for HR in Innovation.

I wrote:

I’d love to see more HR in a true leadership role. Leadership as opposite to management in its narrow definition of executing a course set out by somebody else. See also below the very important message about the role for HR in creating the eminence of our workforce.

Checkout my previous post on what is meant with “eminence of our workforce”.

Rowan-blue-background124

I would like to mix this with some thoughts from Rowan Gibson recently on Blogging Innovation. His full posting can be found here but i will explore some key findings below. Rowan Gibson is the author of “Innovation to the Core”.

UPDATE: what a co-incidence. Just today, Rowan Gibson did a new post in essence giving a one-page summary of his book. Here is the link to “Do you have a Corporate Innovation System?”

 

Innovation to the core” is about putting

radical innovation in the core of

your organization 

 

and is not to be confused with the discussing

Innovation in the core or beyond the core

of your product portfolio

UPDATE: “Beyond the Core” is a book by Chris Zook, and is based on the principle of adjacencies. It seems to be the bible for anybody not wanting to do anything beyond the core. It dates back from begin 2005, and is in my opinion completely outdated as a guide for innovation.

Rowan says in his blog:

In essence, that means developing a particular mix of resources, processes and values that makes it hard for rivals to match what the company does.

This has to do – amongst others – to create this eminence in the work-force.

But it is much more.

Lastly, i was attending one of our company meetings, and our CEO was doing a pitch on the focus of innovation in 2010. Great to have your CEO on board to get innovation rolling ! Really, it makes a big difference. But at the same time, the company runs a 2-year lean-program to build greater efficiencies in the company processes.

In French, we call this “Le grand écart”.

kim

It’s difficult, but not impossible if you’re fit and trained.

People do not understand this, cannot digest, don’t see the big picture, as the efficiency programs are much closer to their daily lives and – most of all – their jobs.

You could see the glaze in the eyes of some folks when we were talking innovation after having explained the lean-part.

 

As long as we do not succeed as positioning innovation as “buying our future”, as essential to building the greatest workforce on earth and giving the people the possibility of being part of that – with reward mechanisms – we won’t succeed in those apparent conflicting objectives.

 

Rowan Gibson goes on:

Making innovation a systemic organizational capability is a complex and multifaceted challenge. It simply cannot be solved with some Band-Aid or silver bullet. Instead, it requires deep and enduring changes to leadership focus, performance metrics, organization charts, management processes, IT systems, training programs, incentive and reward structures, cultural environment and values.

It’s not “good enough” to have your CEO on board. You need the full buy-in of your full Executive Committee, and – in a more complex co-operative organization like SWIFT – the buy-in of your Members, represented by the Board. We still have a lot of work to do, but i believe we are getting there. Innovation is now getting at the agenda of those deciding constituencies.

What i have not yet seen is a focus on how HR can help and be instrumental for innovation.

What companies need is not merely a pro-innovation mindset, or better brainstorming techniques, or "hot teams". It’s about making innovation a new organizational way of life; something that permeates everything a company does, in every corner of its business, every single day. It’s about infusing the entire lifeblood of an organization with the tools, skills, methods and processes of radical innovation. That’s the true imperative for rethinking the role of Human Resources. As soon as we recognize the strategic value and the immense organizational transition that’s involved in building a corporate-wide innovation capability, HR automatically moves to center stage.

And what would be the role of HR in such an Innovation context ?

Who else but HR leaders would be capable of turning a company’s strategic intent with regard to innovation into tangible everyday action? Who else could make the necessary changes to executive roles and goals, political infrastructures, recruitment strategy, broad-based training, performance appraisals, awards and incentives, employee contribution and commitment, value systems, and so on? Who else could build and foster the cultural and constitutional conditions – such as a discretionary time allowance for innovation projects, maximum diversity in the composition of innovation teams, and rampant connection and conversation across the organization – that serve as catalysts for breakthrough innovation? Who else could ensure that each employee understands the link between his or her own performance (as well as compensation) and the attainment of the company’s innovation strategy?

