Posts Tagged ‘innovation management’

Should You Reward Bad Ideas?

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Some ideas are crazy. Some are underdeveloped. Some will fail. How can you deal with them without squelching your employees’ creativity?

True or false: There’s no such thing as a bad idea.

Of course bad ideas exist. In retrospect, the AOL-Time Warner merger was not the wisest idea. Neither is photocopying your face. But ask any number of innovation experts and they’ll all give you a different answer. Of course there is such thing as a bad idea. Or:Every idea has its merit. Or: It depends…

Within the context of innovation, how to handle bad ideas is a controversial topic because statistically speaking, most ideas are bad. Ninety-three percent of successful innovations start in the wrong direction and countless more never succeed. “In entrepreneurship, most ideas fail,” explains Roy RosinIntuit‘s vice president of innovation. “You either scale the wrong thing or you scale in the wrong direction. And it’s hard to predict.”

With no handy algorithm to identify good ideas, innovative companies have to accept that with every great, useful, idea, there will be many more that fall away. Unused ideas are frequently off-topic, underdeveloped, or poorly timed; however, this doesn’t make them bad. So should you reject these wayward ideas, or should you reward them?

Taken literally, rewarding bad ideas sounds preposterous. In competitive climates, separating the best from the rest motivates future growth. But most entrepreneurs would agree that to foster creativity and collaboration, every voice should be listened to and every idea should be shared. If every unused idea is treated like a bad idea, don’t we run the risk of discouraging future innovation? The following six arguments for and against rewarding so-called bad ideas will help you decide what is best for your company.

Should You Reward Bad Ideas? Yes, Reward Unappealing Ideas.

Chances are, you won’t like every idea brought to the table. But hold your judgment. Successful brainstorms incorporate a diverse group of people collaborating with one another and contributing as much as possible without any arguments, debates or snap decisions on their merit.

“The worst thing you can do as a leader is to be the single determining factor of whether an idea is good or bad,” says innovation coach Robert Brands. ”If they’re good, they become the boss’s idea and if they’re bad, you lose ownership of the operation.”

Instead, Brands suggests a method where everyone (“From the maintenance man to the CEO,” he says. “Everyone!”) develop the parameters new ideas should be measured against. Common parameters include profitability, patent potential, customers service, global impact. And, if an idea doesn’t fit your parameters but your employees are passionate about it, consider rewarding their enthusiasm instead.

Read the complete article on Inc.com:

http://www.inc.com/guides/201108/how-to-reward-bad-ideas.html

The Wolves are at the Door: Why YOU Need to Hire an Intellectual Property Lawyer

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Innovation is the lifeblood of any organization, and value creation is measured by a company’s intellectual property portfolio. As a business leader, you are responsible for protecting your company’s IP portfolio through patents. What exactly is a patent? A patent is a legal document granted by the federal government that gives the patent owner the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, offering to sell, and importing the claimed invention. Essentially, it is the property right to the inventor. Virtually anything made by man can be patented, such as “a new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement,” according to Fleit Gibbons Gutman Bongini & Bianco PL.

Why patent, you ask? To make profit from your invention! In order to succeed in business, you must protect and manage your innovation. Remember – the wolves are always at the door, just waiting to pounce on your ideas. Patents are part of an offensive and defensive strategy. Intellectual property law keeps your competitors from copying, using, selling or importing your idea. Patents protect your trademark against counterfeiting and unauthorized use.

If your organization has a portfolio of intellectual property, it is necessary to hire an IP attorney that will protect, enforce and handle valuation of your intellectual assets. It is time and money well spent, as IP attorneys manage patents as well as a comprehensive list of intellectual property concerns including trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, unfair competition, false advertising, computer law, technology licensing and related litigation.

To choose the right IP firm for your organization, look for an attorney who has experience in your product or service arena. Find out if they have a degree in engineering or expertise working in your industry. Does the law firm specialize in any particular business segment, such as entertainment, machinery or financial products? Do they work with small, midsized or large companies? These are all questions you should address when selecting the best fit IP firm.

Tips:

-Make sure you patent and protect surrounding inventions to eliminate alternatives to copy what you try to do or deliver. When you develop a technology you normally will come across additional options and surrounding IP, protect these as a defensive strategy

-Make sure you stay current with the changing Patent laws, including the possible upcoming change to “first to file” vs invent and having a year to file.

-According to Futurist David Houle we are entering the “IP age”. Make sure you are part of it

-Make IP as much a corporate governance issue at the Board level as any other strategic elements that is covered and watched over

-Make sure you cash in on your IP Portfolio

 

Here are some resources for information on patents:

-          U.S. Patent and Trademark Office www.uspto.gov

-          Patents.com www.Patents.com

-          Google Patents www.google.com/patents

-          Patently Obvious: Chapter 6 in “Robert’s Rules of Innovation”

Remember, in high-stakes industries, your competitors are always looking for a way to get a leg-up. With increasingly advanced technology, it is easier than ever to unravel ideas and inventions through reverse engineering. The only way to truly protect your intellectual property is by patenting your IP portfolio. As they say, “the name of the game is the claim.” Without patenting, you will not share in the profits of your competitors. Be sure to educate your employees on the importance of protecting your company’s IP rights and create value for all the stakeholders.