Archive for the ‘Orchestration’ Category

Is Innovation Too Sexy?

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

Innovation is often characterized as an ideal or a grand scheme created by intellectuals who lack an appreciation for bottom line results.  Many believe that innovation is created in a lab, but that it demands “real business men to make it profitable, not scientists.”  It was even said to me this month that innovation was “too sexy of an ideal in times of operational survival.” 

It appears that the dialogues on innovation frequently resemble highbrow dinner conversation, and have very little to do with “block and tackling” needed for business profits.  In general, innovation is apparently about grand principles, but little bottom line profits or sustainable customer influence.

So, let’s divide this debate up into two camps – those that believe innovation is apparently too sexy and another that subscribes to continuous organizational innovation (COI). 

Idealistic Innovation

Eggheads, academics, scientists, and researchers are just a few names levied at groups and individuals who arrive at new industry and functional “paradigm shifts.”  The ideals and new operating principles encased within technology envelops are rolled out to the media and conferences as a new Tour de Force. 

We’ve even witnessed this with industry standards groups, the addition of SOA, SaaS, Web 2.x/3.x solutions, and of course, risk management and securitizations.  All excellent ideals, but lead times that ranged from 3 to 10 years and in some cases still seeking a profitable business model within given niche markets.

In many cases introduced innovation was very disruptive not only to the infrastructural methods, but also chaotic when dealing functionally with consumers, enterprise data integration, privacy, aggregation, retention implementation and the list goes on.  Again, esoteric discussions that for many executives fail to resonate into profits.  In times of growth and profit some have said, “If the lack of adopting these innovations are hurting my bottom line now, why should I invest in them later when I have even less money?”

Therefore, without concrete examples, definitive payback schedules, and process and operational integration plans, innovative ideals have very little efficacy within the organizations – especially today.  The result of grandiose ideals is a lack of appreciation for continuous improvement using innovation to bolster operating, competitive, and profit positions. 

Idealistic innovation creates superior innovative discussions, but little actionable advice or roadmaps – poorly introduced, improperly framed, and no recognized expert (s) to ensure success.  Stated simply, the ideals are too intellectual for comprehension resulting in sponsors “outdistancing” the rest of the organization.  Everyone fails in these scenarios – even me.

COI — Relevant Innovation

Relevant innovation is not a second tier solution to a tier one problem or challenge.  At the tip of its spearhead is the realization that innovation is not sustainable unless it is designed into the culture and operations of the existing organization before it is deployed. 

It can also be iterative and more than likely continuous to positively adjust to actual results, market fluctuations, and consumer sentiments.  In the last decade, it has been implicitly discussed in books and papers by authors Tapscott, Kurzweil, and Hunter.

COI, continuous organizational innovation, is not a onetime event, nor is it associated with a singular program or initiative slogan.  Using strong analytics and inference-driven premises, COI is weaved into a creative-destructive sequence of operational actions that promote innovation viability, while driving up productivity and profits. 

Avoiding the “sexy” and superfluous nature of innovative adoption, COI progressive operations ensure that the introduction of change is more about valuations, efficiencies, and consumers rather than the innovation itself.  The innovation and its premises are merely steps or catalysts to a greater pragmatic result.  For example, the large push surrounding “e” is less significant than many technologists evangelize. 

The bottom line importance includes (but are not limited to) the reengineering of business models, the efficiencies gained, the forward and reverse supply chains, and the removal of huge swaths of waste built into the organizations.  The “e” principles will radically change as the markets change and the world financial systems reach a new equilibrium.  Whereas, the underlying or layered innovation it is very valuable, it is not THE innovation that compels action, adoption, sustainability or longer-term adaptability (i.e., the on-going cycle of true innovation) within the executive ranks.

