Hi all
This was a very funny presentation at the Fortune Innovation conference on the downside of innovation by Stanley Bing; summarised by someone who attended:
Consider the basic equation: Innovation = Constant Change = Pain. There are various sources of this pain -- meetings where nothing gets done, the constant demand for ideas, the competition for mental shelf space, creativity ("this is a pain"), initiative, the obnoxious pressure for gratuitous change and... consultants. Innovative organizations are over-run by consultants, but consultants always come with body bags.
Innovation takes an emotional toll -- anxiety/depression; feelings of inadequacy; triumph of shallow change agents; disrespect for process; idiotic disregard for tradition; promotion of wrong people; marginalization of true experts. "If don't buy the flavor of the day, you're a Luddite." "If you don't adopt the newest innovation, you're all going to die!" According to the media, all innovation is going to kill the existing business model.
Take a look at the great innovators throughout history... Hannibal, Gutenberg, Galileo, George Washington ("invented guerilla warfare, which led to the Vietnam War"), Louis Pasteur ("invented germs"), Albert Einstein ("invented the theory of relativity, which led to the atomic bomb"), and Bill Gates.
What is the true value of innovation? Like any new toy, the value, both real and perceived, declines over time. With innovation, there are benefits as well as liabilities. The liabilities include creativity, dysfunction and stupidity, and change for change's sake. There are alternatives to harmful and pointless innovation: pleasant stasis, gradual change, periodic invention of helpful things, knowing where everything is located all the time; a business plan that is comprehensible to everybody and... a corned beef sandwich.
The conclusion: Innovation has its place (i.e. "around San Francisco"). "Innovation leads to organizations run by children and idiotic crazies." Any questions?