Innovation
Innovation
Innovation: measuring it
to manage it
Michal Kolk, Phil Kyte, Frederik van Oene and Jeroen Jacobs
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Design
the framework
Measure
performance
Manage
for success
Sustain
deployment
What to
avoid
Achieving only
limited improvement
over time
Losing interest from
non-specialist
stakeholders
How to
avoid
Monitor a balanced
set of benchmarks
Challenge
constructively
Secure end-to-end
ownership
Enforce regular usage of
KPIs at all management
levels and throughout the
yearly planning cycle
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Financial
returns
Output
Productivity
Predictability
Speed
External collaboration
(customers, suppliers,
knowledge institutes,
technology providers, etc.)
Internal collaboration
Process excellence
Employee satisfaction
Competency development
Talent attraction & retention
Competitive
advantage
People
development
Process
What to
aim for
Source: Arthur D. Little analysis
What to measure
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Industry
peers
Company
Innovation
peers
II
III
Outside world
IV
Profile
Internal
Direct competitors
Companies similar in
how they innovate
Caveats
Compliance
Meaningfulness
Comparability
(e.g. between
business units)
Willingness to
cooperate
Credibility
Replicability
Sense of direction
often unclear
Source: Arthur D. Little analysis
way companies innovate: driven primarily by idea generation (e.g. consumer goods), R&D-driven (e.g. chemicals) or
analysis-driven (e.g. automotive). Finally, you could consider
innovation leaders from outside your industry who can
articulate your aspirations and goals in other words, what
really good innovation at your company could look like.
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Why do many sound conclusions from innovation measurement fail to materialize into significant business improvements? There are three reasons why companies that know
they are lagging behind in innovation performance still
struggle to give this the attention it deserves.
The first reason is that they cannot articulate how their gap
in innovation performance (i.e. the difference between how
others perform in innovation and how their own company
performs) relates to their gap in innovation output (i.e. the
shortfall in what innovation delivers compared to company
targets). Simply concluding that you file fewer patents than
competitors may not be perceived as an emergency topic
by senior management, but showing how rivals are eating
away at important platforms for future growth will certainly
receive attention.
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The authors wish to thank Rick Eagar for his valuable input
Michal Kolk
is a Principal in Arthur D. Littles Amsterdam office and a
member of the Technology & Innovation Management Practice.
Phil Kyte
is a Manager in Arthur D. Littles London office and a
member of the Technology & Innovation Management Practice.
Frederik van Oene
is a Partner in Arthur D. Littles Brussels office and
heads the Technology & Innovation Management Practice in the
Benelux.
Jeroen Jacobs
is a Business Analyst in Arthur D. Littles Amsterdam office
and a member of the Strategy & Organization Practice.