people innovating

How to foster a spirit of ingenuity

Innovation is a crucial part of any business, and the IT department should sit at the heart
of delivering and implementing new ideas

Written by Rosalie Marshall

It has become a truism that companies need to innovate to gain a competitive edge, and in most cases it is to the head of IT that firms turn to drive this process forwards. However, what remains less clear is what actually constitutes innovation and, once that is decided, how it can be achieved.

The definition of innovation was keenly debated at a recent summit hosted by analyst firm Forrester, which attracted hundreds of IT leaders. Forrester analyst Bobby Cameron made a distinction between “game-changing” innovation and innovation that relates to “ongoing investment”. He said that innovation includes “the entire continuum”, explaining that it encompasses everything from the trial of high risk and unanticipated ideas to taking advantage of standard opportunities that are low risk and incremental.

Bacardi Martini’s chief information officer (CIO) Francois Jolles has a different view. He is currently leading a migration project that will see the company move from 40 enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications to a single SAP system. Jolles argued that this SAP implementation could not be considered innovation. Instead, he said, innovation had to be a novel idea or unique experiment.

“Innovation for us is how we keep our products longer in the barrels,” he said, referring to a new ageing process that Bacardi is using to enhance the flavour of its products.

The definition preferred by Graham Spittle, IBM’s UK Software Group vice president, is that “invention is the idea but innovation is the deployment of the idea”. This resonates with Cameron’s belief that the term innovation can mean employing new ways to harness technologies that are already available in the market.

Cameron argued that Jolles’ SAP project falls well within the bounds of ongoing investment innovation. “When the SAP system is implemented, it will give the Bacardi Martini IT department an aggregate view of all the systems, and this will have a significant impact on the business,” he said.

It is the game-changing kind of innovation that most IT chiefs struggle with, Cameron said. As a means of easing this process, Cameron put forward the concept of “innovation networks” to encourage organisations to buy new ideas from inventors, rather than spending time and money trying to develop ideas themselves.
Cameron pointed to health, beauty and household goods manufacturer Procter & Gamble, which once prided itself on its inventiveness but has since switched to sourcing its ideas from outside.

Procter & Gamble has generated £3bn in revenue from inventions that it did not create,” Cameron said. “It realised it could be more competitive by leveraging its transformation capabilities.”

Cameron said Procter & Gamble does not purchase the inventions it uses because this would kill off the inventor’s entrepreneurial spirit. Instead, it uses a licence that only gives it the right to apply the intellectual property.

Insurance specialist Lloyd’s of London also has an innovation network in place to exploit academic research and niche technology specialists. At the Forrester event, Lloyd’s chief information office Peter Hambling described a partnership his organisation has with a university and satellite and aerial sensing specialist Inforterra to gauge the impact of the 2007 flooding on Britain using light detecting and ranging (Lidar) technology.

Maggie Miller, head of IT at Warner Music Group, said using an innovation network required trust and judgement. “IT leaders should decide which idea to adopt by a gut feeling that comes with experience,” she said. “Trust people and get them to prove their hypothesis as soon as possible. Finally, build it fast to industrial strength and kill it quickly if it doesn’t work.”

Miller said selling the idea to the business is often the biggest challenge of all. “When I was younger I thought an idea would speak for itself, but you need to gain acceptance through showing how an idea can accommodate the business case,” she said.

British Airways CIO Paul Coby said that before IT can drive innovation it must first earn the trust of the board by showing that it can deliver the basics properly. “You can go into the chief executive’s office and talk about the benefits of a service-oriented architecture, but he will never accept your proposal if the existing architecture is awful,” Coby said.

Forrester analyst Alex Cullen said the key to succeeding at innovation is organisation. “Remember it is the CIO’s job to deliver innovation and strategy, while the chief operations officer needs to ensure that everything gets done,” he said.
Cullen suggested that companies should outline to staff the issues they hope to address through innovation and then encourage them to come up with ideas.

