What CEOs Really Think About Innovation
If you’re a CEO reading the headlines in 2017, things aren’t terribly reassuring. Many of the companies named above were already investing heavily in innovation—Target and GE, for instance, each had several initiatives focused on working with startups, tapping into outside expertise, and attracting new kinds of talent.
So is the message to CEOs that they should make bigger, bolder bets? Or turn to strategies that are guaranteed to deliver a return, like cutting staff, raising prices, shutting down underperforming stores, and outsourcing non-core operations?
We wanted to explore how CEOs think about innovation-driven growth—and the costs of investing in projects that may not have a clear payoff. So we spoke with current and former CEOs of companies like Google, Staples, Crate & Barrel, and UPS, as well as leadership professors at Harvard Business School and Stanford University.
Our big questions: what role should the CEO play in fostering innovation? And how can corporate innovators best work with the CEO to identify and pursue sources of future growth?
We also worked with the design firm L-Dopa to create a set of four playing cards (see below) that represent the different roles that CEOs can play, from cost-cutter to innovation advocate. Do any of them resemble someone you’ve worked for?