Article:
The Future of Innovation
by Michael Simpson, Managing Partner, Ideas First
This article was written for a book called “The Future of Innovation”, a compilation of articles and contributions by academics and innovation practitioners. Visit http://www.thefutureofinnovation.org for more information.
This contribution focuses on the future of insight and idea generation, the starting point of the innovation process, and provides three observations of how “smart companies” will generate and identify winning insights and ideas in the future, in a context of a much tougher economic and environmental climate.

1. Smart companies will continue to stay focused on meeting the consumer desire for new ideas and “new news”.
This provides a way of maintaining long-term market strength, especially during an economic downturn. This focus was certainly a factor in the success of companies such as L’Oreal and Procter & Gamble during the last significant recession. These businesses grew market share by maintaining investments in innovation research for priority projects, and by investing in the launch of new products and services, at a time when media costs were relatively inexpensive.
However, given the economic pressures and greater levels of consumer austerity, it will become even more critical for smart companies to take time to define their strategic focus to ensure that their innovation efforts are truly centred on consumer needs and insights.
2. Smart companies will employ new virtual tools and technologies to generate ideas from a broader pool of creative talent in a fast and cost effective way.
This will be the case especially for businesses that want to maximise their internal creative talent and have teams located in different markets. Traditional brainstorming methods of flying people into one location have become increasingly expensive, time consuming and environmentally unsound. New virtual tools have been enabled by Web 2.0 technologies and will allow innovation teams to generate new ideas against a focused objective from a much broader base of employees, rather than limiting the activity to a small, marketing function.
This approach is one of the winning philosophies captured in Karl Albrecht’s “The Power of Minds at Work” and is the driving force behind the 2009 launch of the virtualHOTHOUSE®, a new on-line innovation tool that is being used by leading companies such as Johnson & Johnson, Reckitt Benckiser and PepsiCo. The new tool allows innovation teams in different markets to generate, refine and evaluate new insights and ideas against specific innovation objectives.
The obvious extension of this approach is to use new virtual tools to “outsource” idea generation, working directly with consumers as demonstrated by Dell’s IdeaStorm, or to use social networking groups to generate ideas with trend experts, creative consumers or in direct partnership with small technology companies.
In addition to on-line tools, smart companies will look to exploit the dot.mobi revolution as a way of engaging more effectively with consumers to quickly test and gain feedback to new ideas via wide screen, smart phone platforms.
3. Smart companies will generate and test ideas that are environmentally sound.
There is a danger that the current economic downturn will force many organisations to lose sight of the longer term challenges faced by climate change. This could lead to a failure to invest in developing the ideas and products that will meet longer term consumer needs, or that fail to meet more stringent climate change targets being imposed on manufactures in the developed and developing world.
This was certainly true in the case of the American car industry that failed to invest in the thinking and innovation to develop more energy efficient cars. As a consequence, they saw a huge erosion of their market share as the more energy-efficient cars produced in Europe and Japan overtook them.
We believe that this “watch out” applies equally to other industry sectors and sets the imperative for all manufacturers to apply new thinking to generate ideas that will not only meet consumers’ short term needs, but that will help us all to “save the planet”.
This content was provided by Ideas First. Visit their website at www.ideasfirst.net/WhatWeDo.aspx.
Other content shared by Ideas First
Finding New Consumer Insights
by Ideas First
Insights, or consumer insights, are critical to the innovation process. They are statements that capture a clear and deep understanding of a consumer's attitudes and emotions, and they are one of the key building blocks for a company to generate ideas for new products or new services. Read Article »
Innovating for Growth in an Economic Downturn
by Ideas First
Innovating in an economic downturn can be tough. With sales under pressure and budgets tight, it can be all too easy for marketing teams to forgo any thoughts of future innovation activity. Minds can become overly focused on simply hitting short term sales targets or looking at ways of cutting budgets so that short term profit targets are met. Listed below are five cost-effective ways of “innovating for growth” in an economic downturn, when research and travel budgets are especially limited. Read Article »
Top Ten Tips for Winning Ideas
by Ideas First
Top tips for creating winning ideas, including sources for inspiration and strategic thinking suggestions. Read Article »
Generating Insights and Ideas Online
by Ideas First
Do online methods for generating innovative ideas really work? What tactics can a company employ to ensure that employees become fully engaged in an online innovation process? Read Article »
The Right Focus for Winning Innovation
by Ideas First
Many factors will impact the success of failure of an innovation project, however, one of the most important drivers of success is to ensure that a project has “a clear creative focus” to guide the overall process and to help inspire the development of winning ideas and concepts. The attached article provides direction in defining winning Innovation Objectives and Innovation Pillars. Read Article »



