Ideas Don't Die. Companies Do. (eBook)
323 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-394-29997-3 (ISBN)
Rethink ideas as the real value to the future of your business in a technology-world where knowledge is increasingly a commodity
In Ideas Don't Die. Companies Do. renowned voice on disruptive agility and executive Hari Abburi delivers an insightful framework for leaders to future proof their companies by creating an idea obsessed enterprise. In the book, you'll learn why ideas are more important than customers to disrupt the industry and marketplace.
The author explains how to distinguish between ideas that are truly original and those that require strategic execution to differentiate them from other choices on the market. He offers key insights into how to glean information from other companies who have worked with the idea and how to apply that knowledge to your firm's own idea.
Inside the book:
- Explanations of the 'idea moat' that creates exponential value at one company as opposed to another that uses similar ideas
- Compelling answers to questions about idea timing, and why ideas that failed a few years ago can be successful today
- How to shift your company's focus from thinking customers to thinking ideas
Perfect for managers, executives, entrepreneurs, founders, and other business leaders, Ideas Don't Die. Companies Do. will also benefit product team leaders and other innovators with a desire to bring new and exciting ideas to the market.
HARI ABBURI is a globally recognized voice on agility. His is well-recognized for his agility approach, 'At the speed of the customer'.
He is the CEO of The Fast Future Executive, a global consortium of thought leaders bringing world-class, future-centric, multi-disciplinary executive education to leaders, companies worldwide.
Rethink ideas as the real value to the future of your business in a technology-world where knowledge is increasingly a commodity In Ideas Don t Die. Companies Do. renowned voice on disruptive agility and executive Hari Abburi delivers an insightful framework for leaders to future proof their companies by creating an idea obsessed enterprise. In the book, you ll learn why ideas are more important than customers to disrupt the industry and marketplace. The author explains how to distinguish between ideas that are truly original and those that require strategic execution to differentiate them from other choices on the market. He offers key insights into how to glean information from other companies who have worked with the idea and how to apply that knowledge to your firm s own idea. Inside the book: Explanations of the idea moat that creates exponential value at one company as opposed to another that uses similar ideas Compelling answers to questions about idea timing, and why ideas that failed a few years ago can be successful today How to shift your company s focus from thinking customers to thinking ideas Perfect for managers, executives, entrepreneurs, founders, and other business leaders, Ideas Don t Die. Companies Do. will also benefit product team leaders and other innovators with a desire to bring new and exciting ideas to the market.
Opening Note: Where Your Idea Goes to Die. And Eventually Your Company
I am a believer in agility—the ability to anticipate, build, and deliver to customers on possibilities they never thought existed.
I believe that agility is at the heart of the ability in your company's strategy, leadership, and organization that the customer experiences. Resilience is about longevity and staying in the game, but agility is the ability to change the game.
In 2017, I defined agility as ‘being at the speed of the customer’. However, I believe now, especially after witnessing the first three years of AI-native thinking, that ideas create real value in a super-tech-driven world.
When I started this journey, it was tempting to focus on why companies or ideas failed. I collected many examples, only to realize that success is a more powerful teacher in business. And while understanding customers is crucial, ideas are a more powerful tool to drive agility.
In this book, I trace a few ideas over history: touch screens, social media, fintech applications, home appliances, voice technology, robotics, and entertainment concepts. The learning is powerful and yet simple.
I want this book to be an adoptable thinking approach with three easy principles:
- Think the language.
- Speak the language.
- Act the language.
This is not easy. Especially because agility is a multidisciplinary capability. It has no industry boundaries, expertise areas, or commonly self-created limitations of companies through categories, etc. To help you get started, at the end of each chapter I have included two key questions that drive your reflection on your thinking and business.
Being at the speed of an idea calls for a nuanced, complex, multidisciplinary mindset that is hard to develop yet so critical to success. But it begins with the hard realization: true agility means that ideas are more valuable to your future than today's customers. Are you willing to disrupt yourself? Why would you do it? And what does it take?
