January 14, 2010

28) Shell

shell_logo

wēi  danger

Shell, the multinational petroleum company, was listed as the world’s largest corporation by Fortune in 2009.  Its revenues and profit in 2008 were $458bn and $26bn respectively, making it one of the most profitable companies in the world.  However, Shell is highly aware that its business is being disrupted by new energy sources and its leadership recognizes the need to innovate.  Shell’s challenge has been identifying the right ideas – in part because of its success the company is highly risk-averse and slow to change.  The Head of R&D for the Exploration and Research division wanted to devote 10% of his budget to projects with ‘game-changing potential’ but was conscious that he and his senior team were not best placed to select the ‘right’ ideas, how could he ensure that his organization didn’t revert to business as usual?

jī opportunity

Instead of relying on senior management, Shell harnessed some of its more creative thinkers from lower down the ranks. Shell brought together a small but eclectic group of mid-level employees who were known to be creative.  That team helped design a clear process to fund opportunities that the senior management might have rejected for being too disruptive.  Firstly, the team peer reviewed potential projects – successful ideas were then sent to an “innovation lab” where teams helped each other build out their ideas. Projects that survived the innovation lab moved into the “action lab” in which the goal was not to evaluate idea but to design an experiment to test the idea in a risk-controlled, real-world setting.   Once an approach to test the hypotheses was designed the project received seed funding, subject to results subsequent rounds of funding were available. Since the programme’s creation, about 150 ideas from a total of 1,500 have turned into successful projects – just over one a month on average – in fields as diverse as developing oil and gas wells and alternative fuels. Game Changer has also recently begun soliciting ideas from the public.

How About?

  • Creating an internal marketplace for ideas inside your company?
  • Formalising and communicating a process for seed funding ideas using peer review?
  • Designing experiments to test the ideas fast and cheap?

October 26, 2009

16) Arsenal

Arsenal logo

wēi  danger

Arsenal, the London-based football club is highly leveraged.  The Club is in the process of paying down debt on its new stadium and has been hit by the falling property market on the development of its previous stadium.  This, coupled with an increase in player costs due to high-spending foreign-owned clubs, has left Arsenal forced to limit spending on new players and therefore at risk of falling behind its competition.

jī opportunity

Arsenal shocked the football press by selling two of its star players for a combined £38m and spent only £10m on a new player in the summer of 2009.  Although these star players were known to have had disagreements with other team-members the press predicted Arsenal would be hugely weakened and its results would be negatively impacted.  The reverse seems to have happened, the team spirit among the remaining players appears to have been bolstered and the team has performed better.

how about…

  • asking whether your ‘stars’ are good for the overall performance of the team?
  • rewarding those that glue the team together to drive overall performance?
October 16, 2009

14) Sun Life Financial

sunlife_logo

wēi  danger

Sun Life Financial, the Toronto-based insurance and financial services provider, has felt the downturn – in both its share price (down 70% between ’08 and ’09) and in its P&L.  With similar results many of its competitors have been reducing ‘non-essential’ budgets in order to improve their bottom line in the short-term.  Staff training is often the first to go.

jī opportunity

Sun Life has done the opposite and launched a 4-year, $15m training programme in February ’09.  By the end of the programme, which is co-run with Duke Corporate Education, it is expected that 2,500 Sun Life staff will have attended.  The course aims to identify talent and prepare staff for the upturn (when consumers are likely to exhibit radically different behaviours versus pre-recession).  In addition, many of the staff have pointed to the level of commitment from leadership as a signal of trust and intent.

how about…

  • using downturns (or just quiet spells) to build skills ready for the upturn
  • adapting training programmes in light of changing market conditions