In short, who else but HR

leaders could create a company

where everyone, everywhere,

is responsible for innovation

every day whether as an

innovator, mentor, manager, or

team member?

 

I have become a big believer that companies need an innovation system where

 

everybody in the company

becomes an innovator

 

It’s almost a human right of any employee in a company, i would even venture it is a moral obligation for any employee in a company to be an innovator himself. It is NOT the sole privilege of the innovation team to come up with ideas, on the contrary. See in this context my previous blog on The Holy Fire.

Rowan Gibson has a great closing in his blog post:

The sad reality is that too many CEOs overlook HR’s potential in this regard. They still think of HR solely in terms of regulatory compliance, hiring and firing, employee comfort, compensation and benefits. Notably, Jack Welch, illustrious ex-CEO of GE and arguably one of the greatest corporate leaders of our times, sees things differently. In a recent column in BusinessWeek, he writes that

 

"every CEO should elevate his

head of HR to the same stature

as the CFO."

 

Hope somebody reads this.

Brand, Workforce and Innovation

If you’re interested in Innovation, you have to subscribe to Blogging Innovation. All posts are just worthwhile reading.

image

They also have a group on LinkedIn.

Today’s article typically resonated with me. It’s titled: “Combining Brand Management with Workforce Enablement”.

IBM-718954

It’s about the speech by Jon Iwata, SVP of communications and marketing at IBM on the future of the communications profession at the November 4th 2009 Institute for Public Relations Distinguished Lecture Series at the Yale Club in New York City. Full text of the speech is here.

Iwata says:

"One day soon, every employee, every retiree, every customer, every business partner, every investor and every neighbor associated with every company will be able to share an opinion about that company with everyone in the world, based on firsthand experience. The only way we can be comfortable in that world is if every employee of the company is truly grounded in what their company values and stands for."

IBM has developed an IBM Brand “System”:

Picture a framework with five columns. From left to right the columns are labeled what it means to look like IBM, to sound like IBM, to think like IBM, to perform like IBM and ultimately to be IBM. Simple enough. You could in 30 seconds create the same frame for J&J, Chevron or Ketchum. But of course it would — and should — take you much longer to fill in the details. Every word, every phrase and description in that framework would be painstakingly chosen. Because this is your corporate genome. It describes what makes your company unique. Developing the framework is hard work, but it’s only the foundation. Because, like a genome, the real work — and value — are in bringing it to life.

and also:

For example, we are now collaborating with our colleagues in HR to redesign IBM’s leadership competencies for the first time in many years. If this is ultimately approved by the CEO – and we’ll know in a few weeks – it will mark the first time in my 25-year career that the foundational elements of HR will not only be aligned with our brand and workforce strategies, they will be essentially the same.

I would like to see some examples on how this works in an environment where efficiency programs are run in parallel with innovation programs and (re)branding programs. What is the ideal role of HR in all of this ? Will HR be degraded to a “management” machine to deal with lay-offs only ?

I’d love to see more HR in a true leadership role. Leadership as opposite to management in its narrow definition of executing a course set out by somebody else. See also below the very important message about the role for HR in creating the eminence of our workforce.

About this, Iwata says:

But the building of constituency goes beyond the reaching of audiences. It gets to how a company establishes shared attraction and shared values: how it shapes not just common ground, but a deeper, enduring, shared idea.

They weren’t simply sending messages to audiences. They were creating audiences.

They weren’t shaping relationships with existing constituents. They were creating constituencies.

This is the basis of our Smarter Planet strategy. We are specifically and deliberately working to validate and stoke the optimism of forward-thinkers. We are saying to them – because we really believe it ourselves: “Your hopes for your industry, your city, your environment, your community are now within your grasp. This isn’t a metaphor. We can actually build a smarter planet.”

Our work of late tries to get at the real substance of change, the real issues on the table. The work is long-form. It’s argued, not pitched. It doesn’t focus on our products and services.

It purposefully invites people to

 think

 

Wow !

