MIT Sloan Management Review

Management of Technology and Innovation

Which Innovation Efforts Will Pay?

By Alexander Kandybin

September 25, 2009

For many companies, developing new products is a hit-or-miss proposition. Some businesses with successful innovation practices are relying on a new analytic tool to ensure that the hits are much more likely.

Successful innovation — the kind that leads to customer engagement and profits — is rare and hard to achieve, or so one might conclude from observing the results of many companies’ innovation efforts. Some have tried investing intensively in research and development. But a recent Booz & Co. study of public companies representing almost 60% of global R&D expenditures found that above a certain minimal level, there is generally no correlation between R&D spending and financial metrics such as sales or profit growth.1 Some have tried to follow prevailing trends such as open innovation — but that, too, doesn’t necessarily lead to higher innovation returns.2 Many pursue a strategy of tacit benchmarking: They invest near the average amount of R&D spending for their industries, while running development shops that use many of their peers’ best practices. That approach, over time, has led to greater numbers of minor product line extensions with often diminishing returns.

Yet some companies seem to be better at dreaming up great new products while spending less to do it. Apple Inc. commits 5.9% of sales to R&D, less than its industry’s average of 7.6%. The R&D budgets for two of Detroit’s beleaguered Big Three have been consistently higher... To read the complete article, login or sign-up using the form below.

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