Showing posts with label BUSINESS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BUSINESS. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2014

Innovate or die: The stark message for big business


Old Woolworth's shop Retailers who fail to respond to changing technology go to the wall
Big companies that fail to innovate risk extinction. That's the stark truth in the era of "digital disruption".
Just look at the likes of Woolworths, Polaroid, Alta Vista, Kodak, Blockbuster, Borders... the list goes on. All steamrollered by strings of ones and noughts and changing consumer behaviour.
But why are so many big companies so bad at it?
"Typically, big companies are much more conservative than start-ups and won't do anything that is untested or could risk future profits," says George Deeb, managing partner at business consultancy Red Rocket Ventures.
"Innovation efforts really require a very different, more entrepreneurial risk-taking mindset."
Jackie Fenn, a specialist in innovation at research consultancy Gartner, told the BBC: "Size can add to the challenges. A strong brand can have a fear that failure may damage its reputation.
"But you cannot afford to stay still - business is a moving escalator. The world is moving around you - customer expectations are changing, competitors are always catching up and threatening to take away your business."
Early Polaroid camera in 1949 Polaroid pioneered instant cameras from the 1940s onwards but was undone by digital photography
Short-termism Big publicly quoted companies also have quarterly earnings and shareholder expectations to meet, says Mr Deeb. This can take the focus away from research and development (R&D) and on to earnings and profits.
Exponential-e is a cloud and internet service provider with an annual turnover of about £60m. Its founder and chief executive, Lee Wade, used to lecture on innovation and agrees that short-termism is a major problem.
"[Big companies] are not adept at monetising ideas because they're so focused on delivering short-term performance to meet City shareholder demands," he says.
Lee Wade, CEO Exponential-e Lee Wade, chief executive of Exponential-e, thinks big firms are too short-termist
Another reason is that innovative companies often have a forceful, passionate entrepreneur at the helm, he adds, but when that person leaves or dies, the company can lose momentum.
"Tesco was one of the greatest British innovators under [Sir] Terry Leahy," he offers by way of example. "Now they're losing out to the likes of Aldi and Lidl.
"Apple's Steve Jobs was the hardest taskmaster and a ruthless visionary. But this is what you need to drive innovation."
Growth engine So how can big companies avoid becoming innovation laggards?
Venerable engineering company General Electric (GE), a global powerhouse with revenues of about $150bn (£91bn) and a market capitalisation of nearly $265bn, has built innovation into every part of its business, says Todd Alhart, director of media relations for GE Global Research, the group's R&D subsidiary.
With centres around the world employing thousands of researchers and engineers serving all of GE's divisions, you might think the company had innovation covered.
But Mr Alhart says: "We have a tremendous amount of investment in engineering, but the world is moving a lot faster. So we know we've got to be faster. The digital world is increasingly becoming part of the physical world."
So GE has been experimenting with "open innovation", inviting external engineers to take part in design competitions.
Jet engine bracket This winning design for GE reduced the weight of a jet engine bracket by 84%
"We're trying to reach out in a more open and collaborative way," says Mr Alhart.
For example, in 2013 GE challenged the GrabCad engineering community to come up with a way of 3D printing a lighter, stronger bracket for its jet engines.
"We had about 700 entries and gave out prizes for the best ideas," he says. "A young student from Indonesia reduced the weight by 84%. It's a great lesson in how you can get great ideas fast."
Outsourcing innovation this way is definitely the trend, says Phil Cox, president of Silicon Valley Bank's UK branch.
"Facing dual pressures of the cost of innovation and the speed at which the innovation economy is changing, large organisations are increasingly embracing open innovation.
Gas turbine in General electric factory General Electric, which produce gas turbines like this, is a firm believer in "open innovation"
"By partnering with other organisations, from academics to early-stage businesses, larger companies are able to introduce new products and strategies more easily and rapidly."
More than a bank? Barclays Bank is a case in point.
It has set up an Accelerator centre in Whitechapel, east London, in partnership with Techstars, the start-up investment and mentoring company. Of 340 companies that applied to join the accelerator programme, 11 were selected.
"We wanted to partner with the entrepreneur ecosystem," says Derek White, the bank's chief design officer. "We now have an engine for capturing technology, implementing and promoting it. This is about inventing the future of financial services."
Borders shopfront Borders was another traditional retailer that was a victim of "digital disruption"
The bank also has its own internal start-up programme expanded after the successful launch of person-to-person mobile payment platform Pingit in 2012. There are now 40 business ideas in development, says Mr White.
"Launching Pingit would normally have taken two or three years - it actually took just seven months," he says.
The secret is designing products around customer need, prototyping rapidly, keeping teams small and agile, and having daily, not weekly, meetings, he maintains.
"A large corporate doesn't have to behave like a large corporate."
It's a gas In another example, Centrica-owned British Gas, a former nationalised monopoly and the largest UK energy company with about 10 million domestic customers, has traditionally been concerned with holes in the ground, pipes and wires.
But with the arrival of smartphones, smart meters and smart thermostats, it had to act quickly or lose out to imminent competition from the likes of Nest, which makes smart devices for the home, and other newcomers.
Like Barclays, it adopted the start-up approach and created Hive, its smart-metering subsidiary.
Kassir Hussain, director of connected homes at British Gas, says Hive was founded on the "lean start-up principles" espoused by Eric Ries in his book The Lean Startup: How Today's Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses.
In practice, this means developing a product or service step by step, constantly consulting with customers so that money isn't wasted on features they will not want. Each stage of development is tested - so-called "validated learning" - so that future success is almost built in to the process. Normal management structures don't apply.
Hive promo image The British Gas Hive subsidiary was founded on "lean start-up" principles
"We believe that job titles can actually prevent co-operation and teamwork," says Mr Hussain. "It's about encouraging an entrepreneurial mentality throughout the business. Hive's product development is in days and weeks, not months and years."
Hive's Active Heating system, which lets you remotely control your home heating via smartphone, now has about 80,000 customers. But the service could not have come about from within British Gas's complex corporate structure, Mr Hussain believes.
"Nearly three-quarters of Hive's business is staffed by people with digital backgrounds from outside the group," he says.
'Two pizza' teams Perhaps it is online retailer and web services provider Amazon that best exemplifies lean start-up principles in action.
Keeping teams small enough to be fed by two large pizzas, giving them autonomy and direct access to customers, encourages risk taking and innovation, says Ian Massingham, technical evangelist for Amazon Web Services (AWS), the retailer's cloud platform.
"AWS has launched 280 new services this year - it's all about making things better for our customers."
Most commentators accept there is no one way for big companies to innovate, but they all agree that without innovation your days at the top could be numbered.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Japanese startups need to make Asian push: conference panelists


