Scott Berkum on innovation

In Wellington last week I dropped past Webstock, and caught Scott Berkum presenting on innovation. He talked about the myth of innovation – or how the eureka moment actually takes years of prior effort. What I found most interesting was his linkages between innovation and the early explorers. How are they similar? Here’s a quick list :

  • they head off into the unknown
  • the time scales for their discoveries are largely unpredictable
  • there’s long periods of boredom before the discovery takes place
  • people think they’re a little mad to challenge paradigms (“Of course the world is flat”)
  • when they report their discoveries, eventually people think it was common sense that the discovery should eventually happen (“Of course the world isn’t flat” andOf course iTunes was the reason the iPod was so successful”)

The other interesting part of Scotts talk was his link to the innovation culture that used to exist at 3M, and how it was driven from the top (my emphasis):

“As our business grows, it becomes increasingly necessary to delegate responsibility and to encourage men and women to exercise their initiative. This requires considerable tolerance. Those men and women, to whom we delegate authority and responsibility, if they are good people, are going to want to do their jobs in their own way.

Mistakes will be made. But if a person is essentially right, the mistakes he or she makes are not as serious in the long run as the mistakes management will make if it undertakes to tell those in authority exactly how they must do their jobs.

“Management that is destructively critical when mistakes are made kills initiative. And it’s essential that we have many people with initiative if we are to continue to grow.”

This is company that produced masking tape and Post-It notes – neither of which was on any corporate strategic roadmap, but which was devised by coal-face employees.

NESTA and Fringe benefits

For various reasons  – and connections – I’ve just spent a bit of time reading the work of the NESTA Connect team in the UK.  One of the blog entries had a link to a fascinating event in the USA called the Triple Helix.  The aim of the event is to encourage a model of innovation that looks across sectors to seek the collision points. With a heavy bent on collaboration, both the NESTA blog posting and the  Triple Helix website are fascinating reads.

Early crowd-sourcing (surfing of a different kind)

Over at BusinessWeek there’s a great pointer to a blog posting by John Hagel about innovation and surfing. It seems to me that this is one of the most well documented examples of crowdsourcing, and how lead users can develop new directions for a product. The posting does not stop there, and has lessons to be gleaned about forming user networks and tapping into users on the edges/fringes.

It’s quite a long read, and well worth more than a cursory glance. The one thing that grabbed me was this excerpt:


find ways to appropriate insights from adjacent disciplines and even more remote areas of activity

And now – off to the beach..

The Un-conference

At the weekend I attended Kiwi Foo Camp. It was damn interesting on several counts:

  1. The people there were all fascinating in their own right
  2. The format meant that people could hold sessions on their passions. Those that were also passionate contributed in such a way that added value
  3. The venue was a standard school, with no fancy trappings or dressing up. It was proof that of that old photography adage I like “the last thing you should add to a great photo is a sunset.” (However the same adage does not always apply to nudist beaches – especially ones frequented by overweight European tourists – where there are definitely some things that need dressing up)
  4. People camped. Literally. I took my tent. People who have bank accounts which require calculators with extra wide screens also camped.
  5. It was casual. Being a New Zealand summer, shorts, t-shirts and bare feet were often the order of the day.
  6. Invite only increases the quality of the event immensely.

There’s pages you could write on the implications for innovation events, but I’ll leave it at that. Next time you are planning an event, consider the above list.

By the way, raving about the weekend seems to be par for the course…