No idea is an island
06:48The
title of this post is a bit provocative, and that's on purpose. Every company
wants to innovate, and further they desire that the limited innovation they
accomplish succeed wildly. This is of course whistling past the graveyard, as
most innovations, like most venture capital investments, won't return the
initial investment. Instead, most companies demand innovation results on par
with the iPhone while funding innovation with the equivalent of corporate bake
sales. But this post isn't intended to deride the often inadequate resourcing
of innovation, it's meant to point out the reasons behind a rather uncomfortable
fact: even good ideas often fail in the marketplace. This skips right over the
outright failure of bad ideas and bad products, of which there are legion.
Those probably deserve to die an ignominious death. But why do good ideas and
products seem to have such a high failure rate?
There
are plenty of reasons for good, innovative products to fail in the marketplace.
Perhaps the customers were too aggressive in their needs statements, or not
aggressive enough. Perhaps the innovator identified the right needs but was too
early or too late in the market or technology window. Perhaps the need exists
but the effort for the customer to overcome inertia and actually make the change
seems too high (this is my challenge with Slack). Perhaps the product or
service actually fills an important need, but there were other, more important
or urgent needs that the innovator ignored. In other words, there are plenty of
reasons why good, well-thought out innovations can fail. But none of these is
as important as what Paul Hobcraft and I have been writing about
recently. One of, if not the most important reason good innovative products
fail in the marketplace is because they don't fit within an existing ecosystem
or plug into an important platform. That is, they are independent, discrete
products when a customer seeks a comprehensive, seamless solution.
The
problem with discrete product innovation
Let's
imagine that a company identifies customer needs and does a good job generating
ideas to arrive at a new product innovation, which it then launches into the
marketplace. Having done everything correctly from their point of view, the
innovation team waits with expectation to see how well the product performs.
The consumer, on the other hand, encounters the product, which has a number of
new capabilities, bells and whistles, but doesn't integrate usefully or
seamlessly into a set of products, services, business models, channels, data and
interactions that the customer has already constructed, or had constructed for
them. While the new product outweighs and outranks the product it was meant to
replace, the new product ignores connectivity, seamless integration and a host
of other factors that the customer cares about to get their "jobs" done. Jobs,
you see, may be broken into discrete activities, but the customer really cares
about the total experience or journey. Optimizing one step in the process but
failing to acknowledge the journey doesn't create value, it creates new work for
customers, or forces them to change the work they've done.
Platforms
and Ecosystems
The
English poet John Donne wrote that "no man is an island". He meant that we are
mutually dependent on each other. Likewise, in a highly integrated, hyper
connected word, no product is an island. It relies on other products, services,
business models, channels, data and standards in order to operate. There are
two key ideas at work here: platforms and ecosystems, and these must matter and
shape innovation.
Platforms
are simply agreed connectivity standards that become a backplane or common
operating infrastructure to allow disparate products, technologies and services
to interact. Google, Amazon and others are creating these platforms where
innovators will be able to plug in, interoperate and gain value from the other
goods and services residing on the platform.
Ecosystems
are comprised of the other vendors, technologies, data and ancillary products
and services that offer the customer the full, integrated, cohesive and seamless
experience they want.
Ignore
these at your peril
So,
back to the lone innovator. Too often innovators, individual and corporate, are
too myopic. They identify one "job" to be done, and focus narrowly on
accomplishing that task with more features, skills or elan. While doing so the
customer plays a role in describing the job or task, but often failing to
connect the job to other jobs or tasks that are mutually intertwined or
dependent. Unless the solution sustains the seamless experience or "journey",
the customer isn't likely to switch to a new product simply because it is
slightly better in the abstract, but deteriorates the rest of the activity,
journey or experience.
To
be a successful innovator, one must understand the totality of the customers'
needs, observe the platforms and ecosystems that provide the comprehensive
solution that customers want, which is a total, comprehensive and seamless
experience, and then decide what the key needs and features are that the
innovator can contribute, and how the idea must be shaped to either fit within
an existing ecosystem and platform, or how to radically disrupt the existing
ecosystems and platforms and create something new and more compelling for the
customer. Placing a new and interesting discrete product that does not align
to the expectations of the customer for a seamless experience or worse
interrupts or detracts from an otherwise comprehensive solution is worse than
not innovating at all.
Increase
experience or reduce friction in the journey
The
eventual failure of most good ideas isn't because of market windows or customer
needs. It isn't because the product fails to meet specific targets or price
points. It's because innovators don't open their apertures to understand the
totality of customer needs, and in a very connected world don't understand the
important platforms and ecosystems that the innovative product will enter. Once
you understand the interconnectedness and create products that sustain or
improve that, or reduce friction in a customer experience or journey, your
innovations will succeed. No man, or idea, is an island, and in markets where
connectivity and interrelationships are increasing and platforms and ecosystems
are ever more tightly woven together, your innovation cannot stand alone.
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