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Different key ingredients for successful Innovation

The responses to a recent poll Accenture ran on LinkedIn revealed that people have very different ideas about the key ingredients for successful innovation. A full half of the respondents believe that understanding customer challenges is the key, while another third believe it is essential to embed innovation in an organisation. Industry foresight and speed to market came in equal third, while 4% opted for smart commercialization.

The truth is of course that all of these play a role in successful innovation. And even these don’t give you a full picture of what is needed for continuous successful innovation. But is there one element that is so crucial that without it successful innovation would be impossible?

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Is entrepreneurship naturally innovative?

The latest Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2010, published in late August, seems at first glance to paint a very positive picture of entrepreneurship in the Netherlands. According to the Monitor, the Netherlands now has the highest number of start-up businesses in Europe. In 2010, no less than 7.2% of the adult population was involved in establishing a start-up business or managing a business that had been up and running for less than 3.5 years.

So on the face of it, entrepreneurship is alive and kicking in the Netherlands. In fact, it’s healthier than it has been for decades. However, the Monitor also notes the shortcomings – or weaknesses – of the Dutch entrepreneurial world. Foremost among these is the modest level of product and business innovation. Partly as a result of this lack of innovation, the Netherlands has at best an average score in terms of the number of fast-growing businesses.

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The Price is Right! Or is it …?

In my recent blogpost on the demise of a breakthrough, reader Paul posted the interesting question: “It is getting harder and harder to keep up with all changes. Especially in technology. I wonder how much of this is transferred in prices we pay for products like this.”

To be honest: I’m really not a pricing expert, but I do know pricing is one of the most difficult aspects of any new market introduction: how to ensure a competitive price positioning that satisfies maximum demand and yields a decent margin?

In case of an incremental product improvement or line extension it’s relatively straightforward: you’ve got your current product’s sales figures and competitor’s prices. These will help in determining the ideal price positioning that matches your brand value. For real and potentially disruptive innovations however, current figures are just meaningless. If your innovation offers fundamentally new benefits, there is really nothing to compare it with, right?

In this case you’ll need to understand what the true value of your product or solution is in the eyes of the customer. As I’ve stated before, at the heart of any successful innovation is its value proposition. A value proposition that answers the consumer’s ultimate questions: what’s in it for me?

According to Atkinson, Kaplan and Young[i], a value proposition details what customers can expect to receive in exchange for their money. It comprises the following 4 elements:

  1. Price: to be paid by the customer given the product attributes
  2. Quality: conformity between what has been promised and what has been delivered
  3. Functionality and features: the performance of the product
  4. Service: including after sales

Two aspects in this definition are of particular interest for our discussion:

The first is “the price to be paid (…) given the product attributes”. In most cases the price level depends largely on the cost to develop and produce the product, the Cost per unit of Product. The more features built into your product, the more it will cost to produce, and the higher it has to be priced to be profitable. This also implies that the total quality has to be superior to justify that high price. A tough challenge to meet

But the definition also explicitly mentions “the performance of the product”. And here lies the key to value based pricing. Defining your offerings in terms of its performance will direct the customer focus to your proposition’s value rather than its price aspect. If differentiation in your offering is possible, you should strive to create an offering with a lower cost per unit of performance rather than per unit of product to control the overall solution cost. This doesn’t just create huge value for your customers, it’s also much more difficult for others to copy.

Lower cost per unit of performance delivers longer term competitive advantage and better position to retain the aspired pricing position. Choosing to compete on price per unit means you’re eventually doomed to rely on process innovation to achieve lowest cost per unit of product – and thus step into the commodity trap.

So let’s get back to the question: How much of the (new) technology is transferred in the prices we pay for products like this? Well, if you focus your development efforts on the unit of performance, you will refrain from stuffing your innovation with a plethora of features and functionalities that just drive up the cost per unit of product. Adding functions creates complexity. There is good complexity – the kind of complexity costumers are willing to pay for; but there is there is also poor complexity, the kinds of that no customer values.

This means that it is essential to find out what functionality or new technology is critical to quality. Only by understanding your real customer needs, you’ll be able to develop highly differentiated solutions with a level of performance that customers will highly value. This requires you to do your upfront homework well – discovering consumer insights at the very start of the innovation process, well before any significant investment decision are made –  when the cost per unit of consumer product is still under control, and when you can assess without risk what it will be worth to the consumer.


