Despite increased business investment in innovation, only 18 percent of
executives believe their company’s innovation efforts deliver a
competitive advantage, according to a new Accenture (NYSE: ACN) study
that also revealed a risk averse approach to product and service
development.
The survey of 519 companies across more than 12 industry sectors in
France, the U.K. and the U.S. shows that 51 percent of participating
companies report increased funding for innovation. Ninety-three percent
of surveyed executives said the long-term success of their
organization’s strategy depends on their ability to innovate and 70
percent place innovation among their company’s top five
priorities. Despite this commitment, the study found a decline in the
satisfaction with innovation performance compared to the results of a
similar Accenture study conducted in 2009.
The findings reveal that among the main reasons that innovation results
fall short are too much “renovation” in place of breakthrough ideas, and
too much “invention” against the challenge of commercializing at scale.
Sixty-four percent of respondents said they are focused on product line
extensions rather than big ideas. The proportion of executives who were
likely to identify the introduction of a new product category as a
primary goal for innovation fell to just 27 percent from 42 percent in
the 2009 study. Further, 33 percent said their primary goal was the
expansion of the product suites that support their basic offerings.
According to the Accenture report, entitled “Why
‘Low Risk’ Innovation Is Costly”, this phenomenon may be driven in
part by the fact that 46 percent of the executives said their company
had become more risk averse when considering new ideas. Additionally,
only 46 percent of the companies had an effective, holistic approach to
the development and introduction of new products or services, and 64
percent of them tend to pursue product line extensions rather than the
development of totally new products or services.
“Many companies take a low-risk approach to innovation that can
jeopardize results because they lack a prudent, disciplined approach for
innovation risk management. It’s a situation compounded for many by an
inability to rapidly scale inventions,” said Wouter Koetzier, managing
director for Innovation
and Product Development at Accenture. “However, the research
suggests that those companies that have a formal, end-to end management
system to nurture, scale and launch innovations tend to be more
satisfied with their results as they achieve stronger outcomes.”
The Accenture study shows that those companies which have
institutionalized formal innovation management systems, compared to
those that have not, are almost twice as likely to say they were very
satisfied with their initial idea generation abilities (43 percent vs.
24 percent). Thirty-eight percent vs. 22 percent are very satisfied with
the return on their innovation investments.
Accenture also found that companies with a formal system in place are 75
percent more likely to define their innovation strategy as delivering a
competitive advantage (21 percent vs. 12 percent), twice as likely to
introduce a new business process or model (32 percent vs. 16 percent),
and 35 percent more likely to say they are typically first to market
with new products or services (50 percent vs. 38 percent).
However, as the chart below shows, 38 percent of respondents lacked a
formal approach to innovation management. Respondents in the consumer
goods & services, electronics & high tech and health provider sectors
most frequently said they have a formal approach to innovation.
“The bottom line is that innovation can work better when a formal system
exists to streamline processes, manage risks and mine the data needed to
generate new products, services and business models to foster growth,”
said Adi Alon, a managing director in the Accenture Innovation
and Product Development practice. “Approached correctly, innovation
can be executed at scale, with speed and balance between renovation and
game changing initiatives; driving higher strategic and commercial
value.”
Accenture, through its research identified five key elements involved in
creating a formal innovation system. Those include end-to-end processes
that contribute to speed and flexibility; unique, personalized customer
experiences that can foster loyalty and enhance revenues; the
application of risk management to help drive innovation with analytics,
processes and tools; integration of the customer voice through the use
of big data and social media; and frugal innovation that can reduce
complexity to shorten time to market, reduce the cost of innovation,
disrupt business models and serve the emerging middle class in
developing countries.
About Accenture
Accenture is a global management consulting, technology services and
outsourcing company, with approximately 261,000 people serving clients
in more than 120 countries. Combining unparalleled experience,
comprehensive capabilities across all industries and business functions,
and extensive research on the world’s most successful companies,
Accenture collaborates with clients to help them become high-performance
businesses and governments. The company generated net revenues of
US$27.9 billion for the fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2012. Its home page
is www.accenture.com.
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