Panelists discuss the rise of entrepreneurship in Asia.
TOKYO -- With entrepreneurship sweeping across Southeast Asia and China, Japanese business ventures should waste no time expanding into the region and getting a piece of the action, according to panelists at an annual startup conference here.
     A panel discussion on the investment environment for Southeast Asian startups highlighted prepaid settlement and other services offered by startups. The region's fledgling companies are narrowing the gap in market value with their Japanese counterparts, panelists said at Startup Asia Tokyo, a two-day event that wrapped up Thursday.
     In a speech, Adways Chief Executive Officer Haruhisa Okamura told the audience how the mobile advertising agency overcame a post-IPO earnings slump and pursued expansion into China.
     "Asia may get more momentum than in Japan," Okamura stressed. "We're using tie-ups to develop business with the aim of becoming No. 1 in smartphone marketing."
     The event, hosted by business news website Tech in Asia, drew more than 1,000 people.

Lack of real-world infrastructure inhibiting Indonesian e-commerce



JAKARTA -- Indonesia's e-commerce industry has not had much success corralling the country's ever-growing number of smartphone users, according to research company Nielsen.
     "It is definitely a growing market, but the user experience is not there yet," Anil Antony, executive director for consumer insights at Nielsen Indonesia, said Wednesday.
     Nielsen polled consumers in six major cities from April to June and found that 13% of the 2000 respondents made an online purchase during that period.
     In a separate Nielsen survey, 60% of 503 respondents said a lack of trust prevents them from giving their credit card information to online merchants.
     "Most e-commerce companies in Indonesia are local and have yet to establish a safe, reliable service," Antony said. Online marketplaces such as Kaskhus, one of the country's largest, require the merchant and buyer to carry out transactions on their own. Antony added that it will take several years for global players like Amazon to enter the market due to infrastructure, regulatory and other issues.
     A World Bank study on logistics efficiency ranks Indonesia among of the worst in Asia. Without dependable delivery services, e-commerce companies cannot get orders to customers. Startups have also complained that the government has not issued clear e-commerce guidelines.
     There even seems to be doubt as to whether certain licenses are needed. U.S.-based Uber Technologies -- a taxi service that connects drivers and riders via a smartphone app -- is in a legal battle with Jakarta authorities who say the company has not obtained the necessary permits to operate. The company started doing business in the city in August.
     Antony pointed out that Indonesian smartphone users' heavy use of social networks and texting services will help spread the word once a service does manage to gain some traction.
     Eventually, he said, some company will hit Indonesia's e-commerce sweet spot, and then a raft of copycats will follow.