The difficulty comes when you are trying to innovate without a formal structure in place that is geared towards harnessing new ideas, Cullen explained.

“An employee who comes up with a new idea will still need to work their regular hours as well as taking charge of the new project. Also, a lot of people who are good at coming up with new ideas are not always very good at execution,” he added.

Those in charge of driving innovation need to create a positive culture that breeds ideas, Cullen said. “Innovative environments are not the cultures that prevent staff from rocking the boat or the organisations that are run through fear,” he explained.

Firms should also tap into existing skillsets, Cullen said. He gave the example of a small car firm that had an unexpected degree of success when it asked its employees for cost-cutting ideas. “The company opened up the process so employees could see the suggestions already put forward by their colleagues.

Instead of submitting new ideas, most of the staff built on the ideas that had already been put forward, completely redefining the process and achieving great success,” he said.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

yahoo logo

Yahoo opens up search resources

Yahoo gives access to its search tools in order to disrupt the market 10 Jul 2008

 

CBI says IT can help boost UK business

The CBI finds that firms need help when it comes to changing their business practices 04 Jul 2008

Broadband stakeholders must be more demanding

Enterprise IT managers have a crucial role to play in steering the UK into the broadband fast lane 03 Jul 2008

Intel sees x86 everywhere in future

The chip giant expects its architecture will be in everything from tiny devices right up to supercomputers 03 Jul 2008

Let a little passion drive procurement

Following your gut instinct might be the best route when buying IT equipment 23 Jun 2008

Enterprises embrace Web 2.0

Senior IT chiefs enthuse over Web 2.0 business enhancements 12 Jun 2008

Enterprises embrace Web 2.0

Senior IT chiefs enthuse over Web 2.0 business enhancements 12 Jun 2008

Focus on staff for transformation to succeed

"Technology is easy" but transformation needs staff buy-in, says Bacardi CIO 11 Jun 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Why the ‘e’ in e-Crime?

This week the Home Office announced the creation of the new Police Central e-crime Unit (PCeU). The PCeU promises to tackle cyber... 02 Oct 2008

National Identity Fraud Prevention Week

Every Monday seems to mark the beginning of a new awareness drive and this week’s theme has particular importance to small businesses... 06 Oct 2008

Wanted: a viable model for fibre

While other European countries are pressing ahead with fibre rollouts, progress in the UK is being held back as the debate over who will foot the bill drags on, writes Dave Bailey 02 Oct 2008

ITIL tools add lustre to Technicolor helpdesk

Centralising IT support helped to improve the service to 6,000 users in 58 locations at the film processing firm 02 Oct 2008

Computing podcast - Next-generation broadband Britain; and we report from Gartner's IT security summit

In our latest podcast, we discuss the hurdles that a national fibre-optic network must overcome, and look at the issues discussed at the recent IT security conference 02 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Who should pay for the rollout of next-generation broadband?

Who should pay for the rollout of next-generation broadband?

A UK high-speed fibre network could cost up to £30bn - who should fund it?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Next-generation broadband Britain; and we report from Gartner's IT security summit

In our latest podcast, we discuss the hurdles that a national fibre-optic network must overcome, and look at the issues discussed at the recent IT security conference 02 Oct 2008

Ethernet cableVideo

Is high-speed Ethernet ready to roll?

What are the prospects for the next generation of the networking technology? 26 Sep 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Basketball player performing a slam dunkFeatures

Agility brings results - innovation in software development

Companies are increasingly moving away from rigid programming methodologies and adopting more agile approaches that aim to deliver small gains in rapid succession 01 Oct 2008

Co-op storeAnalysis

Computing Awards: Innovative project of the year shortlist

As part of our build-up to the Computing Awards for Excellence, which take place at London’s Battersea Park events arena on 5 November, we turn the spotlight on the nominations for Innovative Project of the Year 01 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation