The Economist Intelligence Unit released a report earlier this week that explains how physical location is a key driver of innovation. Here are some key findings of the study (taken directly from the paper), based on an online survey of 200 senior executives from around the world:
* The most innovative locations are those with the healthiest supplies of talent. Ninety percent of executives surveyed consider access to skilled people to be critical for innovation. Nurturing talent requires top-notch education, which in turn plays a role in the tendency for likeminded organisations to “cluster”, or locate near each other. Organisations are willing to pay a premium for access to talent, and proximity to a cluster contributes to their ability to innovate.
* Policymakers can help to stimulate innovation in cities and regions, but they must take a long-term perspective. Legal, regulatory and financial measures have been widely used to create a more fertile environment for innovation, but some regions have been more successful than others in reaching this goal. In part, this is a cultural issue: respondents rank business culture (such as a tolerance of risk) an important factor contributing to their ability to innovate, second only to access to skills. The local climate for venture capital is also deemed very important. Building these stimulating qualities can take decades.
* Organisations are increasingly sourcing their innovations globally and externally. As large organisations have disaggregated and globalised, they have realised that they need to go far afield for innovation. A particularly creative process is “open innovation”, where intellectual property flows in and out of organisations to where it can be most useful in developing new products and services. Fifty-four per cent of survey respondents say that, through 2013, most of their innovative capacity will be provided by open innovation and by Internet-enabled techniques.
* While virtual collaboration is growing, face-to-face interaction is also becoming more important. In spite of major advances in networked information technology, innovation still requires face-to-face contact to be successful, especially in the early stages. Brainstorming is the most popular innovation technique, according to survey respondents, while interviewees emphasise the value of physical contact to build trust between potential collaborators. Nevertheless, the Internet is already vital in one area of innovation – that of “co-creation”, the practice of involving customers in the development of new products and services through feedback and suggestions. Sixty per cent of survey respondents say they are co-creating with customers on-line.
* US still attracts investments in innovation, but China and India gain ground. Asked where they are making the biggest investment to boost their capacity to innovate, survey respondents rank the US their number-one destination. India, China and the UK form a second tier, followed by Canada, Australia and Brazil.
Here are a few more links to recent articles on innovation:
Innovations of the Future (Business Week)
In Innovation, U.S. Said to Be Losing Competitive Edge (NYT)
U.S. Tumbles to Sixth in Innovation (Red Herring)
Universities aim to create ‘cluster of innovation’ (Detroit News)
Tags: co-creation, innovation, talent