Here are two ways your company can fail. Keep doing more of the same. Or, if you'd prefer, start doing only what's new.
You want it to thrive so you need to take the trickier middle way; you need to find the right balance between exploring new ideas and exploiting existing ones. That is, between creating new services and products that push frontiers despite the inherent risks, and using the knowledge that you already have to make something that is good even better.
It's easy to find examples of companies that go down because they were unable to imagine any future beyond business as usual. Take Facit, an office equipment manufacturer that was established in Sweden in the 1920s. It was known for making the best mechanical calculators in the world - "everybody" used them. Then the electronic calculator came along. And how did Facit respond? By continuing to do exactly what it had always done: manufacture mechanical calculators. Its engineers recognised the value of electronic calculators - they bought some in Japan and used them to double-check the accuracy of their own products - but that did not change the company's strategy. Within six months the firm lost not just its place at the top of the pyramid, but everything. It collapsed completely.
It's obvious that Facit failed because it focused far too strongly on exploiting what it had to the exclusion of developing new ideas, but out-of-control exploration can be just as dangerous. I saw this first-hand a few years ago when I worked closely with a brilliant European biotech firm that had applications that promised to diagnose, or even cure, some forms of blood cancer. The company was extremely innovative; every day was about creating something new. And not just creating it but making sure that it was absolutely perfect.
But the sad thing was that before these ideas became perfect - or even good enough - they became obsolete. The company spent so much time coming up with ideas that it wasn't able to exploit them.
So, exploitation and exploration both carry significant risks when they're taken to extremes. Companies that find a balance see huge pay-offs. Think of Nestle's creation of Nespresso, Lego's move into animated films and Toyota's creation of hybrid vehicles.
Our research suggests only about two per cent of companies successfully manage both exploration and exploitation in parallel. Why is it so difficult? Largely because there are numerous traps that keep us where we are. Two of the biggest are the "perpetual search trap" and the "success trap".
The first of these arises when a company discovers something but does not have the patience or persistence to stick at it and make it work. It doesn't put in the time or the effort needed to turn an exciting idea into commercialising a new product or service. Instead, it moves on to the next discovery - which it will treat in just the same way. The success trap, meanwhile, is what caught Facit out. The company was so good at making mechanical calculators that they simply didn't want to change. In the short term doing more of the same is not risky, in the medium term not changing is detrimental.
There are at least four things we can do to avoid these traps. First, get ahead of the crisis. Ready yourself for the next battle. Next, think in multiple time scales. In any one year innovation typically accounts for only about 30 per cent of a company's value. But across 10 years, innovation and the ability to renew accounts for 70 per cent. Executives need to fund the journey and lead the long term. Third, invite diversity of talent to challenge you. Balancing exploration and innovation is a team sport. It requires people who are willing to challenge the company and its strategy - and a corporate board that will accept and listen to that challenge.
Finally, be skeptical of success.
Knut Haanaes
Professor, IMD Business School
Professor, IMD Business School