Top 10 Gary Hamel Insights (Spigit Innovation Summit)
by Braden KelleyI had the good fortune to hear Gary Hamel of London Business School's Management Innovation Lab speak on the first day of the Spigit Innovation Summit on August 13, 2009.
Here are the top ten insights that I captured from Gary Hamel's speech:
- We need to openly challenge our corporate management policies and processes, and experiment like we do in other scientific disciplines
- The more consolidated the control of change is, the less resilient an organization will be
- To come up with any really good idea, you have to challenge your deep orthodoxies - we need to do the same thing with our management principles
- Two hard problems - (1) How do you do things at scale without being inflexible? (2) How do you have strong coordination without centralization?
- "If call wait time is 30 minutes, how come I can't pay $2 and jump to the front of the queue?"
- The future is not necessarily unpredictable, but it is often uncomfortable - As a result, management often fails to react
- As knowledge becomes distributed across organizations and countries, it becomes harder to create sustainable differentiation
- Not only is the pace of change going exponential, but business is getting a lot tougher because barriers to entry are falling, and things are changing so fast that by the time regulators understand something new, it's out of control
- The time from leader to laggard in an industry is now sometimes measured in months
- "We can create organizations that can manage incredible complexity, but with great inflexibility" - even though we complain about how organizations are managed, startups do it the same way only smaller
What do you think?
Braden Kelley is the editor of Blogging Innovation and founder of Business Strategy Innovation, a consultancy focusing on innovation and marketing strategy. Braden is also @innovate on Twitter.Labels: Braden Kelley, Gary Hamel, Innovation











7 Comments:
Sorry, but I agree with Bob. I like Gary, but are just observations to fit the occasion. I should have saved the click.
I agree. Disappointing and worthlessly trite observations. I should have saved the click.
If Gary Hamel is trite, then please add some of your observations to the conversation to make it richer.
The absence of an addition is a subtraction.
I look forward to seeing what you have to add.
Submissions are always welcome. :-)
Braden Kelley
Editor, Blogging Innovation
"Making innovation and marketing insights accessible for the greater good"
Branden,
Gary gets paid to be insightful - not us. We either do or die by our actions - specially if you own your own business. I think the commentators are saying that these observations are missing the 'So What?' part. Perhaps you left that out from Gary's speech or Gary left it for the audience to work out - I don't know. However, I fail to see how you can say Gary's comments here are adding 'value'. Branden - it seems you are in the industry of giving advice - perhaps you can elaborate on the 'So What?'
Hi Braden, Wow! Looks like you really took one in the shorts here! I truly feel bad for those who have taken the time to speak up about Open Innovation only to be looked upon in a less than shining light. For those of us who are leading the drive into the OI Generation, comments like those posted just give us more fuel for the fire to get the message out. Whether or not Gary's comments are trivial or non-actionable to me is less important than his ability to keep the OI fires burning.
More from Gary Hamel here:
http://us.hsmglobal.com/notas/54154-exclusive-interview-with-gary-hamel
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