Proven Paths To Innovation Success
Proven Paths To Innovation Success
Proven Paths To Innovation Success
Proven Paths to
Innovation Success
Ten years of research reveal the best R&D strategies for the decade ahead.
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Proven
Paths to
Innovation
Success
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Volker Staack
volker.staack@
strategyand.pwc.com
is a partner with Strategy&
based in Chicago, and is a
senior leader of the firms
innovation practice. He works
with automotive, industrial,
and technology companies,
helping them build competitive
innovation capabilities from
strategy to execution, improve
new product development
efficiency and effectiveness,
and achieve strategic product
cost reduction.
Brad Goehle
brad.goehle@
strategyand.pwc.com
is a principal with Strategy&
based in Washington, DC,
and is a member of the firms
innovation practice. He works
with aerospace and defense,
industrial, and automotive
companies to drive growth
and innovation performance
in areas that span the product
life cycle, including front-end
strategic planning, product
development, and portfolio
management.
strategy+business issue 77
Barry Jaruzelski
barry.jaruzelski@
strategyand.pwc.com
is a senior partner with
Strategy& in Florham Park,
N.J., and global leader of the
firms engineered products and
services practice. He created
the Global Innovation 1000
study in 2005 and continues
to lead the research. He
works with high-tech and
industrial clients on corporate
and product strategy and
the transformation of core
innovation processes.
1000
Only 27 percent of respondents feel
they have mastered the elements
they will need for innovation
success over the next 10 years.
Exhibit 1: R&D Spending Growth, 200514
$700
$600
$500
$400
$300
Softwareand ChinaRising
$200
$100
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2.2%
2013
2014
3.8%
1.4%
(continued on page 7)
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With one exception, each year of the Global Innovation 1000 study has
witnessed an increase in R&D investment.
Profiling the
Global Innovation
1000
3.5
3.0
R&D
Spending
2.5
2.0
1.5
Revenue
1.0
R&D Spending
as a % of Revenue
0.5
2000
2005
2010
The two biggest spenders from 2013, Volkswagen and Samsung, held their positions. Although their industries, along with healthcare, continue to
dominate this list, the software and Internet sector increased its presence in the top 20 this year, with Amazon making its first appearance.
Companies that have been among the Top 20 R&D Spenders every year since 2005
Rank
Company
2014 2013
R&D Spending
Headquarters
Location
Industry
5.2%
Europe
Auto
2014
US$ Billions
Change
from 2013
As a %
of Sales
Volkswagen
$13.5
18.9%
Samsung
$13.4
28.0%
6.4%
South Korea
Intel
$10.6
4.6%
20.1%
North America
Microsoft
$10.4
6.1%
13.4%
North America
Roche
$10.0
1.8%
19.8%
Europe
Healthcare
Novartis
$9.9
5.6%
17.0%
Europe
Healthcare
Toyota
$9.1
7.0%
3.5%
Japan
Auto
10
$8.2
6.8%
11.5%
North America
Healthcare
$8.0
17.1%
13.3%
North America
$7.5
8.1%
17.0%
North America
Healthcare
2.3%
4.6%
North America
Auto
12
10
11
11
General Motors
$7.2
12
14
Daimler
$7.0
4.8%
4.4%
Europe
Auto
13
Pfizer
$6.7
15.1%
12.9%
North America
Healthcare
14
30
Amazon
$6.6
43.8%
8.8%
North America
15
23
Ford
$6.4
16.4%
4.4%
North America
Auto
16
15
Sanofi
$6.3
0.1%
14.5%
Europe
Healthcare
17
13
Honda
$6.3
6.6%
5.4%
Japan
Auto
18
16
IBM
$6.2
1.2%
6.2%
North America
19
17
GlaxoSmithKline
$6.1
2.4%
14.8%
Europe
Healthcare
20
24
Cisco Systems
$5.9
8.3%
12.2%
North America
TOP 20 TOTAL
$165.3
5.4%
8.0%
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Indexed to 1998
1000
in R&D spending,
compared with 45
page 15.)