The best ideas often don't die at the hands of the customers or the competition. They die at the hands of your leaders and company. Perhaps it is easy to start with understanding the challenge of bringing ideas to life through the reality that is typically experienced in a company. I explain this through a simple grid (Figure a.1).
Figure a.1 Four Blocks of Entrapment
LOSING MARGINS BECAUSE YOUR CUSTOMERS DON'T HAVE SIMPLER EXPERIENCES AND YOUR COMPANY SUCKS AT DESIGN
In today's competitive marketplace, the relationship between customer experience, design, and profit margins has become more intertwined than ever. Companies that fail to offer simple, intuitive customer experiences and that exhibit poor design practices risk eroding their profit margins significantly.
The Cost of Complexity in Customer Experience
A seamless customer experience is vital to building long-term loyalty and ensuring smooth operational efficiency. When customers encounter complicated processes—whether during product discovery, purchasing, or after-sales support—they often feel frustrated and undervalued. This dissatisfaction can lead to several negative outcomes:
- Increased Customer Churn: Complex experiences push customers to abandon a service in favour of more user-friendly competitors. High churn rates force companies to constantly invest in acquiring new customers, which is generally more expensive than retaining existing ones.
- Escalated Support Costs: When processes are convoluted, customers are more likely to require additional help. This increases the burden on customer support teams, driving up operational costs and diverting resources from other value-adding activities.
- Reduced Conversion Rates: A complex buying journey can confuse potential buyers, leading to abandoned shopping carts or incomplete transactions. This directly reduces sales volume and, subsequently, the overall revenue base.
The Role of Design in Value Perception
Design extends beyond aesthetics—it shapes functionality, usability, and ultimately, how customers perceive the value of a product or service. Poor design can be a critical factor in margin erosion for several reasons:
- Diminished Perceived Value: A poorly designed product or interface can lead customers to question the quality and reliability of the offering. This negative perception forces companies to lower prices to attract customers, thereby compressing profit margins.
- Inefficient Product Interaction: When design fails to prioritize user needs, it creates friction points that slow down or hinder effective usage. This inefficiency not only impacts customer satisfaction but also increases the likelihood of errors and product returns, further driving up costs.
- Operational Inefficiencies: Internally, poor design can hinder process flows, complicate product maintenance, and slow down innovation. When systems and products aren't designed with simplicity in mind, the cumulative effect can result in wasted resources and a longer time-to-market, ultimately affecting competitive positioning.
Synergistic Impact on Margins
The combined effect of a complex customer experience and subpar design can be more damaging than the sum of its parts. When customers struggle to navigate a product or service, the resulting dissatisfaction can lead to:
- Reduced Lifetime Value (LTV): A negative first impression or recurring issues diminish the potential LTV of a customer. Lower LTV means that the revenue generated per customer may not cover the acquisition and support costs, squeezing margins further.
- Brand Erosion: In today's digital age, word-of-mouth and online reviews play a significant role in shaping public perception. A reputation for complexity and poor design can deter new customers and even alienate existing ones, leading to a sustained decline in revenue.
- Competitive Disadvantages: Companies that invest in streamlined experiences and thoughtful design can command premium pricing and foster deeper customer loyalty. In contrast, businesses that neglect these areas find themselves at a competitive disadvantage, pressured to lower prices to retain market share, which directly impacts margins.
LOSING SPEED TO MARKET DUE TO ORGANIZATIONAL BUREAUCRACY AND LOW-RISK QUOTIENT OF MANAGERS
Modern businesses operate in an environment characterized by rapid technological change, shifting customer preferences, and relentless global competition. To remain competitive, companies must innovate and adapt at breakneck speeds. Yet, the very structures intended to ensure stability and control—bureaucratic hierarchies and conservative managerial practices—can inadvertently become significant roadblocks. When decision-making is mired in red tape and managers are overly cautious, opportunities for timely innovation and market responsiveness are often lost.
