The Path to Agile Innovation

The Path to Agile Innovation

Innovation, most would agree, is the secret of sustained success. But maintaining innovation for the long haul is hard. Just look at companies like Blackberry and Sony, who used to be among the most innovative companies on the planet and now aren’t.

What caused these companies to fall? Their approach to innovation wasn’t agile enough.

GE recognized this when its share price was in the doldrums. Despite a long history as one of the most innovative companies on the planet (making everything from aircraft engines to CAT scanners to washing machines), GE recognized it had to pivot in how it approached innovation, shifting from lean to agile. (More on this topic in “5 reasons why agile is the new lean.”) Since changing course, GE’s share price has started to bounce back.

To follow GE’s lead, start by looking at your share price. If your company is private and doesn’t have a publicly listed share price, it’s still worth calculating the value equation, NPV: DCF (QQC). Calculate the Net Present Value (NPV) of your share by doing a Discounted Cash-Flow (DCF) analysis and comparing it with your current share price to make a buy, hold or sell recommendation accordingly. Investors are interested in the Quantity, Quality and Cadence (QQC) of your cash flow.

A leading indictor of cash flow is conversation flow. I call it C2C: Conversation-Flow to Cash-Flow. Your cash flow and share price also follow the trajectory of your conversation flow. Indeed, as GE has adopted an agile approach, it has shifted the QQC of its innovation dialogue and changed the trajectory of its conversation flow — and its cash flow and share price have followed. You must do the same.

Taking the following steps can change the trajectory of your C2C and get you on the path to agile innovation:

Revolutionize your business model

Let’s call your current business model 1.0. It’s the only thing you have to work with this week, this month and this quarter; it pays the bills and keeps the lights on. You are no doubt continuously evolving and improving the model to version 1.1, 1.2, 1.3 and so on. That’s sustaining innovation.

But in an increasingly fast-paced world, you have to be more revolutionary with discontinuous improvement, advancing to business models 2.0 and 3.0. That’s disruptive innovation. This involves a journey, during which you must reinvent some combination of the content, process and context of your business and its equation of efficiency, effectiveness and efficacy. It will test your agility.

Focus on the future more than the present

Most of us prefer to focus on dangers and opportunities that are clear and present; this is our comfort zone. Consequently, we avoid the discomfort of working on unclear and futuristic dangers and opportunities. In other words, it’s easy to shift your attention from working on the future of your business (e.g., version 3.0) to working on your business at it presently stands (e.g., version 1.2). However, if you let that happen, your company may suffer the same fate as Blackberry or Sony — faster and sooner than you think.

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Watch out for:

  • Excuses. Statements like “I don’t have time, I am too busy, I don’t know how” are excuses that rob you of your agility every day.
  • Wishful thinking. Don’t believe that “hopefully our industry won’t be disrupted.” Hope is not a strategy!
  • “Stupid simplicity.” â€œStupid simplicity” ignores complexity, while “elegant simplicity” embeds complexity.
  • OR dialogue. Avoid thinking in terms of what I call “OR dialogue,” which focuses on dividing who’s right, us or them, me or you, left-brain-analysis or right-brain-intuition. By contrast, “AND dialogue” emphasizes whole-brained design thinking, systems thinking and an agile mindset.
  • Overly planned, traditional project management. This is often called “waterfall” and it sets the feel-good pretense that you are going to do something complex without experiencing failure. It contrasts with “agile,” which emphasizes experimentation, testing, iteration, willing to fail early and often, and learning as you go. (More on this topic here.)

Write your ‘fragility epitaph’

Innovation that lacks agility can cause a business to flat line or die. To help companies avoid this fate, I often put CEOs and teams through an exercise: I ask them to write a “fragility epitaph” for their company, which serves as a eulogy to the inevitable when innovation isn’t agile enough. It typically reads something like this:

We failed to innovate with sufficient agility, falling behind the pace of industry disruption. We ended up being the disruptee not the disruptor because we tolerated excuses, wishful thinking and stupid-simplicity. We had plans, but they were way too waterfall, in a futile attempt to avoid failure, rigidly sticking to one view of the future rather than testing, verifying and learning from failure as we went along. We had eternal debates about who was right about which was the right future and the best direction to go, unable to resolve the chasm between left-brained analysis and right-brained intuition. Our trajectory as a business derailed in the chasm.

We produce a poster-sized version of this “fragility epitaph” and put it up on the wall (alongside the company’s core values/behaviors and excuses posters, which I also help with). Then, when anyone sees those behaviors playing out, they can use the poster as a mirror, pointing out complacency and promoting productive paranoia. Only the paranoid survive!

You show me an organization with poor cash-flow and I will show you an organization with poor conversation-flow. It usually doesn’t take very long to point out to the CEO and executive team that they are already writing their own fragility epitaph. Don’t let that be you.

Source: Mike Richardson for Vistage/TEC Canada 

"Who else other understands what decisions a business owner/CEO goes through like another trusted non-compete owner/CEO. Nobody can really understand all the personal issues they go through, all the professional issues... so to be able to work with trusted peers on those decisions - growth happens faster, it happens with more precision, it happens with trust, and fewer mistakes." -Erik Kikuchi

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