Industrials 4.1%
Other 3.2%
Auto 2.1%
WEIGHTED
AVERAGE:
1.4%
Aerospace and
Defense 0.5%
Healthcare 1.2%
Computing and Electronics 1.8%
Consumer 1.8%
Telecom 7.5%
Volkswagen.
Industrials 10.7%
Auto 16.2%
Healthcare 21.1%
(continued on page 7)
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45.9%
12.9%
3.4%
2.5%
WEIGHTED
AVERAGE:
1.4%
14%
China
North Europe
America
Japan
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Rest of
World
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There has been a strong push
over the last 10 years to align
what you do in R&D with what
you do in the business, says
Nestls Oliver Nussli.
panies or industries defined what the markets needed.
Nowadays, consumers are not just asked for their advice
and inputthey are defining what the products and
services should look like, and can even drive and create
products themselves on [crowdfunding] platforms like
Kickstarter.
As we noted in our 2007 study, The Customer
Connection, companies can spend more money, hire
the best engineers, develop the best technology, and conduct the best business market research, but unless their
R&D efforts are driven by a thorough understanding of
what their customers need and want, their performance
may fall short. We tested this hypothesis and found that
over a three-year period, companies that directly captured customer insights had three times the growth in
operating income and twice the return on assets of industry peers that captured customer insights indirectly,
as well as 65 percent higher total shareholder returns.
The Need Seeker Advantage
Ten years worth of research and insights also illuminate the strengths and challenges of the three different
ways that companies approach innovation. In 2007, the
Global Innovation 1000 study identified three fundamental kinds of companies, each with its own distinct
way of managing the R&D process and its relationship to customers and markets. Every company tends
to follow one of these three innovation models; we thus
categorize companies as being Need Seekers, Market
Readers, or Technology Drivers.
Of course, all three models share the same broad
innovation goals. Every company wants to have superior product performance and quality, to make a strong
connection with customers, and to feel passion and pride
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government.
Our studies have found that
regarding its portfolio. And all three models pursue capabilities for understanding emerging technologies,
engagement with customers, and product platform
management. Each model, however, also has distinct
characteristics and priority capabilities that influence
how the company develops and launches new products
and services.
Need Seekers, such as Apple, Procter & Gamble,
and Tesla, make a point of using superior insights about
customers to generate new ideas. They gain this insight through direct engagement with customers (for
instance, Apple routinely learns from interactions at its
retail stores) and through other means, including analysis of big data. Most important, they develop new products and services based on this superior end-user understanding. Their goal: to find the unstated customer
needs of the future, and to be the first to address them.
Their cultures encourage openness to new ideas from
customers, suppliers, competitors, and other industries,
and they prioritize directly generated consumer/customer insights and enterprise-wide launch capabilities.
We estimate that 25 percent of the Global Innovation
1000 companies are Need Seekers.
Market Readers, such as Samsung, Caterpillar, and
Visteon, make up some 40 percent of the Global Inno-
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Chinas
Innovation
Engine
1000
less abandonment
of failing projects.
85.1%
AVG.
64.5%
60.6%
54.8%
57.6%
AVG.
46.2%
44.9%
39.9%
Need
Seekers
Market Technology
Drivers
Readers
Need
Seekers
Market Technology
Readers
Drivers
Source: Strategy& 2014 Global Innovation 1000 survey data and analysis
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RANK
Company
R&D Spending
as % of sales
2014
US$ bil. Rank (intensity)
2013
2014
Apple
$4.5
Amazon
Samsung
$13.4
6.4%
Tesla Motors
$0.2
440
11.5%
3M
$1.7
79
5.6%
GE
$4.8
30
3.3%
Microsoft
$10.4
13.4%
IBM
$6.2
18
6.2%
10
P&G
$2.0
70
2.4%
professionals.
In contrast, the four most in-
$8.0
13.3%
$6.6
14
8.8%
71
65
47
2.6%
LOWEST
POSSIBLE
SCORE: 0
51
46
33
SPENDERS
32
INNOVATORS
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Revenue
Growth
5-yr. CAGR
EBITDA
as % of
Revenue
5-yr. Avg.