 

And lastly about Building the eminence of our workforce.

I believe that 2010 will be the year that corporations grapple with and ultimately accept that their employees are engaging with – and must engage with – social media. We’ll certainly go through a necessary period when people raise all sorts of objections.

The CFO worries about financial disclosure. The General Counsel fears intellectual property leakage. HR will say we’re helping competitors recruit our people. And everyone will be nervous about criticism of management. These are all legitimate.

So the answer to all this may be another set of policies and guidelines for using social media. My employer has indeed such a set of policies. They are difficult to find, but they exist. But are another set of policies and guidelines a solution. Will the fact that each employee has to sign-off the blogging policy or any other code of conduct really change our actual behavior ?

I doubt it.

Let’s say we actually do that. Then what? Policies and guidelines may keep individuals and their companies out of trouble but, by themselves, they won’t create business value.

The key is to build the eminence of our workforce.

 

What do I mean by “eminence”? No matter what their industry, their profession, their discipline or their job, people with eminence are acknowledged by others as expert. It’s not simply to know a lot about Tuscan villas, digital cameras or banking. You need to be recognized as an expert. And when you show up – in person, or online; in writing, or in conversation – you are both knowledgeable and persuasive. Because being an expert and being good at communications aren’t the same thing, as we all know.

Which is why

 

we need to make the creation

of this kind of workforce

an intentional act,

a new discipline in our function

Yes, we need guidelines and policy – but also training, resources and support for broad networks of experts.

Related to this, i found just a couple of days ago a great post from Hugh McLeod’s site titled: If your boss tells you, “our brand must speak with one voice”, quit.

I once had a boss who didn’t like the fact that I had a blog. Especially when I blogged about stuff that was relative to our industry. Yeah, “Our brand must speak with one voice” was his idea. Yes. I know.

Actually, the reality was, HE wanted to be “The One Voice”. He wanted all the credit, and all the rewards. He didn’t mind me put ting words into his mouth– stuff I had writ­ten– so long as the outside world gave him all the credit. But he didn’t want me in any other role, other than subservient, nowheresville wage slave. He fought tooth and nail to keep me from ever becoming a rainmaker inside the company, something he wanted all for himself.

And back to the end of the speech by Iwata:

To me, this is what “values” are about… and what “authenticity” means. This is about consciously choosing a unique identity. And it’s about actually being that unique thing you have chosen to be.

In other words:

Leading by Being

The holy fire

If you are in one of those dips – and who doesn’t from time to time – I’d like to recommend you some “power-reading”. It’s better than zapping in front of your television, or better than (re)tweeting 140 characters. It’s definitely better than booze or drugs. And it has some element of “depth” that you don’t get from those other media/substances.

I could have titled this blog post “Ignore Everybody”, the title of a fantastic book by Hugh MacLeod of gapingvoid.com. The subtitle is ‘And 39 Other Keys to Creativity”.

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This is one of those rare books that hits you in the face. Subscribe to his blog. A drawing on a business card will wake/shake you up every day when you open your Google Reader.

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Guy Kawasaki said: “Hugh’s book will kick your ass and push you out of your zone of mediocrity and stagnation”.

On one of the other cards in the book it reads:

The price of being a sheep is boredom. The price of being a wolf is loneliness. Choose one or the other with great care.

Hugh refers to the “Pissed Off Gene”. That burning fire inside that make you want to challenge the status quo.

It has something primal.

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So there i am with my wildfire, and now i come across a bunch of folks who feel down and ask me why we need an innovation team. They feel down because they have just gone through one of those mandatory efficiency or six sigma programs to cut fat out of the processes. Nothing wrong with that, some organizations can use a diet, and it’s in essence about being fit and going to the gym (looking at my belly it’s time for me to do so ;-). But what i think is really going on is that they feel the “Pissed Off Gene” coming alive again. It’s protest. It’s challenging where we are. It is challenging the status quo. This gene is a great source of energy. If only we could turn that negative energy in a positive one. Wouldn’t we loose less time and move forward faster ?