[i]Atkinson, Kaplan en Young, Management Accounting, Pearson Prentice Hall, 2006

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The most innovative concept in the FS Industry

Yesterday, November 4 2010, the first Accenture Innovation Awards for the Financial Services Industry were handed out. Just like last Thursday’s edition for the C&HT Industry, it was a lively and exciting event that attracted a large crowd of innovation enthusiasts. Whoever said the FS industry was not innovative?

At the start of the session, Barend van Doorn, partner of Accenture highlighted the key themes observed amongst this year’s submitted concepts. These were: Get Organized, Quick & Convenient, Mobile Breakthroughs and More Transparency. Overarching all these themes Consumer Centricity was clearly the common denominator. The financial crisis has made it evident that regaining the consumer’s trust and addressing their needs has become the key imperative for the Financial Services industry. The entire presentation can be viewed below.

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And the winner is ….

Yesterday the Accenture Innovation Awards for the Communication & High-Tech industry were announced. In a packed exhibition hall in Amsterdam, the audience witnessed during an lively event what the professional jury found to be the most innovative concept of 2010. The coverage of the event via twitter (#aia10) even made it to a trending topic in the Netherlands.

As if to underwrite the relevance of the Innovation Awards, the breaking news was announced that same day that the 2007 AIA winner Hyves – the Dutch social network site – was sold to Dutch media giant TMG (Telegraaf Media Groep) for an undisclosed sum. Truly a stimulating foresight for every competitor for this year’s awards.

Winner of the Accenture Innovation awards 2010 and the prestigious Blue Tulip was tenpages.com, for its disruptive new business model that allows aspiring authors to publish the first ten pages of their manuscript on the web. Everyone can buy shares of 5 Euros a piece. When 20.000 shares have been sold within 4 months, the book will be published and distributed. Winner of the public choice award was the sympathetic Catawiki, which offers collectors of items an online platform to create a catalogue and easily sell and buy collectibles to fellow enthusiasts. A full list of all category winners can be found here.

The most relevant comment of the day was actually made by Ralph Cohen, of runner-up IceMobile. IceMobile developed the hugely popular mobile phone app Appie together with the largest retailer in the Netherlands Albert Heijn. The app helps shoppers to compile their grocery lists, complete with a function to scan barcodes, thousands of recepies and store maps to help navigate efficiently through the shopping aisles.

During his pitch Ralph explained the main reason behind the success of Appie: “We never set out to innovate. Innovation is not a goal on itself, it is the logical consequence of our intention to help the consumer. Truer words have not been spoken that day.

I’m very eager to find out what tomorrow’s innovation awards for the Financial services will bring!

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On the demise of a breakthrough innovation

Last week, Sony announced it was ceasing production of the Walkman after 30 years. At the demise of the once-so-popular device, we can only conclude that this was truly a breakthrough innovation that forever changed the way consumers enjoyed their music.

A successful innovation addresses a real customer need in a differentiated and superior way. Without a compelling value proposition, any idea is just a lead balloon that will never fly. In this particular occasion the customer need was discovered at very close range, within Sony itself. The lead-user that instigated the development of the first device was Sony’s co-chairman Akio Morita, who wanted to be able to listen to his favorite operas during his frequent trans-Pacific plane trips. Dragging around a Sony Boom-Box or Ghetto-Blaster obviously wasn’t an option for mister Morita.

The cassette player in itself wasn’t the real innovation. Technically speaking it was just an incremental line extension as Sony had already produced compact cassette players before, such as the Pressman. The real breakthrough was created when Sony developed a light-weight headset to complement the small cassette player, the H-AIR MDR-3 model. This total solution enabled people to walk, jog or cycle around without feeling too ridiculous wearing the large 70’s soft-padded headphones. It addressed people’s unarticulated, yet real desire to comfortably move about or exercise while listing to the music of their own choice.

Sony’s execution capabilities, fine-tuned to copy western technologies in the post WWII era, were finally deployed to surpass the competition. The product was launched in 1977 to become a commercial success. In 1995 Sony had already sold 150 million Walkmans around the globe, as the premium choice for the young and mobile music lover.

