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Innovator's Guide to Growth: Putting Disruptive Innovation to Work (Harvard Business School Press) (Harvard Business School Press) (Harvard Business School Press) (Harvard Business School Press)

Innovator's Guide to Growth: Putting Disruptive Innovation to Work (Harvard Business School Press) (Harvard Business School Press) (Harvard Business School Press) (Harvard Business School Press)

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Authors: Scott D. Anthony, Mark W. Johnson, Joseph V. Sinfield, Elizabeth J. Altman
Publisher: Harvard Business School Press
Category: Book

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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 108676

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7.2 x 1.2

ISBN: 1591398460
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.4063
EAN: 9781591398462
ASIN: 1591398460

Publication Date: June 23, 2008
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
More than a decade ago, Clayton Christensen's breakthrough book The Innovator's Dilemma illustrated how disruptive innovations drive industry transformation and market creation. Christensen's research demonstrated how growth-seeking incumbents must develop the capability to deflect disruptive attacks and seize disruptive opportunities.

In The Innovator's Guide to Growth, Scott Anthony, Mark Johnson, Joseph Sinfield, and Elizabeth Altman take the subject to the next level: implementation. The authors explain how to create this crucial capability for unlocking disruption's transformational power.

With a foreword by Christensen, this book provides a set of market-proven tools and approaches to innovation that have been honed through fieldwork with innovative companies like Procter & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, Pepsi, Intel, Motorola, SAP, and Cisco Systems. The book shows you how to:
  • Follow a market-proven process -- so your company can reliably create blockbuster businesses
  • Create structures, systems, and metrics -- so the disruptive innovations that will power your firm's future growth receive the funding and personnel needed to succeed
  • Create a common language of disruptive innovation -- so managers can reach consensus around counterintuitive courses of action


  • Incisive and practical, this book helps your company take the steps necessary to benefit from disruption -- instead of being eclipsed by it.



    Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Read The Innovator's Solution, skip this one   October 20, 2008
    Etiler Levent (Istanbul, Turkey)
    Thgis is a very light version of The Innovator's Solution which, I believe, was a masterpiece. You can hardly find in this book the depth and strength which was present in The Innovator's Solution. This is more a company (i.e. Innosight) publicity material and an ecletic strategy manuscript than anything of real practical and academic value. Read the original work and don't waste your time on this, as the original work is an immensely stronger & robust piece on strategy practice and theory.

    Also, please and please, aren't you fed up with the same exercises over and over, e.g. Nucor Steel and minimills etc.? Incidentally, if the authors refer to the book by AG Lafley & Ram Charan (The Game-Changer), they will find out that the Swiffer innovation story is totally different than their romantic explanation.



    5 out of 5 stars The Horticulture of Innovation   September 25, 2008
    Robert Morris (Dallas, Texas)

    The last time I checked, Amazon offers 53,570 books on the subject of innovation in business. So, what do the authors of this book offer that is new? In fact, as I intend to indicate, they offer a great deal and much of the credit must be given to Scott Anthony who is a long-time and close associate of Clayton Christensen's and co-author with him of Seeing What's Next: Using Theories of Innovation to Predict Industry Change. The author of The Innovator's Dilemma and The Innovator's Solution (with Michael E. Raynor), Christensen wrote the Foreword to this volume in which Anthony and his co-authors (Mark Johnson, Joseph Sinfield, and Elizabeth Altman) explain why and how taking "the right steps and putting in place the right structures can allow managers and entrepreneurs to improve significantly their odds of creating profitable growth businesses. This view contrasts with a prevailing stream of thinking that innovation is random and requires creative genius."

    This last sentence caught my eye because I have just read a book by Geoff Colvin, Talent Is Overrated: What Really Separates World-Class Performers from Everybody Else. In Chapter Nine, Colvin suggests that two views characterize what most of us know "that just ain't so" about innovation and creativity. "One is that creative ideas come to us in the way a famous one came to Archimedes, in a eureka moment when everything suddenly becomes clear...The other thing we all think we know about creativity is that it can be inhibited by too much knowledge. We often say that someone is `too close to the problem' to see the solution. The broader principle is that if you know too much about a situation, a business, a field of study, then you can't have the flash of insight that is available only to someone unburdened by a lifetime of immersion in the domain." Colvin's repudiation of both views is best revealed within the narrative, in context. His point is, that great innovators (e.g. those who devise disruptive technologies) aren't burdened by knowledge, they're nourished by it. For them (with very rare exception), innovation doesn't strike, it grows. Therefore, innovation requires a culture within which to thrive.