A COI Quiz

Attribute and Response / Answer

1.            Do your organizational leaders or team primarily consider innovation to be:

a)            Sexy

b)            Cost Saving / Avoidance

c)            Competitive / Market Distinction

d)            Revenue Generation / Profitable

2.            Does your organization have a budget for innovation?

a)            No

b)            Yes

3.            How would you characterize your organization?

a)            Laggard

b)            Mainstream Adopter

c)            Early Adopter

d)            Pioneer or Trailblazer 

4.            Does your organization have a dedicated position specifically responsible and accountable for innovation (i.e., not the CIO / CTO)?

a)            No

b)            Yes

5.            How would you describe your organizational culture?

a)            Dysfunctional

b)            Informal

c)            Hierarchical

d)            Matrixed

e)            Blended

6.            How is innovation primarily introduced into your organization?

a)            No clue

b)            Media Articles

c)            Vendors

d)            Outsourcers

e)            Consultants / Researchers

f)             Individual Employees

g)            Internal Committee

7.            How is innovation fostered and / or rewarded within your organization?

a)            It Is Not

b)            Sporadic / Depends

c)            Established Processes

d)            Part of Organizational Values 

The list could be greatly expanded, and it will be in subsequent COI research results starting in 2009.  Suffice it to say, the more items selected farther down in the abbreviated answer list, the better COI organization you will be or hopefully have become.  And yes, using a series of analytics and correlations, valuations can be assessed resulting in profit and efficiency opportunities.

* * * * * * * * * *

Even with the aforementioned brief threads started on both sides of the debate, we will continue to watch the consumer, business, and credit markets worsen as a severe recession corrects the “innovative” follies of the past.  However, the data clearly points to a fundamental divergence between the implementation of COI metrics and the beliefs that innovation is achieved by periodic and violent inventive seizures.

It is this latter organizational “fits and starts” culture approach that, believe it or not, created or materially contributed to many of the problems we are unwinding today.  And no, lowering of credit standards and deployment of high-risk products is not real innovation.  Standards are not singularly innovation, nor are products that fail to incorporate process, compliance, risks, productivity, or more importantly a healthy consumer.

Perhaps innovation from a macro level is too sexy, too exotic, and too amorphous.  If assumed to be part of a “big-bang” approach, they are more akin to large, physical programs with high costs and even higher failure rates.  So yes, given these parameters and internal beliefs, innovation is often too sexy and too risky of a behavioral pattern to unleash within a for-profit organization.  It is especially too sexy for many corporate officers steeped in traditional views.  One can simply go back to the proven management classics from Deming, Drucker, Peters, or Champy, if you have lingering doubts.

However, as implied, irresponsibility is not innovation.  COI is not about arcane discussions.  If we look out to tomorrow, next week, next month and hopefully next year, we will see that innovation is NOT sexy – it is a pragmatic necessity for a new COI competitive world. 

Perhaps if COI was part of the cultures within the FSI, mortgage, automotive, and insurance industries, we might have avoided the need for bailouts created by iconic dogma, risk and greed?

The Moral of Innovating on Waxed Wings

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo 

 www.Innovative-Relevance.com

In time of extreme stress and financial crisis, the illusionary and amorphous benefits of innovation are exposed to intense illumination and frequently wither under the intense heat.  Their end measurements or much touted “paradigm shifts” are yielding less than expected, budgeted, or promised.  A consequence is executive and investor disbelief in new models of operation and the solution sets that act as catalysts for their anticipated achievement.  So as we collectively reach $1 trillion in MBS direct write downs and suffer a major lost of 52,000 jobs from a single employer, will the “new” innovators be any better in helping the industry with survival operations and integrations than the prior ones?  Ah, relevance.

How many of us invested in technology, process improvements, third-party research, and consultants only to find out that internal performance was no better than our competitors?  More to the point, frequently these integrations and implementations were marginal in weathering the storms as their touchpoint implications led to “unintended consequences.”  Did the innovative IC encased within those solution sets really help predict the current crisis?  Curious.

Now, as the situation appears to have another year of pain forthcoming, we are blasted with “new innovations” and ideals from the familiar firms and iconic figures that seek to help us survive.  However, as we cast a jaded eye on the “new” set of promises and hype, have we now reached the real challenge and intent of innovation?  Perhaps.

Innovation is a curiously non-linear and strange belief that what we do and have today is never good enough.  It is hardwired into the human psyche and shows itself in new compliance solutions, automation of many forms, technological compartmentalization (e.g., SaaS, SOA), process improvements, and of course “e” capture and management solutions.  However, innovation is only innovative if it is pragmatic and dare I say relevant.  However, relevance is usually achieved with people who are able to leverage the ideal for a greater result.  An axiom.

