Tuesday, 21 July 2009

The Creativity Measure that Counts

"96% of business leaders cite creativity as integral to business success and recovery from the recession, yet 44% say they lack the skills and commitment to deliver it."

Marketing Week, 16 July 2009.

Monday, 13 July 2009

Read this: Lost in Navigation

Ovum's Jeremy Green writes insightfully and entertainingly on the state of play in location-based services here.

Or do I mean "location-enabled"...? Possibly not: as Green points out, visitors to London's 2012 Olympics may well spurn location-enabled services, while a location-based service for asthma sufferers is doing rather well. You see, there is a difference...

Quote of the Day

"The perfect [customer] experience is the optimal compromise, because perfection is an illusion."

- Mike Chester, Director of the UK NHS National Refractory Angina Centre, speaking at Henley Business School, 18 June 2009.

The Collaborative Car: Riversimple

Edie Lush writes in The Spectator about Riversimple - the open source hydrogen/electric car. There's innovation in every aspect of Riversimple, not just the engine.

For one thing, you can't buy a Riversimple car, you can only lease one. You pay around £200 per month and 15p per mile, and that covers everything. The company is therefore incentivised to make the car as economical as possible, and to make it run as long as possible. Instead of owning a car that rusts and depreciates, you lease a transportation service.

The open source aspect of Riversimple means that its vehicles can be adapted and evolved by other people. And, in a further marker of the company's commitment to sharing, it's a limited liability partnership rather than a limited company. And to top it all, the company's leaders are relaxed about the need to make a profit any time soon. What would Henry Ford say?

Friday, 19 June 2009

Read this: Hot Tub Technology


This is a gem of an innovation story. Dr Mark Barrett's idea is simple, elegant, understandable and very, very doable. It's based on a novel view of existing infrastructure, there's a clear business case and, cannily, Dr Barrett has left ample room for other people to refine the implementation plan, thereby building an active constituency for the scheme's promotion.

What is it? Well, Dr Barrett wants to switch your immersion heater on when there's excess capacity in the electricity grid. The UK's preinstalled network of 19 million heaters can then act as storage devices for power generated by "bursty" renewables such as wind and wave. And with plans to roll out smart meters across the UK gathering momentum, now's the time to make this innovation.

Read David Strahan's excellent article for the facts and figures.

Wednesday, 17 June 2009

Innovation threat, innovation fatigue

from: Alain de Botton, Status Anxiety, 2004

"Employees must in addition worry about the consequences of the pressure put on companies to introduce new and better products into the market place. For long stretches of history, the life cycles of goods and services were longer than those of the human beings who produced and consumed them. In Japan, the kimono and jinbaori went unchanged for 400 years. In China, people were wearing in the eighteenth century exactly what their ancestors had worn in the sixteenth. Between 1300 and 1600, the design of ploughs did not alter across northern Europe - a stability that must have given artisans and workers a reassuring sense that their businesses would outlive them. But product life cycles have sharply accelerated since the middle of the nineteenth century - destroying workers' confidence in the long-term integrity of their careers.

"Rapid defeats at the hands of new products and services are to be found in almost every area of the economy: canals after the invention of the railway, passenger liners after the introduction of the jet engine, horses after the development of the car, typewriters after the birth of the personal computer.

"The market's passion for change has a propensity to involve companies in product development costs so high that their very survival can depend on the successful launch of a single item. Companies can resemble palpitating gamblers who, instead of being allowed to retreat cautiously after a good run, are continually forced at gunpoint to risk their assets and the livelihoods of their employees on the outcome of a few wagers or even a single bet, as a result either amasssing vast but precarious riches or self-destructing."


Monday, 27 April 2009

Review: Reinventing Banking by Johan Kestens

  • "We have learned that risk awareness should be as much a part of a banker's DNA as commercial astuteness."

There's no shortage of 20-20 hindsight masquerading as confident prediction now that business is getting used to the turmoil of the markets. But this paper from AT Kearney's Johan Kesten is that rare commodity: a clear and well-argued agenda for getting banking back on track, complete with convincing examples and actionable advice.

Kestens summarises the origins of the current financial crisis, focusing on the drying up of public debt in the late 90s, the systemic errors made in the risk ratings of new types of credit derivatives, and the breakdown of mark-to-market valuation models. He also pinpoints issues of governance, organisational culture and regulatory failure. Acknowledging that customers' appetite for innovative investment products is unsurprisingly low in the light of evaporating confidence, Kestens suggests that memories are short: "Will greed surface again over the next three years?"

Kestens marshals seven ideas that banks can use to rebuild their capabilities and reputations. His first area is risk management, where he calls for proper appreciation of risk management throughout the management ranks, more equitable compensation schemes, alternative risk assessment models, scenario planning and simulation ("war games"), new reinsurance strategies and improved risk reporting.

His second area is the redefinition of business scope, starting with an improved understanding of the organisation's actual versus stated scope. He advocates concentrating on core competencies, citing winners who've stuck to the knitting and losers who've diversified away from what they know best. He advocates shielding lines of business from capital markets by making greater use of internal financing - implying that institutions have been lazy in their use of their own resources. Kestens remarks that organisational excellence, including reporting, is a competitive advantage. He recommends focused acquisitions and disposals, and greater use of outsourcing.

The third area of attention is product reinvention. Here Kesten advises banks to counter the natural commoditisation of banking products through the use of affinity, emotion and loyalty - offering real ideas for repositioning product lines. He also discusses product and feature bundling, and customer life stage modelling.

The fourth area for concern is the rebuilding of brand and trust. Consistency, emotional connection, and full and transparent communication are the keynotes here. This section segues neatly into "Do real marketing", an appeal for banks to get better at event-based marketing, and to work harder to understand online behaviours - especially the wealth of intelligence being generated in social networks.

Kestens' last two areas for attention concern distribution and IT. On the distribution side, he urges better mastery of online channels and greater recognition of contemporary customers' savvy, while advocating better management of the purpose, design and location of physical branches. In the IT arena, Kestens makes good arguments for service oriented architecture (SOA) and, perhaps surprisingly, careful systems design - the days when it was okay to assume that computing power is free and limitless have gone. He also makes sound points on the need for careful sequencing of change in IT; programme management is a notorious tanktrap for IT transformation.

The full text of the paper - which includes a valuable appendix on the future of investment banking - is available here.