CHAPTER 7
Innovation
                        Innovation
 Innovation is about having a new way of doing things with
  commercial success.
 It targets to solve, in a novel way, pain points of customers or
  non-customers who are willing to pay for the solution, either
  through a product or a service.
 Innovation in product, service, process or business model can be
  sustaining, differentiated or disruptive.
 No innovation can happen unless there is a new truth or an
  insight discovered, so entrepreneurs must hunt for the new
  truths – what people like or dislike, why they feel that way, what
  barriers do they encounter and why these are important.
      4 Competencies of an Innovator
1. Creativity – forming a mental image or new idea about the future
• Am I visionary?
• Am I able to see the big picture where innovation can reside?
• Do I challenge the status quo?
2. Critical Thinking – offering unique ways to solve defined problems
• Do I understand different processes and approaches to solving
   problems?
• Am I able to generate novel but relevant ideas to solve problems?
• Am I able to get inspiration from various industries or situations?
3. Collaboration – developing relationships with the right partners to
                attain objectives
• Do I understand the jobs-to-be-done?
• Am I able to define synergy benefits and share credit with each
   collaborator?
• Am I able to have good interdependent relationships with my
   collaborators?
4. Communication – engaging constituents to make them understand and
accept your message
• Am I able to have conversations and listen to the opinions of my
   constituents?
• Am I able to make others see what I can see?
• Am I able to get others excited about my idea on solving their
   problems
              How to Improve Creativity and
                    Be an Innovator
A. Knowledge Update – new ideas gained from experience and/or
                       education
       1. Read – to study diverse topics
       2. Watch – to observe other categories and industries
       3. Online browsing – to do social listening
B. Process – a sequence of steps to attain new ideas
        4. Conversations – to have interactions with experts and those
                          with divergent views
        5. Think like a child – to be curious and keep asking questions
        6. Probe – to do data gathering and look for people’s motivations
                          and deeper meanings
        7. Rest and recreation – to have a well-rested mind to welcome
                          ideas with clarity
C. Reflections – serious thinking about a particular problem or idea
to increase and retain creative proficiency
        8. Openness – to listen to the opinions and ideas of others
        9. Mind mapping – to have a process of organizing
                               information
        10. ME time – to practice tasks and habits regularly
D. Experiences – actual encounters with subjects
       11. Inspiration – to be mentally stimulated with different
                       sources like visuals, plays, etc.
       12. Travel – to take trips, especially in trend hubs, to
                       observe new ideas in other places
       8 Tips to Create an Innovation Mindset
1. Hiring – recruit some people who are non-conformists with
   uncommon sense, instead of acquiring the usual people with familiar
   skill sets and common sense.
2. Training – create innovation competency by providing tools,
   frameworks and methods that are duplicable, ending with an annual
   innovation tournament, instead of a passive suggestion box where
   random ideas are given.
3. Idea Channel & Champion – provide employees a “safe place” to have
   the option to submit to a high-level innovation executive, if their
   immediate superior would turn down a major proposal which they
   believe has high potential.
4. Behavioral Requirement – establish innovation as a pre-requisite for
   promotion and merit raise on top of revenue and profit growth.
5. Focus – mull over business model innovation, instead of just
   product and process innovation.
6. Bottom line – look into the long-term effect of market
   penetration, and not just short-term market shares as a key
   performance indicator.
7. Reward and recognition – create a climate where innovation is
   rewarded or recognized.
8. Time – allow specific time for people to work on focused
   innovation projects during regular work hours.
