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Possibility thinking: lessons from breakthrough engineering

Robert Friedel (Professor, Department of History, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA.)
Jeanne Liedtka (Executive Director, Batten Institute, Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.)

Journal of Business Strategy

ISSN: 0275-6668

Article publication date: 10 July 2007

1392

Abstract

Purpose

The ability to see new possibilities is fundamental to creating innovative designs – but what do we know about state-of-the-art possibility thinking? The purpose of this paper is to look at this topic, which the strategy field has largely ignored in favor of analytics, by examining a selection of breakthrough engineering projects. Out of these, the paper aims to draw eight different ways of illuminating new possibilities – challenging, connecting, visualizing, collaborating, harmonizing, improvising, re-orienting, and playing – and discuss what each of these might look like if applied to business strategy.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper explores eight different engineering projects that are regarded as especially innovative. It then explores the lessons of these for business strategists.

Findings

The paper finds that innovative business strategy development has many parallels with engineering approaches.

Practical Implications

Some of the advice resulting from this perspective includes: take an absolute industry “truth” and turn it on its head; look outside the boundaries of your usual world; put the numbers aside and get some images down on paper; find a partner and work together; push yourself beyond the “workable” and try to get to “intriguing;” act as if necessity truly was the mother of invention; formulate a different definition of the problem; and go out and conduct some low cost experiments instead of forming a committee.

Originality/value

The creative front-end of the process of innovation is revealed to be more than a mysterious “black box.” Instead, eight systematic ways to generate possibilities, using concrete examples from both the world of engineering and business, are described to help managers begin to see new possibilities for themselves.

Keywords

Citation

Friedel, R. and Liedtka, J. (2007), "Possibility thinking: lessons from breakthrough engineering", Journal of Business Strategy, Vol. 28 No. 4, pp. 30-37. https://doi.org/10.1108/02756660710760926

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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