    In Chapter 1, the authors identify and then discuss three precursors to innovation: a core business that is in control of its current assets, a game plan for growth, and a mastery of the resource allocation process. "The next seven chapters walk [the reader] through a three-step process (i.e. identify market opportunities, formulate and shape innovative ideas, and take ideas forward) to spot and seize a single opportunity. Keep in mind that the central argument of this book is that there are practical and effective ways by which to buck various trends, such as innovative ideas that never gain traction, once-great companies "topple," large companies that survive tend to underperform relative to the market, and conglomerates that seek to diversify to deliver better returns tend to be worth less than the sum of their parts. Paradoxically, or so it seems to me, innovative thinking requires order, structure, stability, and support (i.e. an infrastructure) so that it has the freedom and flexibility to challenge conventional thinking, the status quo, what James O'Toole so aptly characterizes as "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom." If Colvin is correct (and I think he is), innovation is a process, not an event. This point reminds me of a scene in Ernest Hemingway's novel The Sun Also Rises, when one of the characters confides that his company went bankrupt. "How did it happen?" someone asks. "Slowly, then suddenly."

    After providing a "Disruptive Innovation Model" with a brief explanation (Figure 1-2 on Pages 17-18), the authors carefully organize their material as follows:

    Part One: Identify Opportunities (e.g. nonconsumers, overshot customers, and jobs to be done)

    Part Two: Formulate and Shape Ideas (e.g. development of disruptive ideas and assessment of a strategy's fit with a pattern)

    Part Three: Build the Business (i.e. mastering emergent strategies as well as assembling and managing project teams)

    Part Four: Build Capabilities (e.g. "organize to innovate" and formulate innovation metrics)

    Then in the final chapter, "Conclusion," the authors review several key points and then briefly discuss ten "key innovation traps" (six that are project-related, such as "Pursuing unattainable perfection," and four that are company-related, such as "Too many lingering projects") and then review a series of lessons to be learned from innovation initiatives at Procter & Gamble. (Note: Those with a keen interest in those initiatives should check out The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation co-authored by A.G. Lafley and Ram Charan.) The authors conclude the chapter with their "Final Words of Wisdom," eight guiding axioms suggested by the extensive research and intensive field work that led to their writing of this book. I especially like #8, "Devil's advocates are abundant, problem solvers are scarce."

    Readers will appreciate the authors' brilliant use of reader-friendly devices throughout their narrative, such as check lists of key points and dozens of "Figures," "Tools," and "Tables" which present remarkably abundant information within an easy-to-read graphic. Also at the conclusion of most chapters, "Application Exercises" and "Tips and Tricks" sections that will help readers to take appropriate, effective action on the information and suggestions previously presented. Of special interest to me were there:

    Table 2-1, "Summary of constraints on consumption," Page 60
    Tool 4-1, "Jobs scoring sheet," Page 106
    Figure 4-3, "Identifying opportunities from different starting points," Page 109
    Tool 5-1, "The idea Resume," Page 129
    Table 6-1, "Conditions for success," Pages 149-150
    Table 6-2, "Disrupt-o-Meter, Pages 156-157
    Table 9-1, "innovation challenges and structures," Page 228
    Tool 9-1, "Application Exercise: Assessing your innovation environment," Page 239

    The authors conclude with these observations: "We believe that the concept of innovation is in transition between a theory of random trial and error and perfectly predictable paint-by-numbers rules. We think of this transitional period as the `era of pattern recognition.' This book described patterns related to spotting opportunities, developing ideas, building businesses, and creating capabilities. Using its tools and frameworks will allow you to see what others cannot [e.g. to `see what's next'], to find order where others find chaos, and to create new growth opportunities again and again." Well said.

    I presume to add one other perspective. Think of an innovative organization as a "nursery" where trees thrive and flowers blossom because they are planted in nutrient rich soil and receive constant nurturing. Seedlings are not pulled up "to see how well they're doing." And when necessary, there is pruning to protect growth. Extending the metaphor, the information and counsel the authors of this book provide can help each reader to develop a "green thumb." Producing a harvest is up to you.



    5 out of 5 stars Making innovation a regular part of your organization...   July 19, 2008
    Thomas Duff (Portland, OR United States)
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    I've read a number of books on innovation, both on a personal and business level. Always looking to find that "edge"... In the book The Innovator's Guide to Growth: Putting Disruptive Innovation to Work by Scott D. Anthony, Mark W. Johnson, Joseph V. Sinfield, and Elizabeth J. Altman, the authors present a methodology for making disruptive innovation part of your company's culture. Along the way, I had my thoughts twisted a bit as to how best to disrupt the standard playing field, while not going head-to-head with the giants right from the beginning...