   Exhibit7-1: Comparison of the Old and New
     Business Models of Waters Philippines
                    Old Business Model              New Business Model
Offering
Target Market       • Buyers: Middle class(safety   • Buyers: Middle
                      but best value conscious)       class(safety but quality
                    • Large and medium size           conscious, buyers from
                      appliance dealers               water refill stations)
                                                    • Distributors: Struggling
                                                      Filipino breadwinners
Value Proposition   • Buyers- peace of mind         • Buyers-peace of mind
                    • Dealers- profit generator       without the lifetime
                      and image enhancer              expense, pay on
                                                      installment rather than
                                                      cash for comparable
                                                      affordability
                                                    • Distributors- people’s
                                                      franchise(save and earn
                                                      money by being a
                                                      distributor)
Channel            • Appliance retailers      • Pre-sale: Exhibits and public
                                                service
                                              • Transaction: Direct selling
                                              • Post-sale: Field service
                                                representatives
Customer Bonding   • Pull events to the       • Training, events and
Strategy             store                      functions
                   • Participation of store   • Yearly-travel plan
                     sale, anniversary and    • 5-year-Car plan
                     store operating          • Long-term-housing
                     support                  • System- inheritable rank and
                                                privileges
Revenue Model      • Revenue from dealer      • Sale of units
                     sales                    • Interest income(for
                                                installment sales)
                                              • Parts, filters and home
                                                service
                  Old Business Model                New Business Model
Operating Model   • Manufacturer Importer          • Manufacturer
                   Distributor Retail stores Promo    Importer
                  personnel End users               Distributor Independent
                                                   salesforce Independent
                                                   servicing distributors
                                                   End users Regional 3rd
                                                   party collection agencies
Resources and     • Exclusivity                     • Exclusivity
Processes         • Product knowledge training to   • Relationship with sales
                    storekeepers                      leaders
                  • Order fulfillment               • Training (class and field
                                                      buddy)
                                                    • Credit scoring
                                                    • Collection tracking
                                                    • Recognition
                                                      management
Complementors    •   Store personnel’s   • Convert interested users
                     recommendations       into distributors
                                         • Collectors
Configurations   •   None                • Independent pay system
                                         • Incentivize cash sales to
                                           reduce money cost
Cost             •   Product cost        • Product costs
                 •   Trade investment    • Variable selling costs
                 •   Longer terms        • Administrative costs
                 •   Print Advertising
                     and sales
                     promotions
      5 Tips on Innovating the Business Model
1.  From Facts to Assumptions
         Look at how the industry operates and challenges every element of this
industry logic. Just because some companies have been successful do not mean
they have been doing all the right things right.
2.  From Pain Points to Pain Killers
         In the Philippines, many upper and upper middle households have an
extra car for ‘number coding’ days.
3.   From Competitor’s Strength to Competitor’s Weakness
          Lux(formerly Euroclean) was market leader in home water purifiers in the
Philippines in the 1980’s using knock-on-the-door type of nationwide house-to-house
operations done by full time sellers. With households more concerned with security,
more women working and the popularity of condominium living, Waters Philippines
entered the market in 1995 and challenged this traditional direct selling approach.
4. From Non-Users to Users
        Cebu Pacific Air targeted those who are users of sea and
land transportation as well as those who do not travel or do not
travel as much as they would like to. It turned out that the
numbers of non-users of air transportation were much more than
the users. The key to stimulate demand was to lower cost in order
to have lower price.
5. From Niche to Mainstream
        Disruptors would often start as a niche before becoming
mainstream. The offer of a disruptor may not be attractive initially
to the existing users, especially if it would mean additional
investment. New users may be early adopters eventually attracting
existing users.
                   Learning Innovation
1. Ask a question about your company (or your school) everyday
   starting from the more obvious ones, and find out for yourself
   whether the reply has some basis or are simply assumptions.
2. Ask what has been the greatest innovation in your industry for the
   last three to five years and study the insights behind the innovation.
3. If there has been no innovation in your industry the last three to five
   years, stop benchmarking and studying best practices, the latter is
   only as good as the next practices.
4. Do not insist on getting an expert from your industry because they
   will have the same conventional wisdom as all others. Conventional
   wisdom leads to the usual or ordinary practices, not innovation.
• Innovation is a big lifeline of companies, a potion to avoid
  commoditization and price war.
    Innovating the Choice of Target Market
 In February 2004, Facebook (which used to refer to a printed
  directory with photos and basic information of students from a
  particular school) initially targeted schoolmates of founder Mark
  Zuckerberg as members, connecting student in the Harvard
  University. From this base, it quickly expanded to other colleges
  in and near the Boston area in the East Cost of the United States.
  It then invited other Ivy League schools, eventually welcoming
  all other universities in North America. In September 2006,
  Facebook changed its college education focus to accept anyone
  above 13 years old with an email address, reaching over two
  billion members in twelve years.
