18 Apr Top Reasons Innovations Fail
I’ll make an educated guess that most readers have read at least a few other books, magazine articles, websites, blogs – you name it – on innovation. How to do it, how not to do it, why it works, why it doesn’t, and all of the lessons thereupon derived. As a reader of this “genre” of management books, or as an audience to the industry’s leading consultants, either way, you’ve probably seen a lot of lists – lists of reasons why innovations succeed, and probably more often, lists of why innovations fail.
As an example, Idea Creations Inc., a well known innovation consultant, famously published a list of the “56 reasons why innovations fail” in May of 2009. I actually thought they got a lot of it right, and with their permission, here’s the list (for more, see http://www.ideachampions.com/weblogs/archives/2009/05/post_50.shtml):
- “Innovation” framed as an initiative, not the normal way of doing business
- Absence of a clear definition of what “innovation” really means
- Innovation not linked to company’s existing vision or strategy
- No sense of urgency
- Workforce is suffering from “initiative fatigue”
- CEO does not fully embrace the effort
- No compelling vision or reason to innovate
- Senior Team not aligned
- Key players don’t have the time to focus on innovation
- Innovation champions are not empowered
- Decision making processes are non-existent or fuzzy
- Lack of trust
- Risk adverse culture
- Overemphasis on cost cutting or incremental improvement
- Workforce ruled by past assumptions and old mental models
- No process in place for funding new projects
- Not enough pilot programs in motion
- Senior Team not walking the talk
- No company-wide process for managing ideas
- Too many turf wars. Too many silos.
- Analysis paralysis
- Reluctance to cannibalize existing products and services
- NIH (not invented here) syndrome
- Funky channels of communication
- No intrinsic motivation to innovate
- Unclear gates for evaluating progress
- Mind numbing bureaucracy
- Unclear idea pitching processes
- Lack of clearly defined innovation metrics
- No accountability for results
- No way to celebrate quick wins
- Poorly facilitated meetings
- No training to unleash individual or team creativity
- Voodoo evaluation of ideas
- Inadequate sharing of best practices
- Lack of teamwork and collaboration
- Unclear strategy for sustaining the effort
- Innovation Teams meet too infrequently
- Middle managers not on board
- Ineffective rollout of the effort to the workforce
- Lack of tools and techniques to help people generate new ideas
- Innovation initiative perceived as another “flavor of the month”
- Individuals don’t understand how to be a part of the effort
- Diverse inputs or conflicting opinions not honored
- Imbalance of left-brain and right brain thinking
- Low morale
- Over-reliance on technology
- Failure to secure sustained funding
- Unrealistic timeframes
- Failure to consider issues associated with scaling up
- Inability to attract talent to risky new ventures
- Failure to consider commercialization issues
- No rewards or recognition program in place
- No processes in place to get fast feedback
- No real sense of what your customers really want or need
- Company hiring process screens out potential innovators
Now, I find that there’s nothing wrong with this list. In many cases, in fact, you probably feel that these bullets are “right on target” in describing your own organization and your own innovation processes. You probably wouldn’t be wrong for having those feelings; they’re pretty common in today’s corporate world. But we need to dig a little deeper to find the true causes of innovation failure, and to find solid ground for traction to get out of the quagmire.
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