By: Karl R. LaPan, President and CEO, Northeast Indiana Innovation Center
Innovation is a Messy Business. It also can be hard to measure. I’ve seen too many smart people get fixated on innovation metrics (measuring things like what % of our sales came from new products introduced in the last X years) for the sake of metrics while neglecting what really matters—the change(s) you want to see organizationally to improve something – your products, your processes, your brand, your customer experience, your business model or your methods of delivery. According to Peter Drucker, “Innovation, at its core, is a change in dimension of performance.”
Most CEOs surveyed cite innovation (the pace and rate of innovation) as a top three business priority that keeps them up at night. In order to establish innovation as a credible business initiative, it is important to ensure it doesn’t fall into the trap of being perceived as another du jour change effort. Du jour change efforts share some common characteristics:
I should be clear. These shared du jour characteristics are not what innovation is. Also, these are not the characteristics of how innovation successfully flows through an organization. We need to keep in mind that innovation, by its very nature, needs the flexibility and the spontaneity to flourish. Too stringent of parameters (or trying to over-orchestrate early successes) can be the kiss of death for an innovation effort to succeed. What’s more, for measurement to be successful, you and your organization need to:
In today’s fast-paced world, there is a likelihood that the processes you initially set out to measure will change significantly over time, making it a moving target and not an accurate picture of progress.
That said, I think there is value in measuring progress in what you do. Consider these variables (soft and hard metrics and categorize them into leading and lagging indicators):
Please note I am not recommending the above metrics, I am just providing some examples to get you thinking about it. It is also not an exhaustive list of metrics.
I’ll leave you with this closing thought. Remember that innovation isn’t a goal in itself. Instead, it is a ‘tool’; a means to an end. In football, you don’t win games on the amount of passes you made; you win games based on the number of points you scored. The thing that should be measured is the effect of the innovation on ‘how well you scored’ in achieving your strategic priorities.