Sometimes however it’s getting worse. These days i believe we not only need a physical-gym, but also a mental-gym, because these days, some people already feel down in advance of the program: they start to hide, don’t dare to stick out their neck, afraid that if they become too visible or are not in line with the blueprint, they will be the first to be cut. That’s a ream shame. Come on, guys ! Don’t ignore yourselves in such a big way. Because your are worth it.

So back to the question “Why we need an innovation team ?”. Why we need innovation ? Really, reading the above i wished you did not ask. Because a company that does not have a focus on innovation does not believe in the future. Does not believe in growth. Does not believe in creating wealth. Is a dead company.

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Dead wood.

So, what should we do ? Get rid of the innovation team ? Have no focus on innovation ? Come on !

We should probably quadruple our efforts.

But i know there is also the reality of budgets, certainly in these days. But I will keep pushing for it. So please, for once be proud that your company überhaupt has an innovation program in place (and a quite good one compared to other companies), and embrace it and help it and the company succeed, instead of complaining about it.

Our innovation team gives help. To the people who have that “Pissed Off Gene”, who have that holy fire. To help them to stand up and keep on fighting the status quo. To help them and the company make the difference. We are not measured on the ideas generated by the innovation team. We are measured on the ideas and success stories in the rest of the company and the eco-system at large. We can help those “passionate creatives” with resources (people and money).

And i hope that we also kick some ass

,and send out some wake-up calls, when we see things at the edge of our jungle that could be beneficial for our community. It is our duty to report those things, to orient/position them, to evangelize those new ideas and to help people moving from prototype into incubation.

And yes, that can be fun

Seems to be a bad thing these days to have fun. Really don’t get it. Also, they don’t see the hard work that goes on behind the scenes. They only see the fun part. Innovation is about change. People resist change.

Some days i feel like swimming in syrup

And some days it really feels good when we achieve something. But complaining seems to be the fashion of the day. And being in a good mood is these days like almost like an offense. In any case, the complainers never come to see us to see how they can be part of the fun. They complain. By preference in the gossip aisles of “radio-corridor”, hiding in the safety of anonymity.

It was probably a bad idea to call our team “the innovation team”, as we are measured on how many ideas we make the others generate and realize. But heck ! What should we have called it ? The A-Team ? The Tiger team ? The incentivators ? Cut the crap !

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In the end the name “InnoTribe” is right on. A tribe of innovators. Tribe as in Seth Godin’s book “Tribes”. One of those other great books if you have one of those dips.

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You know what all this is about ? I am going to use a big word: “leadership”. Not the leadership that you read about in McKinsey’s Newsletters. No, personal leadership. The leadership from within. From your true self. When you know damn well when something is right or wrong. Leading by Being. It is daring to follow your internal compass. It’s the difference between putting the fault on others and taking initiative yourself to fix the problem, or to come-up with something bright new. It’s daring to choose between old-game and new-game.

Old Game is being judgmental. New Game is Open Mind.

Old Game is being cynical. New Game is Open Heart

Old Game is being in control. New Game is Open Mind

In the end it’s people with passion that drive the innovation.

You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink
You can’t push a string uphill
Time waits for no man

Jeffrey Philips adds one about innovation. While we like to say that everyone can innovate, its probably also safe to say that

You can’t force a disinterested person to innovate

So, what is it ? Are you the interested or the disinterested person ? If you are of the first category, join the journey. If you are the latter, come and see me. I’ll try to give you a pep-talk and try to shake/wake up that fire in you that is burning for sure in every human being. We just learned through the accidents of life/work to ignore and hide those fires. They’re too close to emotions. And emotions do not belong at work. What a crap !

Express yourself and come alive !

 

Do YOU have the hole fire ?

I do. And I am not ashamed to say so. And I am 52. And there is no age for it. And i am burning like hell. It’s primal. I am on a mission. “Ignore Everybody”. Don’t wait for the others to support you. GO !

