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Innovation

Innovation - There's More to it than Crowds

Car from Henry Ford Museum - photo credit, laughingsquid.com Having spent 2 years diving into innovation and idea management, I know there is more to innovation than getting together in a room once a year and breaking out the post-it notes.

There's also more to innovation than simply asking the crowd to provide ideas, and assuming that all of those ideas are good to great, and executable within a reasonable timeframe, or monetary investment.

Neither of these are bad, they simply aren't sufficient.

Also, having just spent several months analyzing the data that lead to our Market IQ on Enterprise 2.0 which followed on our Market IQ on Content Security - collaboration and sharing of content cannot and should not ALWAYS be out in the open.

Financial Services companies get this - that's why they are prohibited from sharing information across the "chinese firewall" between the research and sales arms - it's called collusion, not collaboration. That's why pharmaceutical companies lock away their R&D - the FDA will tear them apart, as will their competitors, if there are not tight controls on their processes (including collaboration, reporting, etc.). There's a time and place for total transparency, total secrecy, and the gray space in between.

Which is why it's all the more troubling to hear a fellow analyst jump in and declare a decade old market NEW, and a single solution as "the only enterprise class solution" when it hasn't even existed in a production state for 2 years (perhaps not 1, hard to trace from the info I'm finding).

As Dan Farber wrote about the launch of Salesforce's IdeaExchange in 2006:

"Benioff calls it an 'IdeaExchange,' an 'entirely new way to listen to customers on how to build great enterprise software, and satisfy their needs.' What’s entirely new about a blog-like site with comments and voting is somewhat of a mystery..."

That's perhaps a bit harsh, although he has a point. A shiny front-end is only part of the game, which is what troubles me about people who are obsessed with AJAX, widgets, rounded corners and cool company/product names.

In any case, see Jeremiah's "Build your own 'IdeaStorm' with UserVoice" entry, and make your own judgement.

Below is the comment I'd posted on Jeremiah's blog, with live links, and for archive purposes. Presumably the comment will pass moderation and be live on his blog shortly as well. I see that Matt Greeley, CEO of Brightidea is a bit fired up about this as well.

My comments:

The "suggestion box" approach can provide some value, and I'm now trying out UserVoice and IdeaScale as well. Interesting timing in the blogosphere on this one!

A completely open suggestion box, can however have some major downsides - even though I'm a believer in participation, openness and transparency, the stats on innovation show that focus is needed to maximize the value of these efforts.

As @DellDawn suggests, the whole management process itself is significant. Creating the front-end, vote up/down, commentary and status isn't rocket science. Nearly any blog can do that right now with a few widgets to provide ranking, combined with typical commenting and categories/tagging.

Innovation Management and Idea Management imply and end-to-end process, including the idea generation component on through filtering for duplicates, dumb ideas, things that have already been done, as well as genuine useful and relevant ideas that can be taken to market.

And I have to say, Salesforce.com is not nearly the first or the most successful "open innovation" solution.

This entire movement is born out of the Voice of the Customer movement, itself coming from marketing techniques that go back to the earliest days of focus groups. It's just at a different scale - small i innovation (incremental) rather than radical BIG I INNOVATION (brand new, never been seen before).

Some other competitors that have moved beyond the web-enabled open suggestion box: BrightIdea, Imaginatik, and MindMatters. All of which existed well before Salesforce commercialized their solution.

So, I'd say it is patently false to say that "IdeaExchange is the only enterprise class version" of anything. It's a logical extension of the Salesforce platform - pulling data in from the outside (consumers, users), and marrying to their traditional datasource, handled by marketing and sales people and processes feeding in the CRM/SFA engines. Not "the only" by a long shot.

For someone else's thoughts on the open innovation, wisdom of crowds front, see Mark Turrell's recent YouTube video which describes more of the pros/cons of various approaches. He's CEO of Imaginatik, so hardly unbiased, but he's been involved in this type of work for nearly 10 years, and can provide far more detailed anecdotes on the hard results of these systems.

The Forbes article on Suggestion Box 2.0 is a reasonable introduction to this topic as well.

I'll close with the wisdom that venture capitalists know all too well. Ideas are nothing. It's execution that counts. How do you execute on 100, 1,000 or 10,000 submitted ideas? You can't wing it, you need processes and systems in place, or you are toast.

Innovation at the enterprise-level is hard work, even when tapping the crowd. And as Henry Ford said "If I listened to my customers, I would've bred a faster horse." Suggestions frequently (but not always) require interpretation.

Market IQ on Enterprise 2.0 - Released! Discuss...