At the end-of-its lifecycle, the walkman got confronted with superior challengers, such as the Discman and the MP3-payer. In the end it wasn’t Sony that delivered the best value proposition to the customer: this time it was Apple that captured the heart of the customer with a stylish player and a new breakthrough innovation that drastically changed the rules of the game called I-Tunes.

The story of the Walkman demonstrates that it is not easy to remain competitive forever. It’s no simple task to create a sustainable flow of highly differentiated innovations to the market. Capturing the next wave and continuously out-innovate your competitors requires ongoing monitoring of the market landscape and understanding emerging technologies, but foremost the timely discovery of changing customer needs.

The Dutch Accenture Innovation Awards 2010

Curious to find out if the “next Walkman” is about to be launched? In the past months the professional juries of the Accenture Innovation Awards have thoroughly evaluated hundreds of concepts and elected their nominees who compete for the prestigious ‘Blue Tulip Award’. The award ceremonies take place in the first week of November. The Media, Communications & High Tech Innovation event will be held on Tuesday November 2nd in ‘Pakhuis de Zwijger’ in Amsterdam. On Thursday November 4th the winner of the Financial Services Innovation Awards will be announced at the Financial Services Innovation Event, to be held directly after the Emerce eFinancials event on that same day.

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Why Financial Services should get serious about innovation

In just a few weeks, the winners of Accenture Innovation Awards 2010 will be known. The concepts that will compete for the prestigious “Blue Tulip“ have been selected and will be presented during live events on November 2th and 4th 2010 in Amsterdam (more on the Innovation Awards).

Since 2007 the Innovation Awards are organized to create an overview of high performing innovative concepts in the Media, Communication, Entertainment and High Tech sectors. Due to the success of previous editions, Accenture introduced the Innovation Awards to the Financial Services sector.

To accompany this introduction, Accenture has written an article for the Dutch magazine Banking Review. The article explains why this is the moment for financial institutions to get serious about innovation.

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Accenture Innovation Awards

For the fourth consecutive year, Accenture in the Netherlands organizes the Accenture Innovation Awards. The Innovation Awards honors high performance in the field of innovation, uniting and stimulating innovators in the Netherlands. The Accenture Innovation Awards started in 2007, and was initially aimed at companies within the Communcations & High Tech industry.

This year we introduce an additional award for the Financial Services Industry. An independent jury of professionals will select the winners within distinct categories as well as the overall winner of ‘the Blue Tulip’ for the best 2010 innovative concept in the Nederlands. The jury will evaluate the concepts on innovativiness, demonstrated success and potential. Next to the prestigious ‘Blue Tulip’, the winner will receive a media package worth of 50.000 Euros, offered by Emerce (www.emerce.nl).

The awards will be presented during two separate industry specific seminars. The Media, Communication & High Tech Innovation seminar is planned for Tuesday November 2 2010. The winner of the most innovative concept within the Financial Services Industry will be announced during the Emerce Banking Day on Thursday 4 November 2010. Both seminars will take place in Pakhuis de Zwijger in Amsterdam.

To participate, companies can enter their concepts at http://www.innovation-awards.nl. Submission are accepted until July 15 2010. All participants will be published on the Innovation Awards website, which has proven to generate lots of media coverage and attention.

You can also tip us, if you know of a promising concept. Go to http://bit.ly/c5Hc39 and you may win an iPad!

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Nominees for Accentures Innovation Awards 2009 – Peoples Choice

Accenture is proud to present the nominees for the Innovation Awards 2009 People’s Choice.

This is your chance to honour true innovation in the low countries! Cast your vote on www.Innovation-awards.nl and select your favorite innovative concept of this year. The winner will be revealed on November the 5th at the Innovation Seminar that Accenture organises with its partners.

This is the third year that Dutch and Belgian companies in the Media, Entertainment, Communication and High Tech industry compete for the awards. Through these Innovation Awards, Accenture provides insight into the innovativeness of these industries, recognizes the true innovative firms, and brings companies together to discover new opportunities for cooperation, co-development and cross-fertilization. Read more…

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