Writing off legacy within your innovation systems
You hear constantly the need for greater speed, increased agility, and effective delivery from ideas to implementations for innovation.
Yet we still keep these organizational needs locked into those old structures, systems and processes that have been layered one on top of the other as we learnt about innovation over the years.
We often simply kept adapting these (often badly) into the existing way we were managing innovation. Isn’t it time we addressed this growing issue of adapting, stopped the compromising and started redesigning our innovation systems from afresh with present-day leading innovation practice thinking?
Managing innovation as a system is no different from managing IT for example. You get to a given point where the costs of running innovations through your existing systems continue to rise. You begin to diminish your innovation performance.
Speed to market seems never to improve the way you want it too, and more importantly delivery against the identified market opportunity seemingly gets more and more compromised.
The risks of cutting corners seemingly grows every day, and you under-deliver on the opportunity first seen. No wonder eventually leaders begin to question and lose confidence in their innovation abilities.
The results increasingly become suboptimal.
Is there an alternative?