Magazine enews Search and Browse Press Room Reprints Subscriber Services
HOME     
  Read The Issue



Subscribe to s+b
Advertise in s+b
Contact s+b

Comments?
E-mail the editor
 

 

 


Click here to view the enews archives.

enews Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 All


P&G’s Innovation Culture
by A.G. Lafley, with an introduction by Ram Charan
 
8/28/08
How we built a world-class organic growth engine by investing in people.

Illustrations by Michael Klein

The heart of a company’s business model should be game-changing innovation. This is not just the invention of new products and services, but the ability to systematically convert ideas into new offerings that alter the very context of the business.

As they lead to repeat purchases, these offerings reshape the market, so that the company is playing an entirely new (and profitable) game to which others must adapt. A number of game-changing innovators are operating today, including such household-name enterprises as Procter & Gamble, Nokia, the Lego Group, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Honeywell, DuPont, and General Electric. Wherever you see a steady flow of noteworthy innovations from one company, you can probably assume that it is a game-changing innovator, with the distinctive kinds of social connections, culture, and supporting behaviors that enable it to play that role.

Consider the case of Procter & Gamble Company. Since A.G. Lafley became chief executive officer in 2000, the leaders of P&G have worked hard to make innovation part of the daily routine and to establish an innovation culture. Lafley and his team preserved the essential part of P&G’s research and development capability — world-class technologists who are masters of the core technologies critical to the household and personal-care businesses — while also bringing more P&G employees outside R&D into the innovation game. They sought to create an enterprise-wide social system that would harness the skills and insights of people throughout the company and give them one common focus: the consumer. Without that kind of culture of innovation, a strategy of sustainable organic growth is far more difficult to achieve.

A.G. Lafley and I coauthored The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation (Crown Business, 2008) to explain how to make game-changing innovation drive growth on a consistent, well-paced basis. The critical factors that we cover in the book include keeping a laser-sharp focus on the customer; establishing a disciplined, repeatable, and scalable innovation process; creating organizational and funding mechanisms that support innovation; and demonstrating the kind of leadership necessary for profitable top-line growth as well as cost reduction.

One aspect of building an innovation culture deserves more attention than we could give it in The Game-Changer: designing a social system that would spark new ideas and enable critical decisions. In the article that follows, A.G. explains the human factors that fostered innovation at Procter & Gamble. It could be thought of as the “missing chapter” to The Game-Changer; a vital com­ponent that isn’t always obvious, even to experts, precisely because it is so fundamental.

Ram Charan


When I became CEO of Procter & Gamble in 2000, we were introducing new brands and products with a commercial success rate of 15 to 20 percent. In other words, for every six new product introductions, one would return our investment. This had been the prevailing ratio in our industry, consumer packaged goods, for a long time.

Today, our company’s success rate runs between 50 and 60 percent. About half of our new products succeed. That’s as high as we want the success rate to be. If we try to make it any higher, we’ll be tempted to err on the side of caution, playing it safe by focusing on innovations with little game-changing potential.

The decision to focus on innovation as a core strength throughout the company has had a direct influence on our performance. P&G has delivered, on average, 6 percent organic sales growth since the beginning of the decade, virtually all of it driven by innovation. Over the same period, we’ve reduced R&D spending as a percentage of sales; it was about 4.5 percent in the late 1990s and only 2.8 percent in 2007. In that year, we spent US$2.1 billion on innovation, and received $76.5 billion in revenues. We’re getting more value from every dollar we invest in innovation today.




Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 All Next >

Click HERE to subscribe to strategy+business


 

strategy+business is published by the global commercial consulting firm  Booz & Company.


  Article Tools
  PDF version
  printable version
  e-mail to a friend
 
Resources

Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ (Bantam Books, 1996): Developing individual maturity for an organizational innovation culture.


Larry Huston and Nabil Sakkab, “P&G’s New Innovation Model,” Harvard Business Review, March 2006: Anatomy of an open approach for attracting ideas and consumer insights from around the world.
A.G. Lafley and Ram Charan, The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation (Crown Business, 2008): Guide for giving large, mature companies the sustainable capacity for breakthrough innovation.
Roger Martin, The Opposable Mind: How Successful Leaders Win through Integrative Thinking (Harvard Business School Press, 2007): Gaining the ability to overcome the limits of partisan thinking, to enhance innovation or anything else.
Steven Wheeler, Walter McFarland, and Art Kleiner, “A Blueprint for Strategic Leadership,” s+b, Winter 2007: Context for chief executives, drawing on A.G. Lafley’s example, among others.
Procter & Gamble Web site: Includes Connect + Develop, a portal for engaging innovation partners, and Everyday Solutions, through which the company connects with consumers.
For more thought leadership on innovation, sign up for s+b’s RSS feed.

American Business Media. Read the newly released 2007 Forrester Study at http://www.americanbusinessmedia.com

 


 

Looking for Booz Allen Hamilton?
Now independent of Booz & Company

 

strategy+business is published by the global commercial consulting firm Booz & Company.


Magazine || enews || Search and Browse || Press Room || Reprints || Subscriber Services || HOME || 

About s+b || Contact s+b || Advertise in s+b || Privacy Statement || Legal

© Booz & Company. All rights reserved. "booz&co." is a service mark of Booz & Company.

Contact Webmaster || Powered by Raven Creative, Inc.