CEOs Say Innovation is Most Important Factor for Growth
Embargoed until 4am 3 June 2011
News
Release
CEOs Say Innovation is Most
Important Factor for
Growth,
Leadership, Strategic
Integration, Accountability Required
New PwC study:
"Demystifying innovation: Take down the barriers to new
growth"
Innovation – in the form
of developing new products and services – has
become as important to growth for CEOs as raising their
share of existing markets. A survey by PwC of 1200 CEOs from
around the world has found innovation, along with increasing
their existing business, now outstrips all other means of
potential expansion, including moving into new markets,
mergers and acquisitions, and joint ventures and other
alliances.
PwC's 14th Annual Global CEO survey found innovation is high on the executive agenda in virtually every industry. In all, 78 per cent of CEOs surveyed believe innovation will generate ‘significant’ new revenue and cost reduction opportunities over the next three years. But it is highest for those where technology is changing customer expectations. In both the pharmaceutical and entertainment and media sectors, for example, more than 40 per cent of CEOs believe their greatest opportunities for growth come from spawning new products and services.
Additionally, the survey found CEOs are re-thinking their approach to innovation and increasingly seeking to collaborate with outside partners and in markets other than where they are based. For example, a majority of entertainment and media CEOs say they expect to co-develop new products and services.
PwC’s Chief Executive Officer, Bruce Hassall says "In today's fast-moving environment companies must constantly improve and re-invent their products, services and even brands. Innovation is a matter of survival as it gives companies a competitive advantage and creates growth.
"The next decade will be the 'most innovative time' , in mature markets companies must innovate to differentiate themselves; in emerging markets, they need innovation to lessen their dependence on lower costs," adds Mr Hassall.
According to a new PwC, study, "Demystifying Innovation: take down the barriers to new growth," the drive for innovation must arise from the CEO and other executive leadership by creating a culture that is open to new ideas and systematic in its approach to their development. The innovation process generally has four phases:
• Discovery: Identifying and sourcing
ideas and problems are the basis for future innovation.
Sources may include employees as well as customers,
suppliers, partners and other external
organisations.
• Incubation: Refining,
developing and testing good ideas to see if they are
technically feasible and make business
sense.
• Acceleration: Establishing pilot
programs to test commercial
feasibility.
• Scale: Integrating the
innovation into the company; commercialisation and mass
marketing.
The study also identifies seven misconceptions about the innovation process:
• Innovation can be
delegated. Not so. The drive to innovate begins at
the top. If the CEO doesn't protect and reward the process,
it will fail.
• Middle Management is the ally of
innovation. Managers are not natural champions of
innovation. They to reject new ideas in favor of
efficiency.
• Innovative people work for the
money. Establishing a culture that embeds innovation
in the organisation will attract and retain creative
talent.
• Innovation is a lucky accident.
Successful innovation most often results from a
disciplined process that sorts through many
ideas.
• The more open the innovation process,
the less disciplined. Advances in collaborative
tools, like social networking, are accelerating open
innovation.
• Businesses know how much innovation
they need. Leaders must calculate their potential
for inorganic growth to determine their need to
innovate.
• Innovation can't be measured.
Leadership needs to identify its ROII--Return on
Innovation
Investment.
-ends-