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How innovation nearly killed LEGOTake six standard LEGO bricks, and there are more than 915 ways to stick them together. Actually that's incorrect; there are 915 MILLION permutations. I think 'endless hours of fun' is most appropriate in this case. LEGO was the world's most profitable and fastest growing toy company from 2007 to 2012, but the past wasn't all that rosy - the company had a near-death experience in 2003. So how did this happen even though they ticked all the boxes for innovation? The building blocks of innovationLEGO managed innovation in a somewhat more 'textbook' fashion. This was in stark contrast to Apple where Steve Jobs had the final say of what would or would not go to market. If he never came to work, no new products would come out the pipeline. The LEGO process was, in comparison, decentralised. LEGO CEO Jørgen Vig Knudstorp stated that he could leave his company for three months, and its innovation process would continue unabated. I'm not saying that any one method is better than the other is. In contrast, LEGO's methodology was fine, as you shall soon discover. The whole truthThere are seven truths to innovation proposed by David Robertson, and this is how LEGO did all the right things in the wrong way [1]: 1. Hire diverse and creative people 2. Head for blue ocean markets Not exactly brain surgery, but makes a valid point (although the junkyard is littered with those who drowned in blue oceans) Other companies were producing similar bricks, so LEGO went for the blue ocean and came up with the LEGO Studios Steven Spielberg MovieMaker. It took off relatively well in the States, and LEGO then rushed to give the market add-on sets to be used with the original kit. Without the camera kit, these add-ons meant nothing - so the line got flooded and it wasn't long before the add-ons hit the discount bins at the retailers. And so MovieMaker became an unprofitable line and it was 'The End'. 3. Be customer driven 4. Practise disruptive innovation 5. Leverage the 'wisdom of the crowd' 6. Explore the full spectrum of innovation 7. Build an innovation culture An amazing comebackLEGO revisited each of these issues to experience a major resurrection. In 2012, the group increased revenue by 25% to over US$4bn - nearly triple the sales of 2007. [3] To find out more about joining the Innovation Generation in just one day, contact Sid Peimer on 082 659 9167 or email moc.gninnalptarts@dis. And you get to play with real LEGO. Sid Peimer provides freelance strategy, training and consulting. Details on the website www.stratplanning.com References:1. David C Robertson (with Bill Breen). Brick by Brick. How LEGO Rewrote the Rules of Innovation and Conquered the Global Toy Industry. Crown Publishing Group, 2003. About Sid PeimerA seasoned and insightful executive with multisector experience in roles as diverse as senior leadership, creative copy and education. I am a qualified pharmacist with an MBA from UCT. I am currently in my second year of PhD studies with CPUT, and a tenured lecturer at Red & Yellow Creative School of Business on the BCom programme. View my profile and articles... |