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Monday, August 31, 2009

Innovation Regeneration

by Rowan Gibson

GrowthIn biology, there's an old saying: "Growth is the only evidence of life". A lot of investors on Wall Street seem to echo these words when they evaluate today's corporations - and business leaders are getting the message. At GE, for example, CEO Jeff Immelt is on the hook to deliver an incredible 8% of organic growth each year. This represents around $15 billion of new revenue - equivalent to the combined annual revenue of America's entire bookstore industry, or fitness industry, or music production and distribution industry! No wonder "Driving Growth" has become today's dominant management mantra, not just at GE but at companies all over the world.

Yet if we go back to biology for a moment, we realize that there is more subtlety to organic growth than we may have previously imagined. In fact, we find out that life actually requires two very different kinds of growth.

The first kind of growth is about cell multiplication and organization - it's about increasing the size and strength of the organism until it reaches physical maturity. In the case of human beings, it's the process that starts with a single cell and finally produces the estimated tens of trillions of cells that make up our adult bodies.

The second kind of growth, however, is not about size; it's about longevity. It's the process of self-renewal by which our body cells are continually replaced or repaired, as the need may be. If this process - of growing new cells to replace those that deteriorating - could somehow be sustained, human beings could theoretically live forever.

The biology of business is not dissimilar; companies need both kinds of growth as they progress through their life cycle. In the early years, most companies are primarily concerned with scaling up their organizations as rapidly as possible, with a pressing need for systems or processes to help them manage their ever-expanding business. Eventually, though, this kind of growth tends to flatten out and the company reaches a level of maturity in terms of its size and strength, just like humans and other biological organisms do. As my colleague Gary Hamel likes to put it, "Trees don't grow to the sky".

GrowthAgain, consider GE. In the last five years of Jack Welch's tenure, which ended in the year 2000, GE's market value grew from around $50 billion to somewhere between $350 and $400 billion. But to do that again over the next five years, GE's market value would have had to go from $450 billion to $3 trillion! Extrapolating from the year 2000, this meant that by 2005 GE would have to represent 20% of the entire New York stock exchange! The chances of that happening were very remote. Here's the point: it's simply a lot easier to grow by 100% a year when you are a $10 million firm or even a $100 million firm than when you a $50 billion firm. Because to achieve that kind of growth rate at that kind of size, you would practically have to recreate half of the economy every year.

Of course, expanding the business remains crucial even when a company's growth-rate has naturally flattened out, but at some point increasing the scale of the organization is no longer the main issue (in fact, it may even need to get smaller to become more profitable). That's when the emphasis shifts to a different kind of growth - the need to grow new sources of profit to replace those that may be losing their economic value. These might be new product ideas, new services, new strategies, new markets, new customers, new business opportunities, or new competencies - whatever it takes to offset the long-term irreversible decline in the economic efficiency of the company's core business model.

This is the challenge that currently faces companies like McDonald's or Coca-Cola or Microsoft or Dell. It's the task that bedevils Hollywood as it watches box office figures shrink and DVD sales stalling in a world of digital downloads. It's the hurdle for big pharmaceutical firms as they confront declining R&D yields, escalating price pressure, and the growing threat from generic drugs. It's the big headache for traditional airlines as they compete with industry revolutionaries like Southwest, JetBlue, Ryanair, Easyjet or AirAsia. For all of these businesses, and many more, success now hinges not on size but on the capacity for strategic renewal.

Like human beings, organizations start to grow old and die when they lose the power to renew themselves. That's why it's crucial to build a deep capacity for self-renewal - the capacity to replace the old and decaying with the fresh and new on a perpetual basis. The goal is to be "forever young". And the fountain of youth - the only real source of renewal on the longer term - is deep, strategic innovation. It's not going to come from anywhere else.



Rowan GibsonRowan Gibson is a global business strategist, a bestselling author and an expert on radical innovation.

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Friday, November 07, 2008

Interview with Humdinger Wind Energy's Shawn Fayne

I had the privilege yesterday to interview Shawn Frayne, a founder of Humdinger Wind Energy. This being the Internet Age, we didn't have to wait until we could sit down in person to chat. Instead it was an almost commonplace phone to Skype, to mobile (Skype Forward) call from Seattle to Hong Kong.To my parents, I would say "I interviewed him by phone."

