Archive for the ‘COI’ Category

Is Innovation Too Sexy?

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

Innovation is often characterized as an ideal or a grand scheme created by intellectuals who lack an appreciation for bottom line results.  Many believe that innovation is created in a lab, but that it demands “real business men to make it profitable, not scientists.”  It was even said to me this month that innovation was “too sexy of an ideal in times of operational survival.” 

It appears that the dialogues on innovation frequently resemble highbrow dinner conversation, and have very little to do with “block and tackling” needed for business profits.  In general, innovation is apparently about grand principles, but little bottom line profits or sustainable customer influence.

So, let’s divide this debate up into two camps – those that believe innovation is apparently too sexy and another that subscribes to continuous organizational innovation (COI). 

Idealistic Innovation

Eggheads, academics, scientists, and researchers are just a few names levied at groups and individuals who arrive at new industry and functional “paradigm shifts.”  The ideals and new operating principles encased within technology envelops are rolled out to the media and conferences as a new Tour de Force. 

We’ve even witnessed this with industry standards groups, the addition of SOA, SaaS, Web 2.x/3.x solutions, and of course, risk management and securitizations.  All excellent ideals, but lead times that ranged from 3 to 10 years and in some cases still seeking a profitable business model within given niche markets.

In many cases introduced innovation was very disruptive not only to the infrastructural methods, but also chaotic when dealing functionally with consumers, enterprise data integration, privacy, aggregation, retention implementation and the list goes on.  Again, esoteric discussions that for many executives fail to resonate into profits.  In times of growth and profit some have said, “If the lack of adopting these innovations are hurting my bottom line now, why should I invest in them later when I have even less money?”

Therefore, without concrete examples, definitive payback schedules, and process and operational integration plans, innovative ideals have very little efficacy within the organizations – especially today.  The result of grandiose ideals is a lack of appreciation for continuous improvement using innovation to bolster operating, competitive, and profit positions. 

Idealistic innovation creates superior innovative discussions, but little actionable advice or roadmaps – poorly introduced, improperly framed, and no recognized expert (s) to ensure success.  Stated simply, the ideals are too intellectual for comprehension resulting in sponsors “outdistancing” the rest of the organization.  Everyone fails in these scenarios – even me.

COI — Relevant Innovation

Relevant innovation is not a second tier solution to a tier one problem or challenge.  At the tip of its spearhead is the realization that innovation is not sustainable unless it is designed into the culture and operations of the existing organization before it is deployed. 

It can also be iterative and more than likely continuous to positively adjust to actual results, market fluctuations, and consumer sentiments.  In the last decade, it has been implicitly discussed in books and papers by authors Tapscott, Kurzweil, and Hunter.

COI, continuous organizational innovation, is not a onetime event, nor is it associated with a singular program or initiative slogan.  Using strong analytics and inference-driven premises, COI is weaved into a creative-destructive sequence of operational actions that promote innovation viability, while driving up productivity and profits. 

Avoiding the “sexy” and superfluous nature of innovative adoption, COI progressive operations ensure that the introduction of change is more about valuations, efficiencies, and consumers rather than the innovation itself.  The innovation and its premises are merely steps or catalysts to a greater pragmatic result.  For example, the large push surrounding “e” is less significant than many technologists evangelize. 

The bottom line importance includes (but are not limited to) the reengineering of business models, the efficiencies gained, the forward and reverse supply chains, and the removal of huge swaths of waste built into the organizations.  The “e” principles will radically change as the markets change and the world financial systems reach a new equilibrium.  Whereas, the underlying or layered innovation it is very valuable, it is not THE innovation that compels action, adoption, sustainability or longer-term adaptability (i.e., the on-going cycle of true innovation) within the executive ranks.

