Make innovation sourcing a business strategy

William Gindlesperger

Innovation is again becoming a top priority at companies, after the Great Recession, and more resources are being spent on innovation. Satisfaction with innovation return is slowly increasing.

“Innovation Sourcing: Contributing to Company Competitiveness,” a study published by CAPS Research, the research arm of the Institute of Supply Management, underscores the importance of organizations adopting external innovation versus relying solely on their internal research and development efforts. In some cases, goals are being set to increase revenues by adopting external innovation. Proctor & Gamble, for instance, has a goal of attaining 50% of its revenues through external innovations over the next five years.

The findings of the CAPS study are supported by the seventh annual global survey of senior executives, conducted by The Boston Consulting Group in conjunction with Bloomberg/Business Week. Two significant findings of that survey stand out:

• “Innovation is again becoming a top priority at companies, after the Great Recession, and more resources are being spent on innovation. Satisfaction with innovation return is slowly increasing,”
• “Three areas of weakness limiting innovation are: (1) risk adverse corporate cultures, (2) lengthy new product development cycle-times, and (3) inadequate measurement practices for innovation.”

Another factor that influences the acceptance of external innovation is intellectual property protection. It makes no sense to try to duplicate something that already has been invented, tested, patented and licensed. The work has been done, the idea validated and intellectual property protections established. To infringe on a patent is risking legal action that will have a negative bottom line impact as well as tarnish an organization’s reputation.

An example of a patent protected new technology is the automated vendor selection (AVS) competitive procurement procedure that makes it possible for buyers of custom goods and services, such as printing and the manufacture of specialty products, to streamline their procurement process, gain full transparency, document every task and reduce cost of the procured good or service by 25% to 50%. The average savings for current licensees is running around 42%.

AVS TechnologyTM was invented in the 1990s, patented with a series of patents in 2002, 2008 and 2010, and has been licensed to organizations across a broad range of sectors including heavy equipment, construction, building materials, parcel delivery, utility, computer hardware, retail, grocery, health care, finance, resale distributor and associations. The technology itself is only part of the package because to achieve the transparency, strengthened quality controls and 25% to 50% in cost reductions, the inventing company, e-LYNXX Corporation, also invested in the development of a proprietary communications and workflow system and a series of tested best practices. For the inventor, the successful outcome represents a tremendous investment in time and a huge allocation of resources.

External innovation recognizes the importance and benefits of inventions that are developed outside of internal research and development (R&D) departments. To external innovation advocates, it is common sense to adopt a proven technology rather than trying to “reinvent the wheel” to achieve similar results, especially when an inventor is making deployment of the invention very attractive. Using e-LYNXX as an example again, there are no upfront costs to the client for having the AVS software installed and staff trained on the system. The buyer organization also eliminates unnecessary R&D expenses, another bottom-line benefit.

CAPS Research encourages organizations that want to be competitive in today’s economy to adopt external innovation as a business strategy. Senior level executives need to encourage innovation from all sources, and they need to support and engage suppliers that are most likely to provide innovative solutions. “The companywide innovation strategy should be more ‘open’ than ‘closed,’ with an organizational culture that values and emphasizes innovation from supplier and other external sources” the study concludes.