Background



Humdinger Wind Energy was inspired by Shawn's discovery of the story of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapse of 1940. From seeing video of this historic collapse, Shawn became inspired to try an alternative approach to generating electricity from wind energy. The genesis of the wind belt and subsequent founding of Humdinger Wind Energy Was the result of an initial goal 4 or 5 years ago to create an inexpensive wind generating device to power simple LEDs for lighting, or to recharge cell phones in Haiti. This original goal then evolved to a goal of developing affordable rural lighting and rural electrification solutions.

The genesis for the company may have come out of seeking to do social good, but Humdinger Wind Energy is not a pure social play. They are a for-profit start-up that can stand on its own. Humdinger has already gone through a significant angel round that is enabling it to a technology transfer level.

Implications - Wealthy vs. Developing Countries

Though the wind belt technology has developing country implications, it also has wealthy country uses that they can address through technology licensing to existing energy players. The goals of the organization when fused together are to use revenue from wealthy country applications to fund longer term developing country applications. They are more akin to someone like Motorola developing an inexpensive phone to address low-income customers, than an international development organization. Humdinger has a triple bottom line, but also endeavors to meet traditional company goals of making revenues and profits.

Education

In part to support the different goals for wealthy countries and developing countries, Humdinger has decided to make part of their intellectual property available for educational exploration. One of the purposes of doing that is to treat the wind belt as open source hardware in the developing countries while at the same time patent protecting it in developing countries. Shawn had some of the following things to say about this:

  • "We've built the system described in the education document ourselves in three minutes."

  • "Hopefully having more people working on it will advance technologies faster."

  • "People were downloading videos and experimenting with the idea itself and a community was starting to develop."

  • "This community inspired us to put out more information than we had previously explored."

  • "So far we have had 1,100 downloads of the document."

  • "To this point we haven't gotten much feedback other than saying they are excited to work on it."

  • "This approach is also in our best interests because any company seeking to harvest or create energy in a new way has to convince people that the new approach works in order to move out of the fringe."

Open Innovation

We also discussed the open innovation movement and Shawn doesn't fully agree with the open innovation approach. He doesn't think that the human species has reached the point where invention is highly social at scale. He believes that optimal invention is still limited to small groups of people working together in person. Also for Humdinger to be financially viable he feels they must have some amount of protection around their ideas in wealthy countries. Here are some more of his thoughts:

  • "The problem is not generating new ideas..."

  • "There are 1000 different ways to address a problem, the bigger problem is how do you effectively select what to test. You can't test all the approaches. How do you pull out the right ones to test?"

  • " You still need a small group to select the correct solution to pursue."

Social vs. Commercial

There are four primary members of the leadsership team: Shawn Frayne, Jordan McRae, Jerry Chun, and Kurt Kornbluth. As they grow, they will likely merge some of their ideas with those of one of their informal advisors (Paul Hudnut at Colorado State University) and create small incubators of 4-5 people ("Virtual Innovation Factories"). These teams will not be together under one roof (the Edison or Dean Kamen approach), they will be dotted around the world and bring the best minds to bear on very fundamental problems (energy harvesting, energy storage, and water treatment).

Humdinger was formed to generate funds over time for this grand experiment. This is not what we are currently doing with the group in Xela, Guatemala. As they are a separate organization that we partner with - we like to call this "Cloud Inventing".

  • "When we talk to the group in Guatemala (we Skype in to see what's going on at the site and to talk to them), there is a lot of personal contact and we know that they are very good at inventing and engineering, and it is a small group."

Humdinger is trying to develop a new type of wind cell that is flexible and modular and works inexpensively on a smaller scale that only solar or batteries could have before.

  • "What if you could break up a big turbine and split it up into 1000 pieces at the same efficiency ($2/watt)?"

  • "Most of the folks we talk to get really excited about this being a fundamental change in how power can be generated."

Conclusion

Overall it was a great talk and I hope this gives the readers a bit of insight into an example of one of the many hybrid commercial and social good models that we are blessed to have existing during our lifetimes. There are obviously a lot of potential applications for this technology in the wealthy countries - everything from powering sensors to other types of micro-generation. I wish Shawn and Humdinger every success with this endeavor.

Sites mentioned during the conversation that are worth checking out:

- http://www.instructables.com/
- http://www.makezine.com/
- http://www.brightidea.com/
- http://www.ideorg.org/

Related articles:

http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/oct2008/id2008106_231604.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily

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