A COI Quiz

Attribute and Response / Answer

1.            Do your organizational leaders or team primarily consider innovation to be:

a)            Sexy

b)            Cost Saving / Avoidance

c)            Competitive / Market Distinction

d)            Revenue Generation / Profitable

2.            Does your organization have a budget for innovation?

a)            No

b)            Yes

3.            How would you characterize your organization?

a)            Laggard

b)            Mainstream Adopter

c)            Early Adopter

d)            Pioneer or Trailblazer 

4.            Does your organization have a dedicated position specifically responsible and accountable for innovation (i.e., not the CIO / CTO)?

a)            No

b)            Yes

5.            How would you describe your organizational culture?

a)            Dysfunctional

b)            Informal

c)            Hierarchical

d)            Matrixed

e)            Blended

6.            How is innovation primarily introduced into your organization?

a)            No clue

b)            Media Articles

c)            Vendors

d)            Outsourcers

e)            Consultants / Researchers

f)             Individual Employees

g)            Internal Committee

7.            How is innovation fostered and / or rewarded within your organization?

a)            It Is Not

b)            Sporadic / Depends

c)            Established Processes

d)            Part of Organizational Values 

The list could be greatly expanded, and it will be in subsequent COI research results starting in 2009.  Suffice it to say, the more items selected farther down in the abbreviated answer list, the better COI organization you will be or hopefully have become.  And yes, using a series of analytics and correlations, valuations can be assessed resulting in profit and efficiency opportunities.

* * * * * * * * * *

Even with the aforementioned brief threads started on both sides of the debate, we will continue to watch the consumer, business, and credit markets worsen as a severe recession corrects the “innovative” follies of the past.  However, the data clearly points to a fundamental divergence between the implementation of COI metrics and the beliefs that innovation is achieved by periodic and violent inventive seizures.

It is this latter organizational “fits and starts” culture approach that, believe it or not, created or materially contributed to many of the problems we are unwinding today.  And no, lowering of credit standards and deployment of high-risk products is not real innovation.  Standards are not singularly innovation, nor are products that fail to incorporate process, compliance, risks, productivity, or more importantly a healthy consumer.

Perhaps innovation from a macro level is too sexy, too exotic, and too amorphous.  If assumed to be part of a “big-bang” approach, they are more akin to large, physical programs with high costs and even higher failure rates.  So yes, given these parameters and internal beliefs, innovation is often too sexy and too risky of a behavioral pattern to unleash within a for-profit organization.  It is especially too sexy for many corporate officers steeped in traditional views.  One can simply go back to the proven management classics from Deming, Drucker, Peters, or Champy, if you have lingering doubts.

However, as implied, irresponsibility is not innovation.  COI is not about arcane discussions.  If we look out to tomorrow, next week, next month and hopefully next year, we will see that innovation is NOT sexy – it is a pragmatic necessity for a new COI competitive world. 

Perhaps if COI was part of the cultures within the FSI, mortgage, automotive, and insurance industries, we might have avoided the need for bailouts created by iconic dogma, risk and greed?

Fighting Yesterdays “Wars”

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

“All the kings’ horses and all the kings’ men,” could not put a fatally flawed set of industries back together again.  John Thain, CEO of Merrill Lynch, framed the non-whimsical discussion on 11/11/08 in the Financial Times, “This is not like 1987 or 1998 or 2001.  The contraction going on is bigger than that.  We will in fact look back to the 1929 period to see the kind of slowdown we’re seeing now.  And he’s not the only one.  In general, as the old school pundits tout their diminishing merits and credentials as the flotilla around them continues to sink, do we really think this is just a “normal” cycle that can be righted with time and adjusted business models?

I can already see the hate mail filling my mailbox this week.  However, before I dig my grave even deeper, let’s give credit to the streamlined mortgage programs that are forthcoming from the GSE’s, JP Morgan, Bank of America, and CitiGroup.  These institutions, and others, are not just acting as good “corporate citizens,” they recognize the severity of the real challenges facing American consumers and investors.  Thank you for your leadership.

There are many shades of grey that have yet to be realized, let alone booked against a balance sheet (e.g., writing down principle amounts).  We must continue to fight for and achieve a proper balance between American homeowners and the domestic and global good required as part of evolving globalization realignment.  Moreover, very few are tackling the innovation that needs to be embraced with the modification of private MBS’s regarding their reverse supply chain demands (and yes, we never thought we’d have to worry about reverse supply chains). 

