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Innovation strategies being turned on heads

Innovation strategies being turned on heads

By:  Dan McLean  On: 21 May 2007 For: Network World Creator

Innovation in business IT has for the longest time traveled along a top-down path. Throughout history, the IT vendor community largely looked to develop systems, tools and applications specifically for larger companies. Eventually over time, these products slowly made their way down market as somewhat less functional and significantly cheaper offerings for smaller business.

Innovation in business IT has for the longest time traveled along a top-down path. Throughout history, the IT vendor community largely looked to develop systems, tools and applications specifically for larger companies. Eventually over time, these products slowly made their way down market as somewhat less functional and significantly cheaper offerings for smaller business.

There was a good reason for the top-down development approach by vendors. Reality was that big businesses had the greater requirement for IT and, generally speaking, large companies were apt to do much more meaningful and interesting things with it. But times have changed.

Participative online behaviour — nurtured through e-mail, blogging, wiki collaboration, Web 2.0 technology and social networking in general — shows the most interesting application of technology is now occurring from a radically different direction. It’s power and business opportunity driven by the masses.

Businesses are already rethinking innovation strategies. Many are focusing on the consumer in order to identify need and the future direction of product development. An online story posted on Industry Week magazine highlighted Procter & Gamble Co.’s launch of a Web site for women to “share inspirational stories,” practical tips and information. The effort was designed to better understand the product needs of women. Likewise the story said toymaker Lego Group, Nestle, L’Oreal and Nokia are among those companies actively reaching out to consumers for product development ideas.

In the realm of IT, networking giant Cisco Systems Inc. is among the first to formally embrace the concept. During the company’s recent Partner Summit in Las Vegas, company chief development officer Charles Giancarlo put it bluntly. “What’s changed is where the new technology trends come from,” he told the gathering. “It used to come from the enterprise and their data centres and then it trickled out. It’s the consumer that’s driving a lot of new technology trends and that is backing up and hitting IT managers.”

And today’s most influential consumer is the generation that was raised on personal computing and encouraged to incorporate IT into their everyday lives. They experiment and work with IT in a way that’s tailored to suit their personal preferences and business lifestyles. It’s a far cry from corporate IT dictatorship that imposed restrictions upon the application of IT beyond a defined business scope. These users expect a technology experience that surrounds their life, Giancarlo said. They want the same experience no matter where they are. He explained that if you look behind the technologies and the Web sites of social networking, you’ll discover the ways in which they collaborate. And collaboration, particularly as it’s being developed and advanced in the consumer space, is the key to Cisco innovation going forward.

The more we can do to enable technology to allow people to collaborate, the more powerful the use of technology, Giancarlo reasoned. Technology personas are also starting to blend, he said. In this case, Giancarlo was referring to the differences between how a consumer and an employee might want to use technology.


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Dan McLean Dan McLean is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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