230 likes | 486 Views
Tools for Innovation Management. Prasada Reddy Lund University, Sweden. Tools for Scanning Internal Environment . Audits What is an audit? - inventory of resources, assets, systems and procedures of an organization; What is the purpose? - identify what a firm has
E N D
Tools for Innovation Management Prasada Reddy Lund University, Sweden
Tools for Scanning Internal Environment • Audits • What is an audit? • - inventory of resources, assets, systems and procedures of an organization; • What is the purpose? • - identify what a firm has • - identify how firm utilizes them • - improve/learn - basis for betterment • - provide background for identification of core competences.
Audits • How to use an audit? • - Audit collects data and is based on questionnaires designed mostly ad hoc. • - Audits need to be related to the objectives of the firm. • - Audits can be performed for the entire organization or just for parts of it (departments).
Types of Audits • Skills/Organizational Capabilities Audit • Technology/Innovation audit
Organizational Capabilities 1 • Source: Ulrich, D. & Smallwood, N. (2004) • What people respect is not how they are structured or their specific approaches to management, but their capabilities - an ability to innovate or to respond to changing customer needs. • Such ‘organizational capabilities’ are key intangible assets (one cannot see or touch them). But they make all the difference in the world when it comes to market value.
Organizational Capabilities 2 • Organizational capabilities - the collective skills, abilities, and expertise of an organization - are the outcome of investments in staffing, training, compensation, communication and other human resource areas. • They form the identity and personality of the organization by defining what it is good at doing and what it is. • They are stable over time and difficult for competitors to imitate. • They are not easy to measure.
Organizational Capabilities 3 • 1. Represents a person’s functional competence, such as technical expertise in marketing, finance or manufacturing. • 2. Refers to a person’s leadership ability - to set direction, to communicate a vision or to motivate people. • 3. Comprises a firm’s core technical competencies, e.g. Financial firm’s risk management knowledge. • 4. Represents an organization’s underlying DNA, culture and personality and may include such capabilities as innovation and speed.
Organizational Capabilities 4 • A firm typically excel in as many as three of the following 11 capabilities, while maintaining industry parity in others. • Talent (attracting, motivating and retaining); Speed (in making changes); Shared Mind-Set and Coherent Brand Identity (employees and customers have positive images); Accountability (high performance); Collaboration (working across boundaries); Learning (generating ideas); Leadership; Customer Connectivity; Strategic Unity; Innovation (new in content and process); Efficiency (managing costs)
Organizational Capabilities - Audit Process 1 • 1. Determine which part of the business to audit - division, region or the entire company. • 2. Create the content of the audit - adapt the 11 generic capabilities listed to the organization’s requirement.
Organizational Capabilities - Audit Process 2 • 3. Gather data from multiple groups on current and desired capabilities. • - For a 90-degree assessment, collect data only from the leadership team of the unit under audit. Quick, but deceptive as leaders’ self-reports may be biased. • - For a 360-degree assessment, collect data from multiple groups within the firm. Different groups may tell different stories, but can provide insights that might otherwise be missed. • For 720-degree assessment, collect data from internal and external groups such as investors, customers and suppliers.
Organizational Capabilities - Audit Process 3 • 4. Synthesize the data to identify the most critical capabilities requiring managerial attention - Look for patterns in the data and focus on not more than three capabilities required to deliver on strategy goals. Identify those with most impact and the easiest to improve. • 5. Put together an action plan with clear steps to take and measures to monitor, and assign a team to the job of delivering on the critical capabilities. • - Actions - coordinating education or training events, setting performance standards, creating task forces, investing in technology, etc.
Organizational Capabilities - Audit Process 4 • 4. Synthesize the data to identify the most critical capabilities requiring managerial attention - Look for patterns in the data and focus on not more than three capabilities required to deliver on strategy goals. Identify those with most impact and the easiest to improve. • 5. Put together an action plan with clear steps to take and measures to monitor, and assign a team to the job of delivering on the critical capabilities. • - Actions - coordinating education or training events, setting performance standards, creating task forces, investing in technology, etc.
Organizational Capabilities - Audit Process 5 • Lessons Learned: • Get focused; Recognize the interdependence of capabilities; Learn from the best; Create a virtuous cycle of assessment and investment; Compare capability perceptions; Match capability with delivery; Avoid underinvestment in organization intangibles; Don’t confuse capabilities with activities.
Technical Innovation Audit 1Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Core Processes: • Concept generation - identification of new product concepts • Product development - taking the innovation from concept, through development and transfer to manufacturing and use • Process innovation - the development of innovations in manufacturing processes • Technology acquisition - the development and management of technology per se.
Technical Innovation Audit 2Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Enabling Processes: • Resources - the deployment of human and financial resources • Systems and tools - the effective use of appropriate systems and tools • Leadership - providing the top management leadership and direction.
Technical Innovation Audit 3Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Detailed Audit • Assessing the current innovation practice and performance; • Identifying the gaps between current and targeted practice and performance and the reasons for gaps; • Defining the action plans needed to close these gaps.
Technical Innovation Audit 4Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Audit - Two Dimensions: • 1. Process audit: • - the degree to which there are appropriate business processes in place; • - the deployment of good practice - the breadth of use in the company; • The degree to which each practice meets known best in class or world class standards.
Technical Innovation Audit 5Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Audit - Two Dimensions: • 2. Performance audit - • Focus on the outcomes: i) of each individual core and enabling process; ii) of the overall process of technological innovation; and iii) the impact of this on competitiveness. • Produced quantitative results that facilitate comparison between and within organizations and monitors trends. • Weaknesses - insufficient as basis for learning. It does not specify extent of gaps or how to cover gaps.
Technical Innovation Audit 5Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Innovation Scorecards: Process Audits • Provide a rapid overall assessment of the practices adopted with respect to the known best practice and whether or not the required managerial processes are in place. • The basis of the score card is a description, for each process of innovation, of the characteristics of good practice and poor practice. • This description can be translated into scales against which companies can review themselves.
Technical Innovation Audit 6Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Performance Audit • 1. The performance of each core and enabling process that is relevant for firm; • 2. The global result of the innovation process, that is how it impacts on the competitive ability of the firm. • - the performance of innovation in financial terms; • - the impact of the innovation on the competitive performance of the product portfolio to which the innovation belongs; • - the contribution to firm’s process of learning.
Technical Innovation Audit 6Source: Chiesa et al. (1996) • Testing the Audit Tool: • Functionality - i) test the basic functionality of the tool and the functionality of the support process; and ii) to test the degree to which the tool was generic and thus appropriate for firms from different sectors, sizes and technologies. • Usability - i) the degree to which users are able to use the tool properly without support from experts; and ii) clarity of language and terminology. • Usefulness - Short term, whether companies found it useful? Did it lead to effective action plans? Long term - measuring the effectiveness of the programs that resulted from the assessment.
Group Exercise • Conduct 1 Audit in a Firm • Make Analysis of the results - Graph • Prepare presentation • Include advantages and inconveniences of a) the technique; and b) the exercise.