    Contents:
    Introduction: Your Guide to Growth; Precursors to Innovation
    Part 1 - Identify Opportunities: Identifying Nonconsumers; Identifying Overshot Customers; Identifying Jobs to Be Done
    Part 2 - Formulate and Shape Ideas: Developing Disruptive Ideas; Assessing a Strategy's Fit with a Pattern
    Part 3 - Build the Business: Mastering Emergent Strategies; Assembling and Managing Project Teams
    Part 4 - Build Capabilities: Organizing to Innovate; Innovation Metrics
    Conclusion
    Appendix - Frequently Asked Questions; Notes; Index; About the Authors

    As you can tell from the list of chapters, the authors cover everything from identifying ideas and potential products that would be disruptive clear through to the end where you have a formal organization that can grow and repeat successes in that area. Given their experience in the field, you avoid making mistakes that are all too common and sound correct, but end up being wrong. For instance, companies have a tendency to throw massive amounts of resources and capital behind a new idea or product that will "revolutionize the industry". The problem is that everyone becomes committed to the initial design and plan, and no thought is given to learning and prototyping along the way. The end result is often a product that completely misses the mark in terms of what people want. But by then, so many millions have been sunk into the design that you can't easily go back. The book instead advocates for quick trials and cheap prototypes without large amounts of funding. That forces creativity and smaller experiments, and permits course changes along the way. Only after you get actual feedback do you commit larger resources to it. But by then, you should know the outcome or have a solid idea as to market acceptance.

    For me, I was most interested in the first part of the book. The concept of "overshot customers" was one I hadn't heard of in quite those terms. These are the people who don't need or can't use all the high-end performance built into the product(s) being offered, and are actually looking for something far less. To them, "less" becomes "perfect". Why pay for 100% of a product when all you really need is 10% of it? The other 90% is of no use to you. This is also linked to the concept of "nonconsumers". These are the people who don't use your product (or any product being offered) due to constraints of skill, wealth, access, or time. If you can identify these consumers and serve them, you have an entry into the market that can disrupt the incumbents. Finally, I was also intrigued by the concept of "jobs to be done". It's the adage of "people don't buy drills, they buy holes". If you rethink your product as a service that people are hiring you to do, then you can think beyond the boundaries. An example would be the lowly mop. Not much to do differently there. But if you think that people are hiring you (the mop maker) to clean the house, then you look at the product differently. In this case, it led to the Swiffer line of dust mop accessories. Less effort, easier cleanup, and the job is done more quickly. Hence, people "hire" your product as the superior choice. Interesting concepts...

    This is a book that deserves to be sitting on the shelf of management in all companies. Actually, it shouldn't be on the shelf. It should be in the briefcases and backpacks being read...



    5 out of 5 stars The book on implemeting disruptive innovation   July 18, 2008
    Reg Nordman (Vancouver, BC Canada)
    So Geoffrey Moore has the Chasm Companion. Now the field of innovative disruption so clearly identified by Clayton Christensen has its own implementation book. Like anything put out by Innosight, Christensen's consulting company, the book is thorough from end to end. If you read nothing else you must read the Summary and FAQs at the end. I read it in two lengthy sittings. It is a fascinating read that starts out talking to established companies like P&G , Intel and RIM. Then it hits its stride and the implementation guides, examples, templates and resources are useful for every company. Yes even start-ups.

    IMHO anyone working in tech should have read and review this book, But I am a fan of Christensen's work , and if everyone followed his ideas, there would be less work for my consulting firm. The book is full of great case studies Swiffer, Wii, Skype, YouTube, Metro newspapers, ITunes, Whitestrips, Adwords, eBay. Some great lines. " Medical device cos commoditze doctors". " Look for people with the right school of experience - What problems could arise? Who has encountered these problems?" "What job is the client needing done? "



    5 out of 5 stars accessible and practical   July 3, 2008
    Reyna B. Lindert
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    As a small business owner I was not sure this book would be relevant for the clientele I serve. I couldn't be more wrong! The book is written in an accessible and easy to understand way, and the strategies are easy to employ. The Innovator's Guide is a book I keep on my desk and refer to again and again. The book contains a wealth of practical tips that I have used to help my business grow! It especially helped us think about how to build the capabilities to innovate more reliably and set management expectations.

    I found the entirety of the book practical and applicable, and highly recommend it to any executive or executive team member in both small and large businesses.




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