And if you still feel in a dip after this, turn on Madonna’s “Jump”, volume knob on 10, and dance and listen to the following words:

The more that I wait, the more time that I waste
I haven’t got much time to waste
It’s time to make my way
I’m not afraid of what I’ll face
But I’m afraid to stay
I’m going down my road and I can make it alone
I’ll work and I’ll fight till I find a place of my own
[Chorus]
Are you ready to jump
Get ready to jump
Don’t ever look back oh baby
Yes, I’m ready to jump
Just take my hand
get ready to jump

Innovation at the Core and beyond the core

If you consider yourself as an innovator, I guess you all want to create some Edison effect. So that when you launch your innovative solution, you can refer to the old days as “how could we ever live like that ?”

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The fundamental premise of this blog post is that organizations need a two-speed strategy for innovation.

  • One for innovation in the core, which is more about creating efficiencies in the core.
  • And one for innovation beyond the core, where you basically look for the next xxx Million EUR/USD new business stream (*).

*(Fill in the xxx based on the type of business you’re in). Think twice: by filling the xxx, you already frame your innovation to relative small innovations or real bold disruptive ideas.

Beyond the core you can NOT apply the same traditional core principles, decision criteria, mantra’s, etc.

Even more importantly, you need different governance and funding mechanism to succeed in innovation beyond the core. You also need a tail of your innovation process.

You need a governance that is not based on consensus (or even worse, on the principle of pleasing or obfuscating the no-Sayers), but on

the power of the believers

Team up with the believers.

You need a funding model where for each project – aka read new revenue stream of xxx Million EUR/USD – you have a FEW share/stakeholders, so that decisions are fast and don’t get watered down by yet another consensus process.

Because you want to make decisions on change of direction fast. You do not want to go through a lengthy consultation process with all sorts of stakeholders. In this sort of innovation beyond the core, often you take entrepreneurial decisions, that is taking decisions without knowing all the elements of the equation. In other words, their is some risk taking involved.

And when you take risk you can fail.

Fail wisely

And make corrections as you go.

For that you need fast assessment of the situation and fast decision taking to change course.

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In this innovation beyond the core, you probably don’t ask customers what they expect from the next problem, as they are probably framed in the existing core products and probably think in extensions of existing familiar products. When Apple launched the iPOD, do you really think they asked their MacBook customer base what they expected of a portable music player. Do not think so.

They probably would have ended up

with a cassette-player in the cloud

It took the nerve and courage of a visionary with – euh, a vision – and then execute very well on that vision.

You need to define a radically new and very clear tail to you innovation process. That tail must be agile, with few to decide and fund, to move fast before your competitor gets there. If not you end up with a number of cool ideas that never get further than prototype. And you create a big illusion and disappointment with all those who spent often a lot of their free time to come up with ideas and work them out into prototypes and initial business cases. (not everybody has the Google luxury to dedicate 20% of your work-time to innovation). And you loose the “clout” of your innovation team/work. See more about clout at the end of this blog post.

If you still need to be convinced of this principle, please read on and see what a number of very smart people have to say on this.

I found inspiration for this blog post in two great recent articles on Innovation by Adam Hartung in Forbes and one other on his great blog. Reader subscription mandatory if you do something in innovation in real business. Adam is author of Create Marketplace Disruption: How to Stay Ahead of the Competition.

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First article was in Forbes in October about the myth of efficiency.

Most organizations embrace the creation of new ideas and the fun exercises that surround "ideation." Then they hope they can somehow develop the momentum to roll out those ideas. As if that were what organizations do.

We all know that organizations are not designed to create and implement new ideas. To the contrary, they usually exist mainly to manage legacy businesses, to defend and extend them.

Organization leadership focuses on order and control. Thus a recent spurt of articles across the business press bemoans the problem of business "inertia," as the management expert Gary Hamel calls it.

When you take a hard look at efficiency, you can see that it’s never a good source of higher returns.