Hewlett-Packard making Singapore a digital printer ink hub



SINGAPORE -- Hewlett-Packard has decided to expand an ink plant here by 10,000 sq. meters to keep up with Asia's booming digital printer market. The company will spend "millions of dollars" on the project, an HP representative said without being specific.
     When the expansion is finished sometime next year, the plant will be able to produce four times more ink than it can today. The project is expected to allow HP to sell more of its Indigo digital printers.
     HP produces digital printer ink in Tuas, in this city's northwestern part, as well as in Israel.
     The company also will build a new showroom in Singapore where it can pitch digital printing solutions to corporate clients. The 21,000-sq.-meter facility will cater to customers in the Asia-Pacific region. Printing companies as well as consumer brands will be able to use the space to become familiar with the latest printing technology.
     The amount of printing HP customers do on digital printers, which allow for short turnaround times and great customization, has grown tenfold over the past eight years, with Asian customers turning to digital printing at double the pace, according to HP.

Transcosmos to offer e-commerce support services in China



TOKYO -- Transcosmos, a provider of call center services and other information technology outsourcing services, plans to begin a business in China providing operational support for e-commerce sites.
     China's e-commerce market is seen growing by an average annual rate of 38.4% between 2012 and 2020 and is expected to overtake the U.S. to become the world's largest as early as 2016, according to American market researcher eMarketer.
     To tap into this huge market, Tokyo-based Transcosmos is taking a stake in the Chinese software developer Shopex and plans to offer services that combine its sales-promotion services with that company's software for website construction and inventory management.
     The Shopex software for inventory management has features for monitoring the inventory of products sold on multiple e-commerce sites and automatically allocating that inventory based on sales volume. The available stock on all the sites is updated immediately on screen so the inventory can be managed more efficiently.
     Utilizing that software, Transcosmos will expand its business of online sales-promotion services based on changes in inventory volumes and customer information. The company will analyze how given products are selling on various websites, and will centrally manage customer information across multiple sites in order to recommend products.
     Shopex boasts a roughly 90% share of the market in China for e-commerce website construction software, and roughly 50% of the market for inventory management software. However, it concentrates on software sales and to date has not provided support services for companies with online stores.
     As partners, Shopex and Transcosmos will have the capacity to provide the full gamut of support, from the construction of e-commerce websites to operational support after the e-shops open. In addition to expanding local business, they hope to also sell their products to Japanese companies looking to expand into China's e-commerce market.
     Transcosmos currently operates two call centers in China geared toward local companies, but is considering broadening the scope of those operations to also field calls from consumers.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

India's economic growth hits two year high


A worker in an Indian factory
India's economy grew by 5.7% in the three months to June, its fastest pace in two-and-a-half years, according to an official estimate.
The economy was helped by strong growth in electricity, gas and water supply, and financial services, the Ministry of Statistics said.
The growth figure was higher than analysts had been expecting.
India's new government has launched policies designed to encourage business investment, including changes to tax.
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Analysis: Sameer Hashmi, India Business Report Ever since the Narendra Modi government took charge, business sentiment has improved on the ground. Investors have started pumping in money again, capital markets have been roaring, consumer demand has revived & hiring has picked up.
But this euphoria is primarily driven by sentiment and more steps would be required to sustain this optimism.
The performance of the Modi government as it approaches a hundred days in office - has been a mixed one.
While it has initiated measures to minimize tax litigation and opened up defence manufacturing along with railway infrastructure to attract foreign investors, it is still to announce big bang reforms that would give a major boost to the economy.

Italy's Mogherini and Poland's Tusk get top EU jobs


Polish PM Donald Tusk, Herman Van Rompuy, Italy's Federica Mogherini, 30 Aug 14Mr Tusk (left) and Ms Mogherini flank outgoing council president Herman Van Rompuy