        Innovating the Value Proposition
 Martin Luther led the Protestant reformation in the
  15th century and offered an alternative religious choice
  based on “Faith alone” (from God’s grace) rather than
  the “Faith and Work” principle of Catholics. Luther
  allowed the Bible to be available in language other
  than Latin to expand his audience and allowed priests
  to marry.
          Innovating the Channel Strategy
 Netflix started as a DVD subscription business where customers
  choose a plan that allowed Netflix to deliver a fixed number of
  DVDs by mail, and then with the next set mailed to them after
  the previous set had been mailed back. This disrupted market
  leader Blockbuster with their dominance in brick-and-mortar
  retailing, as Netflix did not have to pay for costly retail locations
  and used fewer staff. In the Netflix business model, there were
  no overdue fees, a pain point under the Blockbuster business set
  up. The motivation for Netflix customers to return the DVDs
  once they are done is to receive the next batch of DVDs under
  the plan they availed. Eventually, the channel was changed to
  online streaming, another success. This time, Netflix disrupted
  cable TVs.
   Innovating the Customer Bonding Strategy
 Amazing Race is a TV show that features teams
  competing to reach a destination while the host
  country displays the beauty of their location.
  They have innovated on a tourism show using
  gamification instead of the usual documentary.
        Innovating the Revenue Model
 Recession Coffee in Eastwood is located at the
  front area of the store of Digital Walker, which is
  like their traffic builder. They had a pay-what-
  you-want offer for their coffee which was a
  novelty in the industry, but has since fixed the
  price at P99.
        Innovating the Value Network
 Xiameter, an affiliate of Dow Corning USA,
  collapsed the processes of manufacturing,
  warehousing and inventory management, by
  shipping out on the day their silicones are
  produced, thus, no longer requiring inventory
  management or warehouse space. This resulted
  in lower costs, enabling them to reduce the
  prices of commoditized products with expired
  patents.
 Innovating the Resources and Processes
 Ikea furniture is known for ready-to-assemble furniture
  in flat packs. Its late founder, Ingvar Kamprad, was in
  the mail order business when he was young, he knew
  the importance of easy-to-ship/transport products. The
  flat pack process enabled them to save on space in the
  warehouse as well as in transportation, while also
  reducing the cost for the customers who can opt to
  save delivery charges by picking up and assembling the
  furniture themselves.
       Innovating the Complementors
 Hindustan Unilever offers income opportunities
  to women in rural India. They tie-up with micro
  lending institutions, non government offices
  (NGO) for self-help groups, local government,
  geographical stockists and local drama troops to
  deliver their brand message via comedy shows.
        Innovating the Configuration
 In the US, coupons are popular among fast food
  brands. At one time, McDonald’s decided not to
  print coupons and just post an announcement
  outside the store that they will honor coupons
  of other brands, saving them printing costs
  while having the same effect as sales
  promotions.
          Innovating the Cost Model
 Instead of advertising in mass media, Arce Dairy
  ice cream sells to Philippine Airlines, which
  serves its ice cream to international passengers
  after meals. The consumption by passengers
  serves as a substitute for awareness and paid
  sampling, enabling Arce’s ice cream to be tried
  without having to spend the media cost of
  bigger competition.
   How to Innovate the Marketing Mix
              on Demand
 One tool used to innovate marketing mix is a 5-
  Point Marketing Innovation Tool used by Mansmith
  and Fielders Inc. and adopted by the White Space
  Club.
 It provides five ways to “reinvent” each element of
  the marketing mix. The choice of which of the five
  ways to use, depends on what can help solve the
  pain points effectively in a novel way.
Point Marketing Mix Innovation Tool
           On Demand
               +                              −
  What can be raised or created?    What can be reduced or
                                         eliminated?
                  COMBINATION
             What can be combined or united?
               ×                              ÷
     What can be enlarged or       What can be subdivided and
           amplified?                     rearranged?
