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Examples of Successful
Innovation Practices
Freedom to Fail Forward
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Fail often to succeed sooner... Good
companies embrace a culture of mini-failures. Setbacks aren’t
problems, they’re
opportunities. |
Tom Kelley
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You don't
learn to walk by following rules.
You learn by doing, and by falling over. |
Richard
Branson
Virgin Group |
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Don’t be afraid to make a
mistake. But make sure you don’t
make the same mistake twice. |
Akio Morita
Sony |
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"Life
itself is a process of trial and error... And those people who make no
mistakes are those who make nothing."
~ Alfred P. Sloan, the man who made General Motors
a
most successful and
profitable industrial
enterprise
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Silicon
Valley
What makes
Silicon Valley so successful as the engine of high-tech growth is the
Darwinian process of
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failure.
Commentator and author Mike Malone puts it like this, 'Outsiders
think of Silicon Valley as a success, but it is, in truth, a graveyard.
Failure is Silicon Valley's greatest strength. Every failed product or
enterprise is a lesson stored in the collective memory. We don't stigmatize
failure, we admire it. Venture Capitalists like to see a little failure in
the résumés of entrepreneurs.'
Charles
Schwab
Charles Schwab journals
their failures and lessons they've learned. They maintain also a display of
failed innovations and created a videotape for employee orientation. When
celebration of
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noble failure becomes institutionalized, people within the organization
are more willing to
reassess earlier decisions and take corrective measures...
More
Dell Inc.
"At
Dell Inc,
innovation is all about
taking risks and learning from failure," writes
Michael Dell in his book
Direct from Dell. "To tap into this kind of
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innovation, we do our best to make sure that people aren't afraid of the
possibility of failure, and we do a lot of
experiments. For instance, one
of our managers in the consumer group came up with the idea to offer
installation service to consumers in order to reach people who might be
apprehensive about setting up a new computer. The idea seemed like it would
help out a group of customers, and it made a lot of sense from a cost
standpoint as well.
We knew from our experience with business customers that
when our staff installs a computer, the incidence of set-up failures is
almost zero. The consumer team threw around the idea, did a pilot with one
group of
salespeople, and found out what worked and what didn't. Within two
weeks, we'd made this service available to every consumer in the
United
States. I actually found out about this by accident – it wasn't something
that we had a bunch of meetings about in boardrooms.
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Incremental improvements and experiments happen all the time."
"Mobilize your people around a singe goal. A
company of self-reliant "owners" sounds great in theory, but it can be chaos
if the goals aren't clear to all," says Michael Dell. "At Dell, it's worked
for us because we came up with a consistent
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strategy and well-articulated
objectives.
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Learning opportunities.
There's no risk in preserving the status quo – but there's no profit
either...
More
Johnson & Johnson
"If you are not
failing, you
won't succeed. If you can't succeed, you can't grow," said Robert Wood
Johnson, former chairman of Johnson & Johnson. "Companies with a high
awareness of
culture's importance to
innovation have visible, tangible, and frequently humorous reminders
that it's okay to take risk – that a person won't be beheaded for sincere
attempts that fail."
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Wall-Mart
In his
10 Rules for Building a Successful Business, Sam Walton, the Founder of
Wall-Mart writes:
"Find some
humor in
your failures. Don't take yourself so seriously. Loosen up, and everybody
around you will loosen up. Have fun. Show enthusiasm –
always. When all else fails, put on a costume and sing a silly song. Then
make everybody else sing with you.
Don't do a hula on Wall Street. It's been done. Think up your own stunt. All
of this is more important, and more fun, than you think, and it really fools
competition. "Why should we take those cornballs at Wal-Mart seriously?"...
More
Google
Sheryl Sandberg, a vice president in charge of the company's automated
advertising system committed an error that cost Google several million dollars.
When she realized the magnitude of her mistake, she went to inform
Larry Page,
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Google's co-founder and unofficial
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Thought Leader . "God, I feel really bad about
this,"
Sandberg told Page, who accepted her apology. But as she turned to leave, Page
said, "I'm so glad you made this mistake, because I want to run a company where
we are moving too quickly and doing too much, not being too cautious and doing
too little. If we don't have any of these mistakes, we're just not taking enough
risk." ...
More
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Inspiring People:
4 Strategies
Coca-Cola
Communicating the
message from the top that failure is part of the
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innovation process
has been
something that, CEO and Chairman of Coca-Cola, E. Neville Isdell, did at
their annual meeting, where he declared: “You will see some
failures. As we take more risks, this is something we must accept as part of
the regeneration process”. Isdell wanted Coca-Cola to take bigger risks,
tolerate failures and change Coke’s traditional risk-averse culture. Failure
is so important to the
experimental process, without it there is no learning. The key is to
have
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intelligent failures, and preferably those that happen early and
inexpensively, which then lead to new
insights about customers.
GE
Punishing for falling short of a
stretch goal is counterproductive. "If the company aimed at 15 and made
12, celebrate. What's critical is setting the performance bar high enough;
otherwise, it's impossible to find out what people can do," says
Jack Welch, the former legendary CEO of
GE.
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