Now back to digging my resting place. 

  • So tell me, how you and your organization will innovate your way past collective unemployment rates that may exceed 8.5% early next year (translation, another 3.2 million lost jobs in a few short months approaching over 13 million unemployed)?  FYI, unemployment is at 6.5% today.
  • Will it simply be with the visionary creation of a new business model coupled with new “e” technologies that will make you profitable? 
  • And if we innovate and finally adopt e-solutions (which we must), what will happen to the dogmatic processes and the people associated with them as part of these newfound productivity improvements – will they be cut loose as they are “made redundant” thereby worsening job prospects?  Who will audit them and at what cost?
  • Who will assemble the roadmap to the future consumer and profitability – the same old school folks and advisors that lead us to this catastrophic, global financial hyper-hurricane? 
  • Will those who are advocating new workouts, mitigation servicing solutions, and compliance and risk management be successful?  Are the free-markets no longer free?  Who will pay for a trillion per year budget deficit, when and at what cost within an interconnected world?
  • Are we prepared for the permanent devaluation of industries, their associations, publications, and political clout?  Are we just trying to save our “own skin?”

I could go on, but I think the hole is deep enough this week.  No, I’m not trying to make light of the seriousness of our customers or the institutions that support them.  Trust me; I haven’t smiled about these events for over two years.  My tongue-in-check fun is truly at my own expense.  So what is the point?

I asked a question on a social networking site this week about innovation in mortgage.  None of the answers were very pretty regarding what the industry is doing, and where the future opportunities reside.  Some were downright hostile.  I personally asked several outsourcing providers about their future prospects and business.  Their answers were universally angry (and an industry that I think will be severely and permanently devalued) – “our customers just don’t [expletive] get it!”  I asked VC and private equity investors if they were backing or funding new solution sets for the mortgage industry.  They thought I was delusional. 

So as we think about innovation and we talk among ourselves at recycled conferences with the same media personnel courted by PR teams, are we indeed getting the whole story, a new chapter?  Are we merely being once again short-term focused just using a “new” set of superficial questions?  Are we, as leaders and an industry, fundamentally willing to hear out “divisive” ideals – how will they be recorded and acted upon?  Who will stand up and say, “I want to hear about something new and really different!”

I’ll make sure I turn on my email filters this week and install that remote car starter.

Together, We Can Innovate!

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

When I started this week’s column, it had a very different feel.  It possessed a decidedly different intent.  You see the gloom of the economic chaos coupled with what I am certain to be a protracted global rebalancing has left my market faith and industry leadership severely traumatized. 

My deliverance from these doldrums occurred when I visited with a 102 year old man who is still vigorous, intelligent, and who lived through what many of us only chatter about – long ago written within the pages of dusty old history books.  This brief interaction reignited within me one truism that we all must come to accept.  United together we can innovate and succeed even when we don’t think it is possible or practical.

Some would say over the last several months I have become a “Gloomy Gus.”  With the latest figures showing a U.S. national debt to annual GDP running at greater than 71% (the ratio in 2000 was under 25%), private mortgage securitization at near zero, and recently announced government “programs” at $3.5 trillion, I must admit my faith in our industry to reinvent itself outside of stringent government oversight is not high.  However, while the numbers continue to be poor and the job losses high, the seeds of pervasive, innovative transformations are now germinating. 

So what can be done?  What should be done?  How likely is it to transpire?  Whereas there are many iconic and significant issues we should cover (e.g., TARP, credit markets, consumer behavior, global recession, nearly 2,000 banks vying for government “injections,” et al), let’s quickly address a few that are not typical or even politically correct.