         Exhibit 7-3: Product/Service
+           x          -       ÷    Combination
           Innovation on Demand
2-in-1          Phone with      Debit            External Hard   Online
Shampoo +       Internet,       Card(cashless)   Drive           Shopping
Conditioner     Cable, and free                                  (+new
                shows           Drive Thru       Acer            Channel,
Lip and Cheek                   Restaurant       Transformer     x Time Open,
Tints                                            Laptop          -Parking
                SM Advantage                                     ÷ Vendors :
                Reward                                           Logistics)
                Card(SM +
                BDO +                                            Bayad Center
                Watsons, etc.)                                   (+ Vendors
                                                                 x Locations
                                                                 -Dressing Up
                                                                 ÷ Payment
                                                                 Buying
                                                                 Services)
 Special – What are you willing to do if someone
  special like your own mother experienced pain
  points?
 Crisis – Suppose your sales target has been
  increased 500%, what else will you consider
  doing?
 Else – Who else have you not considered? What
  else can you do? How else can you do it?
     SCENIC Innovation Questions
 Another way to foster innovation thinking is
  through the SCENIC framework shared by
  Mansmith and Fielders Inc. to help
  entrepreneurs and innovators reflect on
  innovation possibilities based on pain points
  they are focused on solving.
 Not – Instead of thinking things are impossible,
  think “Why Not” and look for new possibilities.
 If – Scenario building is another possibility, with
  “What if” question.
 Constraint – suppose the government imposed
  restrictions and you cannot do what you are
  doing, what else would you do?
          How to Kill Innovation
 Protecting financials came out as the most
  frequently cited answer why market leaders
  freeze when it comes to innovation, though
  there is evidence that also shows how
  innovation, and not just incremental
  improvement, can be introduced by incumbent
  market leaders.
                     10 Reasons …..
1. Protecting Financials – The CFO’s role is ensuring healthy
   financials. This means increasing revenues and profitability,
   and not necessarily launching innovation, which may be seen
   as an expense rather than as an investment.
2. Culture of Complacency, Status Quo and Conservative Attitude
   – Market leaders often become too comfortable with their
   success. They have succeeded based on what they have done
   in the past and are no longer as hungry and driven to change
   their success ‘formula’ for growth; after all, they already have a
   name and the money.
3. Limited Paradigm, Knowledge and Methodologies – A high
   market share can blind recipients of the need to improve
   market penetration radically. Also, being better is the
   greatest enemy of being different.
4. Arrogance and Pride – When a company is at its peak and
   has a lot of resources, some of its key officers may think
   they are indestructible for having high brand loyalty.
5. Focus on other strengths – Market dominance may inhibit
   strategic thinking, especially of new market spaces. Market
   leaders have many areas they consider strengths and may
   just allow a new player to do their thing.
6. Industry Conditions, especially Speed to Exploit Technology
   and New Knowledge – Availability of new technology online
   has given rise to many new innovations and many new
   billionaires.
7. Lack of an Idea Channel – Employees may have very restricted
    access to top management or may somehow be limited to
    what their immediate bosses will endorse or not endorse for
    management approval, prematurely killing good ideas in the
    process.
8. Operational Issues – Some companies are affected with many
    internal inefficiencies that keep them in a perennial trouble-
    shooting crisis. Innovation is then relegated to another
    timetable.
9. Lack of the right marketing talent in the team – Managers
    should not only be able to provide directions with the usual
    planning, organizing and allocating, they should be able to
    make sense of the fast changing needs and wants of customers.
10. Focus and lack of vision or foresight – Major innovations
    happen when the proponents are able to connect the dots and
    see a different future.
                  Exercise:
1. Choose either the 5-Point Innovation on
   Demand framework or the SCENIC
   framework of Mansmith and Fielders Inc. to
   come up with a potential innovation to
   increase visit frequency to Abenson or similar
   appliance stores. Explain how value can be
   created for the consumers and how Abenson
   can capture value.
                   Caselet
1. Robinson’s Land launched Go Hotels in 2010
   encouraged from the success of a sister
   company, Cebu Pacific Air. Decode the
   business model map of Go Hotel and identify
   the innovations the have instituted to create
   value for their target customers at low prices
   but still have profitable operations.
