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Robert Tucker

Driving growth through innovation

To achieve consistent growth, companies must offer customers new products and services that solve their problems better than the competition. Innovation is the only strategy that steadily increases revenues; operational efficiencies cannot fuel growth on their own. Companies must target new customer groups with offerings that meet unmet needs. This expands the number of customers and drives them to buy more. The essence of innovation is developing superior solutions that compel both new and existing customers to purchase what you sell. Ultimately this grows both revenue and profits over the long term through a continual focus on innovation.

Driving growth through innovation
Driving growth through innovation

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To effectively harness innovation as a discipline, it is crucial to distinguish between creativity and innovation. Creativity involves generating novel and original ideas, while innovation is the process of transforming these ideas into products and services that generate revenue and profit for a company. Promoting creativity is beneficial, but without a disciplined approach to implementation, creative ideas remain impractical. Companies that master the idea-to-implementation process gain a sustainable competitive edge. Innovation, in business terms, is about creating new ideas that benefit customers and bringing them to life, thereby creating new value. There are three main types of innovation: product innovation, which introduces new products or services that better solve customer problems; process innovation, which involves new efficiencies and capabilities; and strategy innovation, which challenges existing industry methods to meet emerging needs, including new services, distribution methods, market entry, business models, and market creation. Innovation also varies in degree, including incremental innovation (minor changes that increase customer satisfaction and reduce costs), substantial innovation (noteworthy benefits to customers and improvements in operating efficiencies), and breakthrough innovation (products or services that significantly increase revenues and profits). Examples of breakthrough innovations include Gillette's Sensor shaving system, Volkswagen's updated Beetle, and Dell Computer's direct-to-customer sales model. Despite the clear advantages of innovation, many companies struggle to bring new ideas to market. A survey by Arthur D. Little revealed that over 75% of global business leaders were dissatisfied with their innovation performance. The gap between innovative companies and less adept ones is widening. Common issues include the lack of an organized system for identifying disruptive changes, reliance on lagging indicators of innovation success, and leaving new product launches to marketing departments, which often results in new products getting lost among the thousands launched each year. To foster innovation, companies must approach it systematically and use leading indicators to measure success, engaging the entire organization in developing and marketing new ideas. The role of the business leader is critical; unless the CEO prioritizes innovation, it is unlikely to be a concern for others in the company. Business leaders can encourage innovation by establishing a formal innovation strategy, assigning responsibility for innovation, allocating resources, developing consistent innovation metrics, and rewarding innovation appropriately. Innovation must be disciplined, and business leaders should manage risk by committing resources to innovation projects. New metrics that are forward-looking, such as the percentage of revenues from recently developed products or the number of innovation projects in development, can encourage ongoing innovation. Rewards for innovation should outweigh the consequences of failure, including both extrinsic (financial) and intrinsic (involvement in impactful projects) rewards, and recognizing innovators' efforts.

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