Monday, March 14, 2011

Book Review - Open Services Innovation

Book Title: OPEN Services INNOVATION
ISBN: 0470905743
Author: Henry Chesbrough

Review: The book introduces the concept of Open services innovation, which "shortly" means that every activity that a firm undertakes to create economic value should transform product or service-oriented business into service-oriented one, in order to avoid the commoditization trap and achieve new growth and renewal.
This, as you can imagine, can be very hard to reach for industrial firms whose core business is selling products.


Henry Chesbrough starts the book with the conversation he had with Paul Horn former IBM R&D VP, and his answer - that intrigued Henry and stimulated him to start investigating this area - to the question “what is your biggest problem today?”
Paul Horn said that most of his department activities are geared to support IBM to make computer products and software and now most of the revenues are coming from services not from products. “I cannot sustain significant research activities that contribute for less than the half of IBM revenues going forward!

The Four key concepts
Henry Chesbrough introduces four concepts and practices that are critical to leverage this open services innovation concept:
  • Think of your business as a service, regardless if you offer products or services, in order to sustain profitability and achieve new growth
  • Co-creation with customers to create more meaningful value propositions
  • Use open innovation to speed up services innovation and shorten time to market
  • Business model innovation to stimulate effective services innovations
Value chain
In order to succeed in this open services innovation concept Henry Chesbrough proposes to re-write Porter’s Value Chain, “Porter’s Value Chain, while very helpful when it came out in 1985, is now a roadmap to a dead end.”

Porter's Value Chain, 1985

This is definitely true if you start looking at your business as a service business. Porter’s Value chain contains a small activity for “services” at the end of the value chain. In Porter’s Value Chain, the product is the king. Thinking of your business as a service changes this focus entirely. The customer is central throughout the process of innovation.
You don’t get all the customer’s needs identified at the outset, and then freeze them there for the rest of the process. Instead…. you create offers to invite customers into the process, and work iteratively and collaboratively to arrive at innovative outcomes.

Open Services Value Chain
A brief summary of the chapters:

Part 1: A framework to spur innovation and growth
Probably the most interesting part of the book, where Henry Chesbrough lays out his 4 key concepts framework for open services innovation, Business as a service, Co-creation, open innovation and business model innovation.

Part 2: Open services innovation in practice
Through all the book, Henry Chesbrough provides several examples supporting his thinking, like Motorola’s Razr and Nokia. Several interesting cases are explained like KLM, Amazon, etc…

Conclusion:

Excellent book. Excellent 4 key concepts framework. Food for thoughts for firms who are still struggling to achieve new growth. I liked!

The book is valuable because it discusses innovation in areas where many firms are only getting started - innovation in processes, services, business models and customer experiences. So in that regard, a firm or individual new to innovation can pick up the book and learn a fair amount of innovation in services, business models and experiences, which is equally valuable and in fact is probably best suited for many firms.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Mobile broadband in Emerging markets, a powerful combination for disruptive innovations

India is the second largest country in the world in terms of population. India has also a large number of villages; more than 600.000 villages with poor transport infrastructure making movement of goods and people extremely difficult.

Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) is the leading cause of preventable infant blindness worldwide. India has the largest concentration of blind people in the world, 1 out of 3. Over 8% of 27 million births each year are at risk of this potentially blinding condition. The ratio of inhabitants to ophthalmologist is around 100,000:1. There's no way the number of qualified physicians will grow to match the need anytime soon. The challenge is to screen 250.000 infants a day. This problem requires a fast and efficient solution for screening infants especially in the rural areas where expertise is lacking.

Mobile Broadband
The whidespread availability of mobile networks and the steady growth of Mobile broadband are opening unexpected doors for fast, efficient and societal innovations.
Mobile broadband technology provides the possibility to transport data securely, conveniently, faster and while traveling.

A potential solution has been tested. The Postgraduate Institute of Ophthalmology has partnered with a software development company i2i TeleSolutions in Bangalore, and developed the solution and launched a pilot project. The solution consists of the availability of a portable (albeit in a van) retinal camera with a unique image capture design ideally suited for newborns. This camera allows trained technicians, not medical experts, to capture images and upload them (sometimes while traveling between remote locations) via a Mobile broadband dongle data card. The images and data are uploaded to a remote server. Once uploaded the images can be accessed and viewed by an ophthalmologist - who could be thousands miles away - using an IPHONE, an IPAD or any other PC.
i2itelesolutions
Feedback and corrective measures can then be provided back to the technician via the secure server. The window of opportunity for treatment is only a few days (72 hours). This scale of screening in such large numbers can only be possible through telemedicine using Mobile Broadband networks.
This model has now been adopted as part of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) in the state of Karnataka in India and is being deployed across eighteen health centers across six rural districts.

This is a typical case of reverse innovation, coined by Vijay Govindarajan (see also the post of Vijay below for more details). You can find all ingredients of Clayton Christensen for disruptive innovations; all ingredients of any game changer in serving unserved, undemanding group and identifying unsatisfied job-to-be-done; all ingredients of shared value, by creating economic value while at the same time creating societal benefits, introduced by Michael Porter.


References:
i2itelesolutions
Vijay Govindarajan, HBR blog