Market Cap
Growth
5-yr. CAGR
strategy+business issue 77
The 10 Most
Innovative
Companies
1000
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gested that they tend to focus on more tightly aligning their innovation and business models. In our 2011
study, we found that what sets Need Seekers apart is
their ability to execute on their strategyto combine
all the elements of innovation into a coherent whole,
with a culture that supports innovation. In a study we
conducted in 2012 in conjunction with the Bay Area
Council Economic Institute, we found that significantly more of the technical leads at companies classified as
Need Seekers report directly to the CEO, and that their
innovation agendas are much more likely to be developed and clearly communicated from the top down to
the rank and file of the organization. They were also
much more likely to point to product development as
the function with the most influence on their companys power structure. (That same study also revealed
that Silicon Valley firms are almost twice as likely to
follow a Need Seekers model than the general population of companies46 percent versus 28 percent, a
consequence of the startup/venture capital mind-set of
tightly aligned business and technology strategies.)
Our 2014 survey produced similar findings: A
much higher percentage of Need Seekers reported that
their innovation strategy was highly aligned with their
business strategy, compared with either Market Readers
or Technology Drivers (see Exhibit 2, page 10). Such
alignment comes naturally for Need Seekers, because
their whole ethos is rooted in understanding and being
close to the customer through direct exposure to the
end-user, rather than relying on market analysis or the
views of intermediaries. Interestingly, recent research
has found that the Need Seeker strategy is more prevalent among Chinese companies than among the Global
Innovation 1000.
12
12
Next 10 years
NEED SEEKERS
MARKET READERS
TECHNOLOGY DRIVERS
Align business
and innovation
strategies
Align business
and innovation
strategies
Align business
and innovation
strategies
Integrate
functional,
business, and
geographic
silos
Innovation
capabilities
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Organization
and
processes
Align cultural
and innovation
strategies
Business
capabilities
Integrate
functional,
business, and
geographic
silos
Innovation
capabilities
Organization
and
processes
External
networks
Align cultural
and innovation
strategies
Business
capabilities
External
networks
Integrate
functional,
business, and
geographic
silos
Innovation
capabilities
Organization
and
processes
Align cultural
and innovation
strategies
Business
capabilities
External
networks
Source: Strategy& 2014 Global Innovation 1000 survey data and analysis
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strategy+business issue 77
tion to seek out new and substantial innovations is understandable, and will certainly pay off for some innovators. To capitalize on such a significant reallocation of
spending, however, many companies will need to make
major changes in their approaches to innovation and in
1000
New research will involve more
collaborators, says Bombardiers
Fassi Kafyeke. Ultimately, this will
enable greater technology leaps,
while reducing risks.
MARKET
READERS
TECHNOLOGY
DRIVERS
Source: Strategy& 2014 Global Innovation 1000 survey data and analysis
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in the car, and is actively developing wireless communication technology enabling cars to communicate with
one another. Its not a traditional business model for
an automotive parts company based in the Midwest
even for a global supplier like Visteon, says Yerdon. Its
much more like a tech company in Silicon Valley. As
more companies consider a significant shift to services,
it will be important to ensure that the companys innovation goals are aligned with the needs of the enterprise
strategy, and that the business model includes a plan for
capitalizing on the envisioned service innovations.
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Methodology
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Innovation is a function that can
be managed: There are principles
that are known, capabilities that
can be built, and levers that can be
pulled to improve the process.
This list is more important than ever. For every
shining example of a market-shaking innovation breakthrough, there are many more examples of companies
that struggle to realize adequate returns from their
innovation investments. But innovation, although different from operations, sales, and marketing, is nevertheless a function that can be managed: There are
principles that are known, capabilities that can be
built, and recognized levers that can be pulled to improve the process over time. The stakes for making
these efforts are highthe disparities in innovation
performance show that there are tremendous opportunities for getting more from your R&D spending,
and for improving your competitive position and your
financial performance. +
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