3M : Real-Win-Worth
3M is an
iconic innovative company. Although mostly known for “sticky and scratchy
things” (post-its and sandpaper), 3M have over 55,000 products, releasing 25
new products per week and over 3700 global patents granted in 2016. Over 90,000
employees, 200 manufacturing plants and 86 labs are all focused on progressing
3M’s innovation agenda, but how do 3M maintain and sustain this engine of
innovation?
3M
understand the importance of knowledge, and that knowledge is used to create
value. “Research is the transformation of money into knowledge; innovation is
the transformation of knowledge into money.”
3M have a HR
policy that allows all staff to spend up to 15% of their time working on
promising new ideas, and provides even more resources and time for those ideas
that meet criteria indicating that they show the most promise.
3M love the
tough problems, as it’s where they prove their reputation and makes the work
interesting! A core 3M principle is to “spend time in the smokestacks”, meaning
they go where their customers are, observing them working and ask lots of
questions. They don’t guess what the customer needs, they invest their time to
know their needs, discovering the big problems that they can try to solve.
Most senior
managers want their product development teams to create breakthroughs new
products that will allow their companies to grow rapidly and maintain high
margins. But more often they get incremental improvements to existing products.
That's partly because companies must compete in the short term. Searching for
breakthroughs is expensive and time consuming; line extensions can help the
bottom line immediately. In addition, developers simply don't know how to
achieve breakthroughs, and there is usually no system in place to guide them.
3M team
became acquainted with a method for developing breakthrough products: the lead
user process. The process is based on the fact that many commercially important
products are initially thought of and even prototyped by "lead
users"- companies, organizations, or individuals that are well ahead of
market trends. Their needs are so far beyond those of the average user that
lead users create innovations on their own that may later contribute to
commercially attractive breakthroughs. The lead user process transforms the job
of inventing breakthroughs into a systematic task of identifying lead users and
learning from them. Techniques available also include cross-impact analysis,
simulation, and technology forecasting.
Real-Win-Worth
As a project
team learns from lead users, the questions and answers it develops often point
toward the need for strategic change. Indeed, that’s what happened at 3M.
Besides unearthing concepts for new product lines, the team had identified a
revolutionary approach to infection control—but developing the competences,
products, and services that would bring that approach to market would require
the division to change its strategy.
One of the
most vocal advocates of Real-Win-Worth screen is 3M, where the screening has
been used on more than 1,500 projects. The screening's credibility was enhanced
when it played a central role in the ultimate success of the company's computer
privacy light-control film. Although the company's micro louvered light film,
which simulates a tiny blind, promised unique privacy benefits, it almost
didn't get to the market. The first two versions failed in market tests, and
the sales force was unwilling to carry the finished product because the high
sales price threatened to limit sales to a small market niche. At that point it
was a technology in search of a market.
A new
general manager forced the development team to adopt an outside-in approach,
using the R-W-W screen. This revealed that the technology was effective and
patent protected, so it couldn't be copied by competitors. However, the R-W-W
screening also revealed a complete lack of market knowledge regarding market
size and target customer segments, and whether the privacy film would satisfy
the most attractive segments.
Would they
be willing to pay a sufficiently high price? Approval to proceed with
development was made conditioned on obtaining persuasive evidence of potential
demand. This came from test markets; product placements in offices of people
with a high need for privacy, such as human resource managers; observational
studies; and interviews with computer makers and distributors, which showed a
large market potential. Armed with these insights, 3M launched a full line of
privacy and antiglare films for laptops and PCs that leveraged the company's
brand equity and sales presence in the office products market. Within five years
the product line became one of 3M's biggest and fastest-growing businesses.