So what is the moral to my outwardly strange, random line of thoughts this week?  As we know, when Daedalus (of Greek mythology) was trying to escape Crete, he fashion a new innovation to overcome his challenges – a pair of wax, leather, and feathered wings.  As he and Icarus flew, he warned his son that his innovation had limitations and that he should not exceed the “design specifications.” 

Like many so enamored with innovation and their early successes, Icarus pushed his product to its breaking point.  As an industry, as organizations, as vendors we have done this as well.  We have fallen into the sea as the result of personnel not fully appreciating the limits of our euphoric inventions – however this time, we have taken millions with us including national economies. 

You see, it is the people that must support the innovations.  Run too far in front and no one appreciates the implications (I’m accused of doing this all the time).  Execute too slow and the markets pass you by.  Drucker alluded to this conundrum two decades ago. 

However, just because we failed to innovate properly, it does not mean that we stop trying or hire new talent that is very different from our old operating models.  People will be the key to sustainable innovation and without these individuals, innovation cannot be made organizationally relevant let alone adaptable (which is why we have evolved from waxed wings to supersonic travel). 

Perhaps organizations need to rethink roles and responsibilities moving into 2009?  I wonder if executives and organizations will finally realize that they need a matrixed holistic innovation role outside of the siloed functional responsibilities.  If we cannot cross-correlate the innovative principles, ideals, and solution sets across divisional initiatives where “experts” routinely exceed the “design specifications” of any given approach, how can we be assured of avoiding unintended consequences yet again? 

In closing ask yourself these questions before you part with hard fought organizational treasury and political capital:

  1. How are these individuals both internally and externally who are asking for engagement, different from our existing base and culture (i.e., is different good)?
  2. Are these the same personnel who cycle from organization to organization every few years simply pushing the same old thing in a new wrapper?
  3. If we select this person or the vendor solution, what will we do to ensure we are not dependent upon them for years to come (e.g., governance, transition, interoperability)?
  4. Are our advisors and professional services teams the same people who were part of failed institutions who are now advising us?  Is that clever or even warranted?
  5. Are we looking beyond our existing networks to get the best-in-class personnel (e.g., from outside the industry) aligned with our current and future ability to deliver?

Icarus is an analogy for our self inflicted, mortal wounds.  Let us remember them well and move forward as Daedalus did.  We are not done with counting the casualties as we have 12 to 18 months to go.  We must, however, be done with hiring the same old people, vendors, lobbying groups, and advisors if we are to truly innovate within our “design specifications.”  

My International Friend…

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

It was two months ago when I “received” a letter from my international friend in this column entitled “My American Friend.”  This week, I deliver my response. 

My dearest international friend, thank you for your concern and support regarding our failing institutions, economy, job base, and forthcoming Bretton Woods redefinition.  You are correct; the financial environment that we devised and operated for decades has been decimated.  The lemmings have leapt into a recessionary chasm taking the global economy and our “foundational” truisms with them.  However, among all the turmoil, I have witnessed new innovation, a real desire for differentiation, and an acceptance of the fifth iteration of globalization.  We are positively preparing for the future – albeit selectively!

As a Bretton Woods II gathering is postulated and convened, I believe the innovative “winners” of this global wealth, process and rebalancing shifts will be many.  Nevertheless, there are some distinctive beneficiaries that are surfacing on American soil even during a rancorous presidential election year:

·         Audit / Tax Firms:  Often dismissed as “dull and boring,” these professionals and their government endorsed limited liability methods will again take center stage in a highly regulated business environment.  SOX-like regulations coupled with a public outcry for new, pervasive policies will place auditors and accountants into leadership roles not only in finance, but transactional processes, IT, sourcing, and yes, metrics and reporting.  The ability for organizations to withstand audit examinations will be a key.  Forgotten until recently are the standards of performance that must be met with consistency, transparency, and integrity. 