EU leaders have appointed Italy's Federica Mogherini as EU foreign policy chief and Poland's Donald Tusk as European Council president.
The announcement came in tweets from the current council president, Herman Van Rompuy, at an EU summit.
Ms Mogherini, a centre-left politician, is Italy's foreign minister. She will replace the UK's Catherine Ashton.
Mr Tusk, Poland's centre-right prime minister, has been Polish leader since 2007. He will chair EU summits.
The full-time appointments mean that the EU's three top jobs are now filled. Mr Tusk and Ms Mogherini will work closely with the new European Commission President, Jean-Claude Juncker.
Italy's Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini, 30 Aug 14Italy's PM Renzi lobbied hard for Ms Mogherini to get the foreign affairs job
Polish PM Donald Tusk, 30 Aug 14Mr Tusk had long been considered a potential successor to Mr Van Rompuy
Mr Tusk, 57, will serve for two-and-a-half years (renewable), starting on 1 December. Ms Mogherini's term, starting on 1 November, is five years.
Mr Van Rompuy called Mr Tusk "one of the veterans of the European Council", the grouping of EU government leaders.
He is the only Polish prime minister to have been re-elected since the collapse of communism in 1989.
Mr Van Rompuy praised "the determined and confident way he has steered Poland through the economic crisis, and managed to maintain steady economic growth".
As a student Mr Tusk was active in the Solidarity anti-communist movement.
Mr Van Rompuy said Mr Tusk would face three major challenges: the stagnating European economy, the Ukraine crisis and "Britain's place in Europe".
He said the EU leaders were convinced that Ms Mogherini, 41, "will prove a skilful and steadfast negotiator for Europe's place in the world".
He noted Italy's "long-standing tradition of commitment to the European Union".
'Huge challenges'
Mr Tusk then made a short address in Polish. He said that "in December I'll be 100% ready" to speak English.
Ms Mogherini, speaking fluent English, later said "the challenges are huge... all around Europe we have crises - on European soil, in Ukraine, and starting from Iraq and Syria, going to Libya".
On arrival at the summit the European Parliament President Martin Schulz, a Socialist, spoke warmly of Ms Mogherini, calling himself a "fan". It was a strong indication that she would be a popular choice among MEPs.
The parliament's approval is required for all 28 members of the new Commission, and the EU foreign policy chief, officially called the High Representative, is also a vice-president of the Commission.
Baroness Ashton, a centre-left UK politician, has been in the job since 2009. The High Representative runs the EU External Action Service (EEAS).
Italy's centre-left Prime Minister Matteo Renzi pushed hard for Ms Mogherini to get the job.
However, last month the EU failed to get a consensus on her candidacy, as the Baltic states and Poland saw her as inexperienced and too soft on Russia. She has only been Italian foreign minister since February.

Friday, August 29, 2014

Brazil's economy falls into recession, latest figures show

Copacabana beach

Brazil has fallen into recession, just a month before the general election, latest figures show.
Economic output, GDP, fell by 0.6% in the three months to June, worse than analysts had predicted, and revised figures for the first quarter of the year also showed a fall of 0.2%.
A recession is usually defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction.
The news will be damaging for the government of President Dilma Rousseff.
According to the most recent poll, Ms Rousseff would lose to a rival candidate, environmentalist Marina Silva, if October's election went to a second round.
The World Cup, held in June and July, was not regarded as generally good for business, says the BBC's Wyre Davies in Rio de Janeiro.
"There were more days off for employees and many traditional tourists stayed away," he says.
"The problem is that, with elections due in early October, the economy is increasingly seen as President Dilma Rousseff's weak point."
Fans at Germany v Argentina matchThe World Cup failed to lift Brazil's economic output
The data showed that civil construction, manufacturing and investment especially suffered during the second quarter.
'Worrying slowdown'
"This recession shows the exhaustion of a growth model that has been centred on internal consumption," said Eduardo Velho, chief economist at investment firm INVX Global in Sao Paulo.
"It is a good picture of what the economy is suffering - a slowdown in industry, a fall in investment, rising inventories. The recovery from here will be slight," he continued, saying that deep reforms would be needed whoever wins the next election.
The second quarter figures prompted analysts to revise down expectations for full-year figures.
"With the sharp fall in investment, the potential GDP growth rate shows a significant and worrying slowdown in recent quarters," said Cristiano Oliveira, economist at Banco Fibra in Sao Paulo.
"That said, we now expect no growth in the Brazilian economy in 2014, despite moderate growth in the global economy."
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Analysis: Katy Watson, business reporter, Sao Paulo
A decade ago, Brazil was the darling of emerging economies. The country reaped the benefits of soaring commodity prices and government spending helped millions of poor Brazilians enter the middle class - the future looked bright.
But it's a very different picture now. Investor and consumer confidence has fallen, just like industrial output and retail sales are struggling too.
The World Cup may have taken people's minds off economic worries temporarily, but the issue is now top of the agenda. There is just over a month to go before the presidential elections and today's figures will be seen as an opportunity for candidates hoping to unseat President Dilma Rousseff.
They'll use the R-word to try to convince voters that their economic policies are a better alternative for the country's future.