Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Defining relevant innovation – the elusive ‘credible challenge’


Credible challenge – what is it, and why is it important? 

In order for something to be credible, it requires belief.  Belief not only that each associate will be affected by the challenge, but that they can influence the outcome.  Belief that the challenge is possible, but also difficult.  Above all, belief that the challenge has relevance to the group.  It’s this last piece that I want to focus on, how to establish the belief in your stakeholder group that the defined challenge is relevant.

Relevance in this context can really be defined through evaluating ease of execution, of both your own and competing business.  This is not to say that any products or services in your market are irrelevant.  The opposite is true – all products and services in your market are relevant.  Depending on the evaluation, the challenge should be approached differently.  The intent is to drive relevance and ultimately support the credibility of the defined challenge.

The key is understanding that it is not the challenge itself, but the response required, that drives relevance for the stakeholder. 
Product mapping quadrant
 
The model above demonstrates an appropriate response for each product or service in a market, based on evaluating the ease of delivery.  Note that this evaluation is intended to cover any and all aspects of business support.  It should not be limited to the purely technical capability of production.  For example, a critical aspect of this holistic view is the profit margin and the level that is deemed acceptable.

The response in each case should be to drive the consumers accessing those products or services into the core business quadrant, by altering or switching the product. 

It is important to note here that ‘innovation’ does not include dabbling in the core business quadrant.  Although these changes to products identified as core business might be important to execute, they do not represent a challenge and will not have any significant impact on the market.  Therefore they cannot meet the definition of credible challenge.

The glaring hole in everything I have described so far (just in case you didn’t spot it) is that I haven’t included the introduction of *new* products – only the evaluation of existing ones.  As a consequence, we have also ignored the possibility of significantly growing the market. 

To be fair, this is partly deliberate, as my intent was to cover the larger business point of view, where significant market disruption is to be avoided.  If this is not possible, at least the pace of disruption should be controlled.  Ideally each product falling into the convert to alternative quadrant would spawn a successive but largely equivalent product into the reduce cost quadrant.  In reality however, genuinely new to market products could be introduced into the reduce cost quadrant, simply as a response to grow the market.  If you expand these lines of thinking, an individual product will have a lifecycle through the model.

Product mapping quadrant showing typical lifecycle
 

The interactions are in reality much more complex, with consumers shifting in and out of complex repertoires.  However, the intent of this model is to identify product innovation responses which are self-evidently relevant to the stakeholders involved in the process. 

Defining a preferred shape of products in a particular quadrant (which ultimately sets the boundaries between the quadrants), and how much of the portfolio should sit in each quadrant, will enable effective prioritization.  This prioritization can then drive a sustainable and relevant product portfolio, with new products feeding in at one end and obsolete products exiting then pipeline at the other. 

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