  Q&A with Cebuana Lhuillier President
   Jean Henri Lhuillier on Innovation
 Cebuana Lhuillier is in the Guinness Book of
  World Records as the largest chain of
  pawnshops in the world with over 2,200
  outlets, bigger than many banks combined,
  serving mostly the ordinary “unbanked”
  population.
Q1: How do you go about understanding your
    target consumers and what have you
           discovered about them?
 A: We know a lot about our clients, and the
  market we serve. We talk to our clients in so
  many ways, at our branches, thru our Customer
  Care hotline and on our digital platform. On top
  of this, we engage them on a national scale UAI
  study complemented with other several
  consumer researches thru FGD, etc.
  Q2: From pawnshops, you also have remittance, bills payment,
 collection, e-loading and insurance. In fact, you have tie-ups with
   some 100 companies. Which of these products are you most
  excited about? Which represent the future of Cebuana Lhuillier
 A: Cebuana Lhuillier believes in empowering the
  masses thru financial inclusion. Each product we
  come up with ensures more access for our clients to
  gain financial access and security. We are excited in
  every product we bring to the market. We have the
  full application of the “sachet” concept to make it
  within the reach of our market. From
  microlending/loans to remittance to microinsurance,
  all of which are part of our community
  empowerment vision.
  Q3: You are pioneering in micro insurance with over a million
policies sold monthly. In 2012, you launched ‘Barangay Cebuana’
 where your branch personnel visited 750 barangays resulting to
over 300,000 policies but partly cannibalized the store sales. What
   changes are you instituting to gain big wins on both fronts?
 A: For micro insurance, out-of-branch efforts were
  meant to educate communities about the value of
  insurance. And the true measure of the success of such
  info dissemination campaign was the number of
  people who availed of it, and we were successful in
  doing that. Bottom line, in business you can’t wait for
  your clientele, you need to reach out physically, and
  electronically. This is our strategy to provide more
  customer touch points thus access is not limited to our
  brick and mortar branches.
    Q4: One of your core values is innovation. What
        innovation are you proudest of so far?
 A: Cebuana Lhuillier is a game changer, we have
  changed the face of pawning, remittance and micro
  insurance. We don’t walk around telling our market of
  our capabilities, they tell us what they need and we
  develop the capabilities to serve them even better. Our
  innovation is born out of our move in creating a culture
  of appreciating our clients, making sure that the clients
  who are the “unbanked” be treated even better than
  those who are “banked”.
 Q5: What other programs or products can you
      also claim as the industry’s first?
 A: Loyalty program, micro insurance, bills payment in
  the pawnshops, customer convenience programs
  (renew anywhere, send / receive anywhere), digital
  platform for transaction updates, deposit links to
  bank accounts, network remittance, collection
  services, Cebuana Lhuillier On Wheels, insured pawn
  items, web promos, social media based promotions
  etc.
Q6: You now have over 5 million members in your 24k
 rewards program. Other than your existing products,
what can you do to leverage on your power to radically
     help improve the lives of your cardholders?
 A: We know every cardholder we have. Our in-market
  strategy for new products and services are normally
  intended toward them based on their behavior,
  financial transactions and general profile. For example,
  our upcoming non-collateralized micro loans for
  entrepreneurial purposes are geared toward targeting
  our international remittance members who are either
  already on a small scale business who wants to expand
  or planning to put up one. We take our 24k members
  to heart.
Q7: Cebuana Lhuillier launched the annual Happiest Pinoy
 contest with over 10,000 nominees yearly and the annual
 My Happiness photo contest. What was the insight behind
    these contests? What are you trying to accomplish?
 A: The search for the Happiest Pinoy is actually an advocacy of
  our micro insurance brand with a long-term objective to
  become a full brand campaign for the entire Cebuana Lhuillier
  ecosystem of brands. Traditionally, insurance was introduced
  to the market almost like a scare campaign. We wanted to do
  it differently by anchoring on happiness which we Filipinos are
  known for. It links to the very culture of our people thus the
  instant connection it has to our market. This campaign will not
  just improve our relationship with our market but also lift the
  stigma of the old pawnshop concept. Who doesn’t want to be
  happy? We want to have happy clients, happy employees and
  happy shareholders.