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Innovation to the Core: A Blueprint for Transforming the Way Your Company Innovates

Innovation to the Core: A Blueprint for Transforming the Way Your Company Innovates
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Innovation to the Core: A Blueprint for Transforming the Way Your Company Innovates

 
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If you're like most business leaders, innovation now tops your corporate agenda. But despite all the talk and excitement about the importance of innovation, managers have so far found scant help for innovating in a systematic way that fuels consistent growth and sustained success.

In Innovation to the Core, Strategos CEO Peter Skarzynski and business strategist Rowan Gibson change all that. They share the accumulated wisdom from Strategos--the consulting firm Skarzynski co-founded with Gary Hamel that helps clients instill innovation into their very core. Drawing on a wealth of stories and examples, the book shows how companies of every stripe have overcome the barriers to successful, profitable innovation. You'll find parts devoted to crucial topics--such as how to organize the discovery process, generate strategic insights, enlarge your innovation pipeline, and maximize your return on innovation. Frequent hands-on tools--frameworks, checklists, probing questions--help you put the book's ideas into action.

Crafted in close coordination with Gary Hamel--the man who Fortune magazine has called "the world's leading expert on business strategy"--Innovation to the Core is the definitive fieldbook for making innovation a core competence in your organization.

Click here to watch a trailer for Innovation to the Core: innovationtothecore.com/thebook/index.cfm?target=watchtheintro

"At last, a book that tells us what innovation really is and how we can embed it into the DNA of our companies. A splendid guidebook with terrific examples."

-John Naisbitt, author, Megatrends and Mindset!

"Until now, innovation has been a religion without a bible. Innovation to the Core aptly fills the void."

- Al Ries, coauthor, The Origin of Brands

"Innovation to the Core is what so many books about innovation have failed to be--a prescriptive 'how-to' that enables managers and executives to really understand what it takes to make innovation a core competency of their companies. The detailed examples ensure that readers relate the theory to the business realities."

-Kelly Duffin-Maxwell, Senior Vice President, Breakthrough Innovation, Kraft Foods, Inc.

 
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Product Details
Author:Peter Skarzynski
Hardcover:320 pages
Publisher:Harvard Business School Press
Publication Date:March 18, 2008
Language:English
ISBN:1422102513
Product Length:9.4 inches
Product Width:7.6 inches
Product Height:1.2 inches
Product Weight:1.75 pounds
Package Length:9.29 inches
Package Width:7.56 inches
Package Height:1.1 inches
Package Weight:1.66 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 16 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:5.0 ( 16 customer reviews )
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13 of 15 found the following review helpful:


5Innovative thinking about innovative thinking  Apr 30, 2009 By Robert Morris
I am among those who agree with Michael Porter that "the essence of strategy is choosing what not to do" and with Peter Drucker that "there is surely nothing quite so useless as doing with great efficiency what should not be done at all." These two observations are directly relevant to the material that Peter Skarzynski and Rowan Gibson present as they respond brilliantly to questions such as these:

1. How to create the preconditions for innovation?
2. How to establish a foundation of "novel strategic insights"?
3. How to generate a "torrent" of new opportunities for innovative thinking?
4. How to ask the right questions at the right time?
5. How to construct an "innovation architecture"?
6. How to select, schedule, manage, and leverage investments in innovation?
7. What does "driving to innovation" involve?
8. When doing so, how to balance supply and demand?
9. How to build a "systematic innovation capability"?
10. How to sustain innovation?

The Porter and Drucker observations correctly stress the importance of knowing what not to do as well as knowing what to do. There are countless examples throughout the history of business when brilliant execution had catastrophic consequences. I suspect this is what Gary Hamel had in mind when suggesting in the Introduction that in a world of ever-accelerating change, "innovation is the only insurance against irrelevance. In an environment of steadily decreasing friction and crumbling entry barriers, innovation is the only antidote to margin-crushing competition. And in a global economy where knowledge advantages dissipate ever more rapidly, innovation is the only brake on commoditization."

However, as Skarzynski and Gibson so skillfully explain in this book, decision-makers in organizations that aspire to be more innovative, who now seek answers to questions such as those previously listed, must be innovative in how they think about the innovation process, not merely producing clever new products or devising intriguing new services. Hence the importance of what Skarzynski and Gibson characterize as creating the preconditions for innovation, establishing a foundation of "novel strategic insights," and constructing an "innovation architecture." They cite and examine exemplary companies such as GE, P&G, Whirlpool, and CEMEX to illustrate how they took somewhat different approaches to achieve these preliminary objectives. I agree with them that the new mindset must be developed at all levels and in all areas of an organization.

I commend Skarzynski and Gibson on their skillful use of various reader-friendly devices that facilitate, indeed accelerate frequent review of key points later. For example, at the conclusion of most chapters they provide (in combination) "innovation challenges" and "leadership imperatives" relevant to the chapter's subject. Here are brief excerpts from Chapter 5, Innovating Across the Business Model, found on Page 122:

Innovation Challenge: "How do I keep my current business model fresh and innovative?"