·         Professional Services:  For the mortgage industry, these professionals were once narrowly focused.  With the “new” widespread chaos and demand for rapid and radical operational transformation, look for the industry leaders (e.g., E&Y, D&T, BearingPoint) to take up enduring leadership roles within struggling enterprises.  Ask yourself, why they are showing up more and more at conferences and events with mounting numbers, exhibitions, and regularity? 

·         End-to-End Regulatory Advisors:  Once relegated to simple forms and compliance actions, new top-to-bottom regulator and agency power will create unprecedented operating controls that were once thought of as unthinkable.  The ability to use enterprise data to achieve compliance STP and source vetting will demand efficient leveraging far beyond standard setting and old school ideals.

·         Knowledge Orchestrators (KO):  Those organizations that adopt and adapt manufacturing disciplines to the comprehensive sourcing and delivery processes will be the winners.  A new genre of strategies and domestic work initiatives are being born already – leading to a vast rethinking of what is important, standards demanded, and skills that must be operationally internalized.  The use of KO coupled with “game changing” innovative solution sets will be our future, and I have already had the pleasure of hearing several that will be announced before the end of year.

As you know, we have added trillions of “support” packages to prop-up the financial institutions, peripheral industries, credit markets and marginally the consumer.  I would suspect that these new programs in total will exceed the prior national debt issuance within a very short 12 month window – perhaps as much as $6 trillion in new debt leading to a high-water level that might equal or exceed the annual GDP of the U.S. 

Last week alone, America lost over 30,000 domestic jobs in just five business days as the consumer and credit maelstrom continues (beyond the normal job creation and destruction cycles).  Architectonically it was because we failed to appreciate and prepare for the implications of complex financial engineering and the unwinding of “Vegas-like” risk positions.  How many political leaders now long for the $460 billion in 2007 national deficits as this year and next may approach the trillions.  Now, we wait to see how the trillions of government “investment” will work their “magic” within the financial value chains – will it be about improving Tier 1 capital ratios, M&A events, or will these infusions enable the consumer to refinance and purchase once again?  With the average debt to income well beyond 100% per consumer, is the latter even possible?

The economic predictions of those continually held in high regard continue to be proven inaccurate.  After all, until last week it was an accepted axiom and economic and mathematical improbably that long-term treasury rates would be inferring that select private debt is more risk free than U.S. government debt (Financial Times , “Swap spreads turn negative”). 

In closing, our operations will survive and we will again prosper – but not using the same formulas of the past that made many association and leadership careers.  The fabled state-driven economic decouplings have proven to be fanciful economist’s dreams.  The advice of the old school perhaps has 12 to 24 months of usefulness – and that is being generous. 

While my hope and belief in the future of American innovation coupled with the fifth iteration of globalization is very strong, I must confess my disappointment when I attended a recent mortgage conference.  The old school still had the stage and agenda as they tried to make themselves and their old practices innovatively relevant.  However, the rebirth is taking place outside of these dogmatic venues and it is unlikely that they will regain their influence massive moving forward.  If they don’t radically change, they will become increasingly unimportant or non-existent.

As you know, the key to our domestic future is jobs – high-paying, defensible, and innovative domestic jobs.  I believe the new market movers will be those organizations that balance domestic job creation with global labor arbitrage.  Unknowns include the potential for a double housing bottom (again economist believe this is mathematically impossible), a lasting global recession, currency exchange rates, and deflationary commodity prices triggered by an Asian selloff (e.g., China) to name but a few.  Yes, my international friend, I have many questions and like you I must ask about unpopular, interrelated topics. 

Ultimately, the legal retribution will be undertaken – just look at the daily media.  “It wasn’t my fault – the events could not have been predicted.”  “It wasn’t my fault — it was the lack of regulation.”  “It wasn’t my fault — it was the lender, the GSE’s, the congress, the president.”  Being in the minority, I believe it was all their faults regardless of whether they had “accreditation,” education, or licenses.  As the old saying goes when I hear industry leaders speak on the record, “I think you protest too much.”  The fact remains, many touched the interrelated counterparty risks and instruments – very few “educated” individuals did anything about it.  Hollywood couldn’t have asked for a better script.