Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Toxic processes challenged at the Strategos “Innovation Academy”
View through CrossRef
In a session of the Strategos Innovation Academy, participants considered how a number of core management processes – for example, strategic planning, capital budgeting, performance assessment and product and process development – inhibit innovation. Working in groups, the participants identified problems with existing practices and then suggested a number of ways to make the process less toxic to innovation. Today’s strategic‐planning processes rarely emphasize radical innovation – the new business concepts and operational models that are necessary to keep corporations at the head of the pack – either implicitly or explicitly. Another failure that participants identified is the linkage between strategy planning and the annual budgetary cycle. To improve strategic planning, participants made a number of other suggestions, many of which derive from the toxicities and failures of the existing strategic‐planning process. Companies should first ensure that their business definition and associated mission statement are broad. Narrow definitions are likely to reduce a company’s identity to its current business model, thereby impeding the possibility of renewal. Companies should also explicitly include innovation in the strategic‐planning process. A chief innovation officer – a new senior‐level appointee in the company – can help ensure that innovation remains central to the strategic‐planning process. Greater scrutiny of strategic plans can also help. For example, CEOs can reject strategic plans that do not include a substantial amount of innovation. The introduction of new metrics for innovation would help formalize this commitment to innovation. Participants also recommended that companies find ways to dissociate the strategic‐planning process from an annual schedule. Instead, the process needs to become continuous. To this end, some participants advocated renaming the process strategic evolution instead of strategic planning.
Title: Toxic processes challenged at the Strategos “Innovation Academy”
Description:
In a session of the Strategos Innovation Academy, participants considered how a number of core management processes – for example, strategic planning, capital budgeting, performance assessment and product and process development – inhibit innovation.
Working in groups, the participants identified problems with existing practices and then suggested a number of ways to make the process less toxic to innovation.
Today’s strategic‐planning processes rarely emphasize radical innovation – the new business concepts and operational models that are necessary to keep corporations at the head of the pack – either implicitly or explicitly.
Another failure that participants identified is the linkage between strategy planning and the annual budgetary cycle.
To improve strategic planning, participants made a number of other suggestions, many of which derive from the toxicities and failures of the existing strategic‐planning process.
Companies should first ensure that their business definition and associated mission statement are broad.
Narrow definitions are likely to reduce a company’s identity to its current business model, thereby impeding the possibility of renewal.
Companies should also explicitly include innovation in the strategic‐planning process.
A chief innovation officer – a new senior‐level appointee in the company – can help ensure that innovation remains central to the strategic‐planning process.
Greater scrutiny of strategic plans can also help.
For example, CEOs can reject strategic plans that do not include a substantial amount of innovation.
The introduction of new metrics for innovation would help formalize this commitment to innovation.
Participants also recommended that companies find ways to dissociate the strategic‐planning process from an annual schedule.
Instead, the process needs to become continuous.
To this end, some participants advocated renaming the process strategic evolution instead of strategic planning.
Related Results
Innovation, Innovation Strategy, and Strategic Innovation
Innovation, Innovation Strategy, and Strategic Innovation
Abstract
Purpose
The purposes of this chapter are to propose definitions of innovation, product innovation, business mode...
Executive innovation
Executive innovation
One recent quote for the role of CEOs and other C-Suite executives on the innovation of a firm is: "Innovation executives are not expected to be the innovators, but the great ones ...
Innovation ambidexterity effects on product innovation performance: the mediating role of decentralization
Innovation ambidexterity effects on product innovation performance: the mediating role of decentralization
PurposeThe purpose of the study was to analyse the impact of innovation ambidexterity represented by explorative and exploitative innovation capabilities and their combined effects...
Nutrient Regulation of Relative Dominance of Cylindrospermopsin-Producing and Non-cylindrospermopsin-Producing Raphidiopsis raciborskii
Nutrient Regulation of Relative Dominance of Cylindrospermopsin-Producing and Non-cylindrospermopsin-Producing Raphidiopsis raciborskii
Raphidiopsis raciborskii (previously Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii) can produce cylindrospermopsin (CYN) which is of great concern due to its considerable toxicity to human and an...
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
In a world with pressing social issues that require the collaboration of multiple stakeholders to solve them, this research sought to find out through the views of interior design ...
Akademia Umiejętności (1872–1918) i jej czescy członkowie
Akademia Umiejętności (1872–1918) i jej czescy członkowie
The article shows that the Czech humanists formed the largest group among the foreign members of the Academy of Arts and Sciences in Krakow. It is mainly based on the reports of th...
Responsible Innovation and Responsible Digital Transformation in Emerging Economies (Vietnam): the Roles of Innovation Barriers and Ethical Pressure
Responsible Innovation and Responsible Digital Transformation in Emerging Economies (Vietnam): the Roles of Innovation Barriers and Ethical Pressure
Responsible innovation and responsible digital transformation are increasingly important for firms seeking to create innovation value while responding to ethical, social, and stake...
Effects of Temperature on Competition Between Toxic and Non-Toxic Raphidiopsis raciborskii and Cylindrospermopsin Production
Effects of Temperature on Competition Between Toxic and Non-Toxic Raphidiopsis raciborskii and Cylindrospermopsin Production
Toxic and non-toxic strains of Raphidiopsis raciborskii coexist widely in natural water bodies, with the dominance of toxic strains directly influencing bloom toxicity. This study ...

