How and Why to Keep Innovation Management on Track

Most organizations don’t see it coming. Overall growth remains strong and performance metrics indicate smooth sailing ahead. Then comes the growth stall — not just a bad quarter or even a bad year. Instead, there’s a significant, sustained downturn in top-line revenue growth.

And yet, research by Gartner shows that 85% of growth stalls stem from factors that are avoidable — including a breakdown in innovation management that means investments in new products, services and business development aren’t achieving desired returns.

93% of companies hit top-line growth stalls — stalls that destroy an average of 68% of the organization’s value

“Innovation management is the second most common driver of stall points since the Great Recession of 2008 – 2009 behind companies failing to respond to emerging competition from emerging markets or changing customer preferences,” says Katie Bennett Camilli, VP, Team Leader, Gartner.

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Gartner research shows that 93% of companies hit top-line growth stalls — stalls that destroy an average of 68% of the organization’s value. In 2011, for example, $2.15 trillion in market value was lost to stalls. The research identifies 19 root causes of stalls, but shows that a breakdown in innovation management accounted for one-quarter of all stalls in 2011 in companies with over $1 billion in revenue.

4 tactics to guard against innovation management stalls

Innovation breakdowns most often stem from inconsistent funding, slow product development and even overinnovating. Many companies overspend on incremental innovation at the expense of the future. And nearly 80% of R&D leaders reported pressure to scale down or kill breakthrough projects in favor of more immediate priorities.

Growth stalls don’t stem from uncontrollable factors; they result from flaws in corporate strategy or organizational design

The risk of an innovation breakdown has increased since the Great Recession, and although there are many reasons that innovation management can break down, companies can use these three tactics to prevent this particular cause of stalls.

Compare the growth potential of the existing R&D portfolio to past results.

Most senior leaders harbor unrealistic expectations based on their organization’s existing R&D portfolio, which leaves the company vulnerable to a stall.

Instead, one chemical company categorized its projects as either transformational, next-generation or incremental, and compared forecast revenue with current performance to determine discount rates. This helped the company accurately determine the strength of its portfolio, expose potential shortfalls and resolve risk factors.

Identify gaps between the existing portfolio and objectives to identify critical innovation projects

One major cause of derailed innovation management is the diversion of R&D funding to fulfill short-term business demands. Business leaders need to identify gaps in the existing portfolio and take steps to fix them.

For instance, one U.S.-based technology and services company designed a portfolio review process that ensured that both long- and short-term goals were adequately balanced. A review team examined how the new proposed portfolio was aligned to long-term financial goals to pinpoint any mismatch between investment selections and growth targets.

This also invited a candid discussion about a project’s worth relative to overall objectives and other projects. Business leaders could also revisit the project list and make changes if gaps emerged.

Determine the link between business outcomes and portfolio changes

Senior leaders typically lack clarity on how changes to the R&D portfolio impact overall business growth.

To really drive this point home, consider how one consumer products firm demonstrated the impact of portfolio changes. It modeled how shifting portfolio resources would impact key metrics and was able to illustrate how an increase in incremental innovation would jeopardize outcomes tied to next generational and transformational development.

Beware red flags indicating a lack of strategic focus

A lack of strategic focus — often indicated by a perception of “strategy of the week” — prevents the organization’s strategy from maturing and generating expected results. Beware of executives not fully committed to growth projects underway, resource shifts to short-term projects, a lack of vision or tangible plan to execute the long-term vision, and disagreement on criteria to evaluate and prioritize growth projects.

Growth stalls don’t stem from uncontrollable factors; they result from flaws in corporate strategy or organizational design. The key is to be proactive and eliminate root causes like the breakdown in innovation management.

This article has been updated from the original, published on August 10, 2018, to reflect new events, conditions or research.

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