The Weight of Organizational Bureaucracy
Organizational bureaucracy typically involves a hierarchical structure, detailed rules and procedures, and layers of approval that can slow down decision-making. While bureaucracy is designed to bring order, ensure compliance, and reduce risk, its inherent inflexibility can hinder rapid responses.
Implications for Speed-to-Market
- Delayed Decision-Making: Every stage of a product's development or strategic initiative may require approvals from multiple levels. This results in extended timelines that are ill-suited for the fast-moving nature of modern markets.
- Stifled Innovation: Bureaucracy tends to promote adherence to established protocols over experimental approaches. Innovative ideas often need to navigate a maze of regulatory and procedural hurdles before they can be tested in the market.
- Communication Barriers: Excessive layers of management can create communication silos. Critical information may be delayed or distorted as it moves through the hierarchy, further impeding timely decision-making.
- Risk Aversion Through Structure: Bureaucratic organizations often emphasize compliance and predictability. This can lead to risk-averse behaviour, where the focus is on avoiding mistakes rather than seizing opportunities—contributing to slow market responses.
The Low-Risk Quotient of Managers
Managerial risk aversion is a tendency among leaders to favour safe, proven strategies over innovative but uncertain ones. This cautious approach is often rooted in concerns about failure, accountability, and the potential for negative repercussions on one's career.
Effects on Market Speed
- Conservative Strategic Choices: Risk-averse managers are more likely to rely on traditional approaches that have worked in the past. While this may ensure stability, it often prevents the adoption of agile strategies that can capitalize on emerging trends.
- Delayed Initiative Implementation: Managers hesitant to take risks may delay launching new products or services until all uncertainties are minimized. This cautious wait can result in missed market windows where competitors have already established a foothold.
- Innovation Inertia: A low-risk quotient leads to a culture that prioritizes incremental improvements over disruptive...
| Erscheint lt. Verlag | 4.7.2025 |
|---|---|
| Sprache | englisch |
| Themenwelt | Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Unternehmensführung / Management |
| Schlagworte | company differentiation • Competitive advantage • Copyrights • Go-to-market • go-to-market plans • idea moat • Innovation • Innovation competition • <p>Product ideas • patents • Product Differentiation • product ideation • product innovation • strategy, agility, leadership, organization</p> |
| ISBN-10 | 1-394-29997-4 / 1394299974 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1-394-29997-3 / 9781394299973 |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
Kopierschutz: Adobe-DRM
Adobe-DRM ist ein Kopierschutz, der das eBook vor Mißbrauch schützen soll. Dabei wird das eBook bereits beim Download auf Ihre persönliche Adobe-ID autorisiert. Lesen können Sie das eBook dann nur auf den Geräten, welche ebenfalls auf Ihre Adobe-ID registriert sind.
Details zum Adobe-DRM
Dateiformat: EPUB (Electronic Publication)
EPUB ist ein offener Standard für eBooks und eignet sich besonders zur Darstellung von Belletristik und Sachbüchern. Der Fließtext wird dynamisch an die Display- und Schriftgröße angepasst. Auch für mobile Lesegeräte ist EPUB daher gut geeignet.
Systemvoraussetzungen:
PC/Mac: Mit einem PC oder Mac können Sie dieses eBook lesen. Sie benötigen eine
eReader: Dieses eBook kann mit (fast) allen eBook-Readern gelesen werden. Mit dem amazon-Kindle ist es aber nicht kompatibel.
Smartphone/Tablet: Egal ob Apple oder Android, dieses eBook können Sie lesen. Sie benötigen eine
Geräteliste und zusätzliche Hinweise
Buying eBooks from abroad
For tax law reasons we can sell eBooks just within Germany and Switzerland. Regrettably we cannot fulfill eBook-orders from other countries.
aus dem Bereich