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How strategic innovation really gets started

Robert Chapman Wood (Associate professor of strategic management at San José State University, San José, California, where he studies processes of innovation and managed institutional change in large organizations. Prior to his academic career he was a research director at Strategos, a California‐based consulting firm headed by Gary Hamel.)

Strategy & Leadership

ISSN: 1087-8572

Article publication date: 9 January 2007

5268

Abstract

Purpose

Explains (using a model and cases) how companies that lack a capability for continual strategic innovation can bring one into existence.

Design/methodology/approach

Author developed histories of how continual innovation emerged or failed to emerge in six firms, drew conclusions based on what worked in the successes.

Findings

Strategic innovation gets started with a five‐step process that involves improvising initial innovation processes, then learning from what was improvised.

Research limitations/implications

Though the companies studied were selected to represent different industries and kinds of strategic innovation, the number was relatively small. Findings should be replicated in studies of more firms.

Practical implications

Instead of using standard organizational change models that call for clear goals that leaders can manage to, firms seeking repeated strategic innovation should create inspiring but necessarily vague goals, improvise first steps toward them, and encourage emergence of innovation routines based on what was improvised.

Originality/value

Provides an evidence‐based model of how to bring Continual Strategic Innovation into existence.

Keywords

Citation

Chapman Wood, R. (2007), "How strategic innovation really gets started", Strategy & Leadership, Vol. 35 No. 1, pp. 21-29. https://doi.org/10.1108/10878570710717254

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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