If you have not already downloaded our Market IQ on Enterprise 2.0, hot off the virtual presses this week, I would recommend you grab yourself a free copy. Over 80 pages, over 70 charts/figures, and all in all, quite a bit of information to ponder.

Once you've had a chance to digest the content, pipe up with your comments here, and we can discuss how the >400 person sample population lines up with YOUR reality. Did we find collective intelligence in our survey respondents, or something else?

If you prefer to ask questions "live" then join us tomorrow, Thursday March 27th at 2pm EDT, on the free companion public webinar. Any questions not answered live (in case we run out of time) will be brought back to the blog to be addressed. Over 500 people registered - the more the merrier. Looking forward to it, pipe up one way or another (hither or yon), and let's discuss Enterprise 2.0!

aiim-market-iq-on-enterprise20
Download it now!

How Many People Does It Take to Make a New Light Bulb?

The World Bank estimates that nearly 2 billion people worldwide live off the grid. One man is on a mission to change that -- Mark Bent leverages the InnoCentive Innovation Marketplace, funded by grants from the Rockefeller Foundation and NY-based VC firm Spencer Trask, to find environmentally friendly, cost effective lighting solutions.

If you're not already aware of InnoCentive, well, you should be. For those who believe that Open Innovation, Crowdcasting, or Crowdsourcing are a big scam, pulling ideas "for free" out of the crowd, and providing all of the profit and benefit purely to the company who has tapped into the crowd, then there is some work we need to do to uncover a bit more of the ways that InnoCentive's model differs from others.

While you're thinking about that, you may want to listen to the interview I had done with Anil Rathi, CEO of IdeaCrossing - they have a different twist on this model as well, this time, putting the brains of MBA students to the test for Innovation Challenges issued by some very well known companies.

read more | digg story

Shh... Secret Webinar on Enterprise 2.0

Ok, so it's not secret, or if it is, we've really blown it, as without our normal week prior push, we have over 300 people pre-registered for the free webinar on Thursday March 27: Enterprise 2.0 - What's the Real Story?

The market is abuzz with commentary on Enterprise 2.0. Emerging from the momentum of Web 2.0, Enterprise 2.0 presents a unique set of challenges and opportunities. Such as? Ah, that would be telling... you can find a sneak peek in our E-DOC magazine, both in the Jan/Feb issue (current as of this post), and the soon to be published Mar/April issue.

Register for this webinar (no charge, so might as well get this on your calendar) - and stay tuned for the Market IQ report on Enterprise 2.0 that will preceed the webinar (and be the subject of our presentation). The webinar will be archived as well, in case you can't make that day, for you Long Tail fans out there.

Underwritten in part by EMC, Open Text, Socialtext and SpringCM.

 

If you're in Boston next week (March 3rd)...

I know I've mentioned this once or twice, but for anyone who is coming to the big AIIM International Conference and Expo (run by Questex), a few chances to meet in person are coming up:

  1. I'll be co-presenting with Carl our 1-day Intensive edition of our Enterprise 2.0 Practitioner training on Monday, March 3rd, 9am-5pm (it's pre-conference, so grab your pre-conference tickets separately, or the "Gold Passport" to have your choice of pre-conference sessions);
  2. I'm presenting on Tuesday, March 4th, 2:30pm - 3:20pm, on Do or Die: Innovation by Process-based Information Management and;
  3. Another presentation on Wednesday, March 5th, 11:10am - 12:00pm on Build Smarter Internal and External Communities via Social Networking Methodologies and Technologies;

I'll of course be roaming the floor, but if you're in town for the show, drop me a line (here or to dkeldsen [at] aiim (dot) org), or show yourself at one of these sessions, and let's meet in person. Always nice to take virtual conversations back into "the real world" - so if this is our chance in the short-term, I'll be there. Will you?

As always, if we are not already connected on LinkedIn or Facebook, I am more than happy to connect virtually. Send me an invite, and we can connect there as well.

Webinar: March 27: Enterprise 2.0 - What's the Real Story?

The market is abuzz with commentary on Enterprise 2.0. Emerging from the momentum of Web 2.0, Enterprise 2.0 presents a unique set of challenges and opportunities. Such as? Ah, that would be telling...

Register for this webinar (no charge, so might as well get this on your calendar) - and stay tuned for the Market IQ report on Enterprise 2.0 that will preceed the webinar (and be the subject of our presentation).

Underwritten in part by EMC, SpringCM, and Socialtext.

The 7 Year Wikipedian Itch

Say what you will about Wikipedia, but it has generated one enormous collection of information, in a wide variety of languages, and while it does suffer from time to time from vandalism, the trend is to continuous improvement, and the largest assembly of content/information/knowledge we've yet seen.