As appealing as cost cutting sounds, it can’t improve returns except within the shortest time frame. Why? First, most cost cutting is easily matched by competitors, thus offering little or no competitive advantage. Second, most cost cutting is simply distributed to customers through lower prices, in a fight to maintain revenue and stay ahead of fast-moving competitors. Price wars break out as a business spirals into lower margins and declining growth.

We know that the return on innovation is very high

As I mentioned earlier, it has been shown in many industries that investment in new products and services creates substantially higher returns. Why? Because real innovations are harder for competitors to match and keep up with, especially the more radical or disruptive they are. Also, genuine innovation prompts more customers to buy, increasing sales. Innovation grows a business. And since it leaves competitors behind, it generates higher margins.

Second article also in Forbes a couple of days ago. About Innovation beyond the core.

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Few businesses are any good at innovation. For all their brainstorming exercises and "open innovation" programs,

they mostly just come up with reformulations of existing products,

new pricing plans and basic updates

the same old things just a little cheaper, faster or better

Businesses ask their "strategic customers" where to innovate and get little advice. Those customers are usually strategic only in that they are large, not because they have any particular market insight. They too just want more, better and cheaper, which are hardly recommendations for true innovation.

The criteria are developed by reviewing "core technologies," "core markets" and "core capabilities."

"Leveraging the core"

becomes a refrain

All of which just increases the likelihood that what comes out will be remarkably non-innovative, like reducing the dirt-removing strength in Tide, slapping the word Basic on it, lowering the price and calling the result an innovation.

This leverages the "core brand" while extending its reach to more low-price customers, but how much can it possibly increase company revenues?

Even if you get that far, and have some form of Innovation evangelists in your company (i hate the word Innovation “Manager” as innovation has to come from everywhere inside and outside your company) that is in no way a guarantee for success and often a source for cynicism.

As ideas are developed, they get pushed through the wringer. Managers try to add value by applying a critical eye to them. With little more than their own past experience to guide them,

they cut out ideas they fear

won’t work technologically,

won’t be accepted by distributors,

might cannibalize existing product sales,

could require entering unknown markets

or otherwise are disruptive.

The number of ideas quickly shrinks.

Why is failure the norm? Defending and extending the business is what we’ve trained our business leaders and managers to be good at. They know how to remain close to "core" by staying "focused." They work on improving "operational excellence" and seek the "low cost position" while striving for "customer intimacy" with the biggest customers (encouraged by Michael Tracy and Fred Wiersema, the authors of The Discipline of Market Leaders).

Third article on his own blog just before the week-end. Referring to another great article by Andrew McAfee, in essence about the management illusion of (brand) control in this Web 2.0 world.

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Executives who feel like

they have "control" of their business

are under an illusion in 2009. 

And that has been demonstrated time and time again as this recession has driven home a plethora of market shifts.  There are many things managers can control.  But many of the most important things to success are completely out of management’s hands. 

Thus, the ones who succeed aren’t trying to control their brand, or business. 

Instead they are building organizations that have great market sensing and are quick to react. 

Just compare GM to Google and you’ll see the gap between what worked in 1965, and what works 45 years later.

Fourth and last article is from James Gardner.

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James Gardner is a Director in Corporate Information Technology at the Department of Work and Pensions in the UK, where he is accountable for innovation, architecture and strategy. Before that he was Head of Innovation and Investment & CIO Technology at Lloyds TSB. For quite some time he is writing about innovation in Banker’s Vision. His latest post is about innovation backlash and innovation clout.

Consider this scenario. You use the tools of innovation to create a pile of new thinking that results in new prototypes or experiments getting built. Everyone is excited, and loves the new approach. New things start happening, so everyone declares the exercise a success.

But the situation is illustrative of something that you always see when you send an innovation team into the wild: the new ideas getting created threaten someone’s interests, no matter how well the innovation team influences those around it.

You get a backlash that is as inevitable as it is hard to manage. In fact, I’m not certain it is possible to manage it.

If you’re about changing the status quo and you don’t ruffle some feathers, it is surely inescapable that you’re not really changing anything at all.