  • Beyond Origination and Distribution:  Down from its peak of nearly 65% just two years ago with an origination market of nearly $3 trillion, private securitization has fundamentally stopped.  Lacking a risk tie to the originations while putting servicers into a new series of responsibilities and accountability, the old financial instruments engineered to increase market participation are the biggest obstacle to changing the consumer payment equation.  However, several months ago the Treasury / FDIC delivered updated guidance on an arcane investment instrument that accounted for under $50 billion in asset issuance.  On Halloween (perhaps fitting), Chairman Bernanke made the markets buzz with an implication that these risk-assessed instruments, covered bonds, may be useful in the dismantling of the old GSE frameworks.  For those individuals who have dedicated nearly a decade in pushing standards, this “use case” or practical investment instrument demand may have created the real innovation – widespread and unequivocal adoption of industry and enterprise data interoperability – aka end-to-end STP of data supporting both forward and reverse supply chains.
  • Changing FSI National Agenda:  It’s all around us.  After a two year political debate, a referendum has emerged and a new national agenda is being formed.  Regardless of the party in power, a core realization has been internalized by those seeking productivity gains and ethical corporate leadership.  Many industry leaders once believed that labor was the cornerstone of productivity.  The national agenda has placed domestic jobs and national independence ahead of a quick “buck.”  Education and reinvention using domestic entrepreneurs and 21st century business models are surfacing in an effort to increase accountability and responsibility to community and the workforces.
  • Investor Driven Consumer Consumption:  Unlike the past, investors will have a greater deal of reserve supply chain impacts on the end consumer.  As witnessed at the recent national industry conference, there were many, many individuals and groups seeking out funding for new ideas.  Some were just there for survival.  However, all failed to appreciate the pervasive shift in sentiment and funds available for “new ideas” and the “innovation” these business plans supposedly addressed.  Moreover, investors in securitized financial instruments will demand a fully automated and auditable supply chain that lead to the creation of the instrument they are purchasing.  The implications demand compliance, fast response (i.e., covered bond defaults and cover pools), practical use of flexible standards, and an ability to support and deliver varied products to an increasingly strained consumer.
  • Domestic Arbitrage:  Jobs, jobs, and more jobs.  I’m amused at the outsourcing projections – activity does not signify booked and profitable structured arrangements.  Just look at the external analysis appearing in highly regarded independent sources including the Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times.  Domestic sourcing is not nationalism or protectionism just as outsourcing is not innovation.  A new balance is emerging as part of Globalization 5.0 and the equation is no longer zero sum or net negative.  The last time this occurred was nearly three decades ago when the country renovated itself for the ensuing 25 years.  We are at the cusp of a new set of discussions and corporate accountability. 

As we know, the mortgage industry is an eclectic, some would say “pioneering,” group of loosely interrelated professionals.  There are a few individuals and groups with historic awards.  There are more with educational credentials.  There are many with varied experience.  But none are fully prepared for the trillions being “invested” in the name of financial entities semi-nationalization that may last a decade – not to mention the forthcoming unwinding of the GSE’s as Chairman Bernanke recently implied. 

As we continue to fight off the lending orgy after effects of rampant risky behavior, we are witnessing a positive and dramatic rebirth of an industry in need of widespread integrity, new processes, and domestic jobs.  The page is turning onto new chapters.  They are new leaders and provokers that are not part of the “conference” elite and unlikely to be “invited in.” 

I should note that it this 102 year old man was no stranger – he is my Great Uncle Charles.  After witnessing a century of innovation, market changes, wars, the Great Depression, and lost loved ones, he still retains the spark of hope and rebirth as part of his daily life.  For an industry that must create new financial models which are applicable for a 21st century consumer and investor, we can only innovatively move forward as individuals, as organizations, and as a multifaceted profession together.  Like my uncle, there is a great deal of our future that has yet to be written, and we must openly and ethically accept our trials if we are to positively move forward.

Much can be learned from history and few individuals who lived through prior severe downturns.  Today some pundits suggest that the only thing missing 80 years later are the gangsters and the locust.  While I firmly believe there is much pain ahead for the next three years, a fundamental lesson learned is that the innovative prism of the past will not be the prism of the future no matter how much we think it will or should be. 

Innovation is neither linear nor neat – it is frequently born in the fire of despair.  We have the latter; now let’s make sure we innovate together for not only our success, but our customer’s future.  Are we prepared, committed, and passionate about doing the “right things?”