“Simultaneity”.
Leverage multiple streams of interdependent technologies
to establish a transformation continuum.
There are essentially two factors critical to
success in innovation through
technology (assuming, that is, you have already
identified such an innovation opportunity):
- Getting
the right technology properly deployed
- Getting
the organisation to use it to its advantage
Only
when both are achieved can business
transformation realistically occur.
On this page:
Innovative technology, be
it the potentially powerful “disruptive” or
exploratory variety, or the less threatening ‘though
generally less powerful “incremental” or
exploited kind, can make a huge positive impact
on an organisation – but only if that impact
is understood and embraced by the entire organisation.
A new technology, of itself, can appear innovative – but
unless your organisation can make “valued
use” of that technology, it may, at best,
be an amusing distraction. At worst, of course,
the distractive power of ill-considered technology
can indeed become destructive – consuming
company resources and management attention in equal
measure.
The subject of “right technology” is
increasingly one of “right technologies” as
most of today’s strongly beneficial ones
are interdependent. Indeed arguably the greatest
innovative leaps are being made through convergence,
i.e. several technologies melding in a symbiosis
that yields benefit > sum of parts. This equation
is a significant challenge for many organisations,
particularly large, conservative ones, as they
tend to evaluate all projects and project elements
as if they were independent – even when
they’re not. This is due to the often stated
need for “repeatable process” stemming
from concerns around previous failures attributed
to: scale, complexity, resource availability
and risk, etc. – with the view that such
singular focus on each project in isolation will
yield greater accuracy and certainty. This
process approach – the reductionist method – has
great power in understanding isolated things
(and is the basis of much scientific method)
but is ill suited to the necessary holistic view
required for innovation, as it struggles to stay
open to available synergies and at best identifies
contingent liabilities in the “risk register”,
thus playing to the conservative, risk averse
members of the management team and greatly reducing
the impact of any associated business case.
Let’s be honest, innovation is inherently
risky – but therein lays its power. The
risk versus reward relationship alone suggests
that higher rewards bring with them higher risks,
but higher risks can also stimulate an organisation
(and individuals) to greater efforts – to
strive to meet the challenge. The key is
to ensure that communication of the risks is
done in a way that identifies them as stepping-stones
to success rather than as possible show-stoppers – in
other words, that the risks are mere requirements
definitions that will need close attention. That
does not downplay their potential impact – it
merely reminds people that problem = opportunity
and invites them to view risks as problems from
the opportunity perspective.
- Pessimist = The glass
is half empty.
- Optimist = The glass is half full.
- Engineer
= The glass is twice the size it needs to be.
- Innovator
= Why the glass? Why not a bag! Or a straw? Or
a…
| How
Helena Consulting can help |
|
One of our key strengths is our ability to understand
the entire scope of technologies and thebusiness
impacts associated with specific innovation – and
to be able to communicate these in language appropriate
to the audience. Rather than resort to mere “dumbing
down” and reductionism, we take the entirely
different approach of synthesising the whole and
explaining the: strategic objective, the business
case and the technologies and processes that need
to be deployed to deliver on the promise of the
business case, through plain languages and appropriate
analogies – thus effectively selling
the benefit. In this way the staff (and
management) can better understand the whole and their role
in its success – a success they will have
bought into.
Our 25+ years of experience in technology innovation
has taught us, amongst other things, that “fear
of change” can be turned into excitement
and a can do/will do attitude – it just takes
the right story telling skills. We have those
skills.
Malcolm Duffield
|