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The road to inventionDate: 2015-10-07; view: 459. Innovation is rarely rocket science
(4) Big firms are better at less eye-catching forms of innovation and generally improving the ways in which products invented elsewhere are manufactured, marketed and continually enhanced. Henry Ford, whose name is almost synonymous with four-wheeled transport, did not invent the automobile. He ‘merely' invented a far superior way to manufacture it - namely, the mass-production assembly line. And on that was built an industrial empire that has thrived for almost a century. Likewise, in the past few decades most of the companies that have created truly extraordinary amounts of wealth have done so by inventing great processes, not great products. Dell, Toyota and Wal-Mart, for example, have risen to the top of their respective industries by coming up with amazingly efficient ways of getting quite ordinary products into the hands of consumers more cheaply than their rivals.
(5) Big companies have a big problem with innovation. The Oxford English Dictionary defines innovation as ‘making changes to something established'. Invention, by contrast, is the act of ‘coming upon or finding: discovery'. Whereas inventors stumble across or make new things, ‘innovators try to change the status quo,' says Bhaskar Chakravorti of the Monitor Group, another consulting firm, ‘which is why markets resist them.' Innovations frequently disrupt the way that companies do things (and may have been doing them for years).
(6) It is not just markets that resist innovation. Michael Hammer, co-author of another important business book Re-engineering the Corporation quotes the example of a PC-maker that set out to imitate Dell's famous ‘Build-to-Order' system of computer assembly. The company found that its attempts were frustrated not just by its head of manufacturing (who feared it would lead to most of his demesne, including his job, being outsourced), but also by the head of marketing, who did not want to upset his existing retail outlets. So the innovative proposal got nowhere. Dell continued to dominate the business.
(7) Mr Christensen described how ‘disruptive innovation' - simpler, cheaper and more convenient products that seriously upset the status quo - can herald the rapid downfall of well-established and successful businesses. This, he argues, is because most organizations are designed to grow through ‘sustaining innovations' - the sort, like Gillette's vibrating Mach3 razor, that do no more than improve on existing products for existing markets. When they are hit by a disruptive innovation - as IBM was by the invention of the personal computer and as numerous national airlines have been by low-cost carriers - they are in danger of being blasted out of their market.
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