My conclusion is that you have to invest your innovators with sufficient political clout that they can – in their own right –

protect themselves

from the backlash when it happens. If the clout is invested via proximity to a powerful senior figure, then so much the better.

There is a downside to giving innovators clout, of course. The downside is they then have the ability to disrupt strategy and “get distracting”. My own view, though, is that a strategy that doesn’t know how to deal with the new stuff without falling apart isn’t very much use anyway. It’ll only be current in the short term.

Try this: give your innovators their head and protect them from harm.

You’ll be surprised as the results you get.

This sounds very much like the Red Monkey story from Jef Staes, already mentioned elsewhere on my blog.

Summary: Innovating in the core or beyond the core is fundamentally different.

PS: of course, this blog post was written during my free personal time.

Cloud Computing and Marketplace are just happening

Three interesting news items that Cloud computing and marketplace are just happening.

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Nobody else than Salesforce – a 10-year old company running a 10B+ $ cloud business, with 60,000 customers and 1,5M users (talking about reach…) – has as helped to launch FinancialForce.com , a new company that offers financial software. The new startup is funded by Unit 4 Agresso, the parent company of Coda, which had sold the Coda2Go SaaS through Salesforce.com’s on-demand application store. The new company is co-headquartered from Salesforce.com’s offices in San Mateo, Calif., and from an office in Harrogate, England. Salesforce.com will provide the customer support for the startup’s core product, also called FinancialForce (formerly Coda2Go). Salesforce.com is looking to position Force.com as a platform to launch new SaaS companies. FinancialForce.com is one of their first big case studies. The new solution includes general ledger accounting, user-defined budgets, spreadsheet integration, accounts payable and receivable, and invoicing. Pricing starts at $125 per user per month, and customers do not have to be Salesforce.com customers. Yes, i know, it is "just" accounting. But if you know that force.com already has 80 Financial Apps on their marketplace, it’s obvious on how the dots will connect.

The second is nobody else The U.S. Defense Department. They just put into operation their cloud computing services for military personnel. Originally launched a year ago, the platform, called RACE (Rapid Access Computing Environment) , was initially used for testing and development of new applications. The military says RACE is ready to go live with 99.999% uptime.

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The third is a company Schumachergroup .

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Their CIO was speaking at the Cloud Computing conference in London this week. This presentation was by far the best of the whole conference.

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75% of all their business critical apps are now in the cloud. And targeting 90 % by 2010. The rest in a traditional on-premise data center. The cloud is 99,5% uptime and is manned by 25% of their IT FTE’s. This is the area where they innovate. Their data-center is 98% uptime, has 75% of the IT FTE’s running it and it’s the data center that keeps the CIO awake. In the cloud, they can deliver 5-10 times more value faster. What does faster mean: on average 5 months to deploy a new app into the cloud.

We have invited this CIO to Innotribe at Sibos2010 to deliver a real-life case study from another industry.

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See also the article "Marketplace – a commodity" on my personal blog here . Some people believe a Marketplace for Financial Services is years away, even beyond 2015. Don’t think so. It’s getting build-in in platforms.

Marketplace: a commodity

Here is force.com from Salesforce. As far as i am concerned, the way a marketplace should look like. Already more than 800 apps available, more than 70 of them are financial apps.

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Also have a look at the US Government marketplace.

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Everything’s up there. With pricing info, liability clauses, shopping basket, etc

Some believe building an application marketplace is something exotic, and if your not an Force.com, Apple, Google or the US Government it is something that is years away.

Reset your thinking. Picked up via ReadWriteWeb. Microsoft is going to offer application marketplace in SharePoint 2010. See the interview in the article on ReadWriteWeb.

What is even more interesting in this article is the video from Citrix Dazzle solution, embedded below:

Search for a financial application, make sure you get the right approval level for being allowed this app, mix and match online and offline apps, etc. It’s like an iTunes for apps, but then in an enterprise environment.

Can’t wait to see an out-of-the box offering that allows me to set up a marketplace of financial services in the cloud.