Give Innovation a Chance – Move off the Solution!

So there’s consensus within your organisation that now is the time to innovate. But months down the line the “innovation” is launched to the market only to become a commercial flop. So what went wrong?

So there’s consensus within your organisation that now is the time to innovate.  Competitive pressures are mounting up and more than ever you need to develop that unique solution for your customers to ensure your business continues to be a success. But you want to get that innovation to the market fast.  There is enormous pressure to start working on a solution, any solution.
 
You conduct some research, look at current solutions available and before you know it, decisions are made and resources are diverted into product development.  But months down the line the “innovation” is launched to the market only to become a commercial flop.  Your innovation didn’t really solve a problem.  There’s no demand for your product.
 
So what went wrong?  Well, the organisation was too quick to focus on a solution without properly understanding the customers’ outcomes.  In my paper “The Innovation Lens“, I discussed Anthony Ulwick’s Outcome-Driven Innovation Model which focuses on the jobs the customer will do with or without the solutions available.
 
Customer outcomes should relate to the job the customer is trying to get done; they should not include a solution or features.  Don’t unnecessarily narrow the scope of innovation to something the customer is currently using rather than what the customer is trying to get done.  Current products and services are merely point-in-time solutions that enable customers to execute jobs.
 
In trying to analyse the customer outcomes, Ulwick believes that most projects fail not because customers don’t understand the problem but because the people trying to solve the problem don’t ask the right questions.  So whilst we need to carefully eliminate assumed solutions from our customers’ need statements, we also need to set the research objectives correctly in the first instance.
 
Take our recent participation in the MOD Grand Challenge as an example.  The aim of the Grand Challenge was to:
 
“Create a system that can detect, identify, locate and report a comprehensive range of military threats in a hostile urban environment, with a high degree of autonomy “.
 
By specifying the need for autonomy, an element of the solution was outlined within the main objective, thereby seriously restricting the scope for an early innovation.   Autonomous general purpose threat detection is a very hard problem that is unlikely to be solved any time soon. And yet, soldiers need a solution to detect threats right now.  By saying that the solution must be autonomous closes the door on an “Apple iPod” type innovation that is highly productive and ergonomic.
 
In setting the outcome criteria for the competition, it would have been better in terms of number of threats identified, minimising false positives and location errors.  And to reward the benefits of autonomy, the underlying criteria could have been set as: minimising the number of people to operate the system, the time to perform the task, or to maximise the stand-off range and maybe add the constraint that operators should have their “eyes out” rather than “eyes down” for better safety under gunfire.  Expressing the criteria in this way provides scope for other radical ways of solving problems other than through autonomy.
 
We need to move off the solution when looking for ways to innovate.  We need to talk about jobs, outcomes and constraints instead of solutions and give innovation a chance.

Mindsheet exhibits at National Science and Engineering Week

Mindsheet take their Testudo reconnaisannce robot to a National Science and Engineering Week exhibition at Armoury House.

An army of robots went on display today [11 March 2009] to demonstrate the impact of science and technology on military operations.

Unmanned bomb disposal vehicles and spy robots operated using an Xbox games console controller were lined up for inspection at Armoury House in London.

Mindsheet's Testudo robot at Armoury House
Mindsheet's Testudo robot at Armoury House

The exhibition is part of National Science and Engineering Week (NSEW), an annual series of events celebrating the importance of science, engineering and technology in our lives.

Minister for Defence Equipment and Support Quentin Davies said: ‘The Ministry of Defence and the defence industry are working together to exploit new technologies that can help and protect our armed forces”.

Mindsheet took along their Testudo reconnaisannce robot to the event organised by the MOD.  Testudo was originally conceived for the MOD Grand Challenge in 2008 and we are now under contract with the MOD to make the robot more rugged and user-friendly for battlefield use.

Further coverage of the event:

Mail Online

TMCnet.com

Mindsheet Wins MOD Contract to Develop a Portable “Battle-Winning” Reconnaissance Robot

Mindsheet is pleased to announce that we have been awarded an MOD contract to develop a rugged mini-robot to act as a reconnaissance scout for troops.

Mindsheet Press Release
25 February 2009

Mindsheet is pleased to announce that we have been awarded an MOD contract by the CDE (Centre for Defence Enterprise) to develop a rugged mini-robot, named Testudo, to act as a reconnaissance scout for troops. 

Originally unveiled at the MOD Grand Challenge 2008, the robot scout is a platoon level asset that supports hazardous ground manoeuvres such as early warning of threat events, clearance of hazardous ground, compounds and buildings and could even help locate enemy fire. This low cost, man portable device acts as a force multiplier that could ultimately save lives. 

The £28k contract, awarded in January 2009, will enable Mindsheet to further develop the robot for field testing in March with a view to realise the production system later in 2009.

Mindsheet has already been awarded Innovation of the Year by The News, Portsmouth, for work on the robot to date.

Raglan Tribe, the Managing Director of Mindsheet, says:

It’s a great honour to be given the opportunity to support our troops. Hopefully, this programme will allow us to get the technology in a state where it could help save lives.  If so, then our job is done”.

END

War of the future: Robot versus robot

From the Toronto Star, May 02, 2008–A fleet of tiny tanks, each no bigger than a breadbox, cruising in remote-control formation down the dusty alleys of Afghanistan to neutralize roadside bombs……The Grand Challenge was launched in 2006 in an attempt to solve modern military riddles …

From the Toronto Star, May 02, 2008

LONDON–A fleet of tiny tanks, each no bigger than a breadbox, cruising in remote-control formation down the dusty alleys of Afghanistan to neutralize roadside bombs…

…The Grand Challenge (detailed at www.challenge.mod.uk) was launched in 2006 in an attempt to solve modern military riddles …

… Several of the systems entailed futuristic flying bots built from scratch. Others, such as the fleet-formation ground system by the British firm Mindsheet, are adapting conceptual robot armies based on over-the-counter cars available at hobby shops everywhere.
“We chose not to reinvent the wheel but to work instead with the wheels readily available. That way we are able to more easily concentrate on providing a tool that a soldier in Afghanistan would be able to begin using immediately,” said Mindsheet managing director Raglan Tribe …

…”It is a weird extrapolation, the idea that war is becoming a scenario of `Your robots versus our robots,’ Why not just fight it out on a video game instead?” said Mindsheet’s Tribe. “But this is where things are moving.”

Read full article at www.thestar.com

Mini-helicopters, flying saucers and robot buggies fight it out for war games prize

“We call it boys’ toys for warfare,” bellows Chris Burgess, as the hip-hop act Stromkern roars “Come Armageddon come” from the plasma screen behind him. On the video a radio-controlled buggy is zipping along a dusty street, its onboard camera swivelling left and right, on the lookout for snipers and roadside bombs that might lie ahead.

“We call it boys’ toys for warfare,” bellows Chris Burgess, as the hip-hop act Stromkern roars “Come Armageddon come” from the plasma screen behind him. On the video a radio-controlled buggy is zipping along a dusty street, its onboard camera swivelling left and right, on the lookout for snipers and roadside bombs that might lie ahead.
Burgess belongs to Mindsheet, one of 11 teams unveiled as finalists in the Ministry of Defence’s most ambitious – and unusual – attempt to bring hi-tech science to the frontline. Called the Grand Challenge, the £4m project calls on engineers to design a robot that can scour an urban area for enemy combatants and explosives and report back, preferably without human intervention …”

Read full article at www.guardian.co.uk

From The Guardian, Friday May 2 2008