And courtesy of WIRED, and a contextual ad alongside my gmail account - I found that Wikipedia is 7 years old as of today, January 15, 2008. Kids... they grow up so fast!

Wikipedia may still not quite be universally known, although it is getting harder and harder to find people who will honestly stare at me, blank-faced, when I bring up Wikipedia. Those who do tend to still not have a computer at home, or (god forbid!) not have internet access at work (very much a possibility).

After 7 years though, the controversy still broils about expert researchers and vetted processes, versus amateurs (or "the masses") and the end results of both processes.

The most puzzling lesson (or question) that enterprises are still asking, and will be asking for some time to come is "If Wikipedia has worked at all, how can we take what has worked there, and do it for ourselves? What are the benefits? What are the risks?"

We don't ask such a set of bold-faced questions in our current survey on Enterprise 2.0, but those are some of the underlying aspects that we're testing for. Is there value in Enterprise 2.0? How do you measure it? How do you foster adoption? Is it free? SaaS? Does IT help or hinder? Is "emergence" a lot of hooey, or is there something to it?

Should you happen to be interested in the subject (survey link), and right around 30 minutes of time to answer 67 questions around the topic of Enterprise 2.0, the survey (survey link) closes at end of day (-5 GMT), this Friday, January 15, 2008.

Thanks for your input (survey link)- and stay tuned for the final report, slated for late March, and for an array of Enterprise 2.0 training courses, that will begin to be available in March as well.

AIIM's Market Intelligence Survey on Enterprise 2.0

Testing Kwout.com, a screenshot web service, that provides screenshots with working/captured web links embedded. Interesting idea.

The screenshot is of our currently running Enterprise 2.0 survey, that ends on Friday, January 18th, 2008. Go there now! :)

http://aiimMarketIntelligence.questionpro.com

Over 100 responses so far, your vote counts. Forewarned is forearmed - this survey is 67 questions (less if you end up branching/skipping due to some internal logic), and is taking respondents somewhere between 18-35 minutes to take.

It's not the shortest survey, but we want to get a solid set of data to point at where the meat is (or not) in Enterprise 2.0, after the meme being in the wild for nearly 2 years.

Please note that you *can* save your place in the survey, and have the system e-mail you a link to come back and finish it up, if you can't dedicate the time to hit it all in one go.

Thanks in advance, and stay tuned for the end research, which will be free for the taking, and expected to be published in late March. Companion webinar discussing the findings will also be by the end of March.

Note that we've been working with our advisory panel on the creation of this survey - which includes:

Stay tuned, much more coming on Enterprise 2.0. Do your part for User Generated Content, and lend a voice to this survey, eh? ;)

 

Patents 101: Defense, Offense, or License

And I'm back! Bit of a busy time, so my podcasting fell off the weekly posting schedule... This is an interview with David Nason (http://www.nason.net/david), who I found via, what else, LinkedIn (http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidnason), and drew my attention due to the number of patents he has single-handedly, or collaboratively, authored and run through the patent and trademark office. Seeing that David has run to ground over 20 patents (http://www.nason.net/david/patents.php), and I, zero, it seemed wise to make that jump over the edge of talking about innovation from a creativity standpoint (individually) and high-level (Big I Innovation - in the boardroom), to understand some of the lower-level "reality" of innovation, in the form of the legal entity known as a patent.

What is a patent? How is it different from a trademark? What does the process for submitting a patent application look like? Can you do this yourself, or do you need an attorney? Will any ol' attorney do?

I had no idea - so that's why David jumped on the phone with me, and was gracious enough to provide both me, and all of you listeners out there, with some clarity in what in the end is a lot simpler process than I (at least) had expected.

Your feedback is much appreciated - what are your experiences with patents? Think Patent Law is ruining the economy? The only thing left keeping it together? Comment below, and let's have a continuing conversation!


MP3 File

The Netflix of Receipts?

Quick post: Saw today on mashable.com (an extremely popular Web 2.0 site) an article about Shoeboxed.com, which is billed as the Netflix of Receipts. Once a month, send your receipts in to Shoeboxed in a pre-provided envelope, they'll scan and organize your personal receipts, along with electronic receipts (e-mail) that you send along to their service.

Capture 2.0? Imaging 2.0? I suppose we should've seen this coming, and I know it's not new to the vast majority of the 50k+ AIIM membership, but an interesting sign as to just where we might be in the adoption lifecycle for capture (aka scanning, imaging, etc.).