One of four Leadership Imperatives provided: "Challenge each of the core assumptions of your current business model. Are yesterday's assumptions still valid, or have they become today's orthodoxies? Are they blind spots that your competition could exploit?"

These end-of-chapter sections summarize key points and should also be viewed as "gut checks" or "reality checks." The questions posed should be frequently asked and then answered with both rigor and candor. I also appreciate Skarzynski and Gibson's provision throughout the narrative of a series of several "Ask Yourself" checklists as well as various Figures that illustrate key points about "Hierarchy versus diversity" (Page 29), "Divergent phase of innovation architecture process" and "Convergent phase of innovation architecture process" (Page 141), "Experimentation matters - not `trial and error'" (Page 193), and "Whirlpool's infrastructure" (Page 233).

Of course, all of the material provided in this book is essentially worthless if it remains ignored in a book that remains unread or unused on a shelf or atop a credenza. Moreoever, as Peter Skarzynski and Rowan Gibson would be the first to point out, it would be a fool's errand to try to apply everything that they recommend without making appropriate modifications. That said, I know of no other single source that offers more valuable information and counsel than does this one to those who are determined to transform the way their company innovates.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


5Excellent book about innovation with a focus on people  Sep 21, 2008 By Christian Thun
Innovation to the Core is an excellent book! I can recommend this book to anyone working in large enterprises on innovation, innovation processes or business strategy. While not going deep into the question why innovation is important, the authors role out an extensive plan how to make innovation a core capability of your organization. It is assumed that successful application of this "blueprint" will ultimately lead to sustained competitive advantage through continuous breakthrough innovation both in products and in the business model. The examples of Whirlpool, P&G, IBM, GE and others are used to proof this assumption.

The book is very much focused on the importance of people behind innovation and discusses a wide array of business elements that may need to be changed in order to implement and operate a holistic, seamlessly integrated innovation process. The transformation process and key issues are repeatedly compared to the development of TQM many years ago. An idea that I like because it allows us to learn from experience in the past where companies were challenged with a focus on quality similar to a focus on innovation today.

While this book is great when read with a focus on the key issues surrounding cultural change, values and corporate learning, I can not agree that it is a complete blueprint for making innovation work. The key topic of IT and processes did not get the attention it should have received to complete this book. According to my own experience with global organizations and also to other authors like Prahalad in his latest book on innovation, are IT systems and processes two of the key success factors to a sustainable system of innovation inside the enterprise. Skarzynski & Gibson devote several chapters to processes and IT but only at a very high level without making clear that infrastructure transformation is a key challenge of large enterprises with their zoo of grown systems and millions of dollars wasted every year in efforts to transform these systems into something efficient. If the authors could upgrade the chapter on IT to show how the architecture can be transformed in a workable way this book would be just perfect!

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


5Good insight on how to create an innovation mindset  Nov 05, 2009 By Mihai Marinescu
The book is a guide on how to develop an innovation culture inside an organization. Industry agnostic, and with a lot of good examples, it illustrates the main steps an organization should take to gain a competitive advantage through innovation. Its focus is on new concepts like crowd sourcing and openness to customers, employees and even competitors rather the traditional secrecy of the R&D department, and has a broad perspective on innovation, not simply NPD. I recommend it to anyone interested in innovation management.

10 of 14 found the following review helpful:


5If your firm's strategy can be applied to any other firm, you don't have a very good one.  Mar 31, 2008 By Jorge Barba "MaNcHiLd"
Imagine that your organization is an innovation powerhouse. Imagine that other companies adopt your strategies and not the other way around. Imagine that every single person in your organization is hailed as an innovator. Too good to be true right?

Not so.

Author Rowan Gibson and Peter Skarzynski set out to jumpstart your innovation efforts in their book Innovation to the Core. Distilled from various examples of companies that 'DO' innovation, they present a blueprint that we can use and also 'DO' innovation. But before you set out to 'DO' innovation you want to start with creating the conditions to foster innovation, then develop the skills you need to innovate and then a process to bring it all together and produce new products and services. Innovation to the core shows you how!

Pragmatic is the key word to describe the contents of this book, written as a guide this is THE best book I've read on enterprise innovation and have recommended it more times than I can remember. I actually used the chapter on business model innovation to give a friend of mine a big picture view of his online car sales business and brainstorm new approaches to compete.

If you're familiar with Gary Hamel's work from Competing for the Future, Leading the Revolution and The Future of Management you will absolutely want to read Innovation to the Core. Most of those insights are presented here in such a simple way that any startup or lone entrepreneur, small business that wants to grow, the mid-size business and the corporate juggernauts can put to use.

It has a 5 star rating at Amazon and with good reasons. The people, the skills and the process it's all here.

You should follow Rowan Gibson on Twitter @rowangibson and let him know what you think.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


5Innovation to the Core a must-read  Aug 16, 2011 By StudentofInnovation
I first read this book when it was released back in 2008, and upon rediscovering it again this summer, have found the examples and case studies just as timely--if not, perhaps more relevant--today. Innovation to the Core is a great read that will transform the way you assess and build your innovation pipeline.

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