MIT Sloan Management Review

Leadership and Organizational Studies, Management of Technology and Innovation

 

How Management Innovation Happens

By Julian Birkinshaw and Michael Mol

July 1, 2006

The full text of this article is available free to all site visitors as part of our ongoing Business Insight series compliments of SAS. Jointly produced by MIT Sloan Management Review and The Wall Street Journal, Business Insight offers fresh thinking on crucial management issues supplemented by the deep knowledge of related MIT SMR articles. Download article PDF

Few companies understand how such innovation occurs -- and how to encourage it. To foster new management ideas and techniques, companies first need to understand the four typical stages in the management innovation process.

Management innovation — that is, the implementation of new management practices, processes and structures that represent a significant departure from current norms — has over time dramatically transformed the way many functions and activities work in organizations. Many of the practices, processes and structures that we see in modern business organizations were developed during the last 150 years by the creative efforts of management innovators. Those innovators have included well-known names like Alfred P. Sloan and Frederick Taylor, as well as numerous other unheralded individuals and small groups of people who all sought to improve the internal workings of organizations by trying something new.

Consider how our ability to manage the consistency of manufacturing processes has evolved: from Ford Motor’s introduction of the moving assembly line in 1913 and Western Electric’s invention of statistical quality control in 1924, through the quality revolution begun by Toyota Motor and other Japanese companies in 1945 and on to such recent innovations as the ISO quality standards and Motorola’s Six Sigma methodology, which were both introduced in 1987.1 Similarly, the ability to keep control of a company’s finances has changed substantially over the centuries, through such innovations as discounted cash-flow analysis, capital budgeting and, more recently, activity-based costing. Even the foundation stones of the modern business organization were at some point created by inventive and farsighted... To read the complete article, login or sign-up using the form below.

 
 

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