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Making the Most of Ideas

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Title: Making the Most of Ideas


1
Making the Most of Ideas
  • Prof. M.J. Gregory

2
Overview
  • Industrial ideas
  • Global context
  • Emerging capabilities
  • Working in networks
  • Industrial innovation

3
Industrial Ideas
  • Products ARM Microcircuit design
  • Production Zara Fashionable clothes
  • Distribution Dell Personal computers
  • Services Rolls-Royce Aero-engines

4
ARM microchipsmarketinggtdesigngtproductiongtdistr
ibutiongtservice
  • ARM designs used in 75of mobile phones
  • Close to global customers and OEMs
  • Fabless business model
  • Substantial process knowledge

5
Zara - clothesmarketinggtdesigngtproductiongtdistrib
utiongtservice
  • Spanish clothes maker Zara owns all production
    capability
  • Products in own shops change every 2 weeks
  • Production can be flexed to respond to demand
  • Competitors cant follow!

6
Dell personal computers marketinggtdesigngtproduc
tiongtdistributiongtservice
  • Dell pioneered large scale direct selling.
  • Their model allows on-line customisation of
    products
  • Production and delivery status can be tracked by
    the customer
  • On-line diagnostics and after sales service
    minimise support costs

7
Rolls-Royce Aeroenginesmarketinggtdesigngtproduct
iongtdistributiongtservice
  • Responding to customer needs
  • Rapid growth in market share
  • Totalcare service model 60 of revenues
  • Implications for design and production

8
Innovation, Value Chain Business Models
  • Innovation can occur within and between each
    stage along the value chain
  • MarketinggtDesigngtProductiongtDistributiongtService
  • but the stages often have different owners and
    the interfaces and interdependencies between them
    are often poorly understood.

9
and the context is changing rapidly
  • Global demand for products is rising
  • Disintegration of stages in some value chains
  • Value-adding opportunities at each stage
  • BUT
  • Globalisation is changing industry configurations
  • Industrial capabilities are evolving rapidly

10
Globalisation the case of China
  • China is emerging as an industrial powerhouse
  • It has received massive inward investment
  • Industrial development has been systematic
  • High-tech capabilities are increasing rapidly
  • Growth impacts global industrial structures

11
Growth
Average annual growth rate was more than 10
between 1980 and 2004
Source Chinese National Statistics Annual Report
(2005)
12
Foreign Direct Investment
Billion US Dollars
Source http//www.china.org.cn
13
New Workshop of the World- Pearl River Delta
  • 70 of the worlds photocopiers
  • 60 of the worlds microwaves
  • 160,000 people in single factory for running
    shoes

14
New Workshop of the World - Yangtse River Delta
  • 30 of the worlds ties
  • 70 of the worlds
  • lighters
  • fastest growing car production location

15
Domestic appliances - Galanz
  • Largest microwave oven production base in the
    world
  • Annual production capacity of 15 million units
    11,000 employees.
  • Turnover 700m
  • 70 of China market,
  • 40 of global market.

16
Clothing - Meters/Bonwe
  • Virtual company in Garment Industry
  • Grown dramatically from a shop into a regional
    brand and into the leading national brand
  • Over 1000 retail outlets in China
  • Sales of US250 million in 2003.

17
So how do they do it?
  • Cheap labour
  • Foreign Direct Investment
  • Natural resources
  • But also
  • Systematic development of infrastructure
  • Strategic development of industries
  • Increasing focus on innovation and service!

18
Industrial Capabilities - Hon-Hai
marketinggtdesigngtproductiongtdistributiongtservice
  • Global electronics production capability
  • Developed strongly from component production
  • Value capture through economies of scale and
    flexibility
  • Moving to design and service

19
..and is extending its scope
  • For example Hon-Hais strategy reads
  • Focus on global logistic capabilities
  • Expand production capacity
  • Achieve further vertical integration
  • Maintain technologically advanced and flexible
    production capabilities
  • will leverage off its manufacturing expertise
    and continue to move tirelessly into new areas of
    related business

20
and as for brand
  • We have no brand
  • but, our quality is the brand
  • our technology is the brand
  • our people are the brand

21
..and then the ODMs
  • Original Design and Manufacturing businesses
  • Execute the whole manufacturing cycle
  • Ask you (the brand owner) if you would like some
  • Sell the surplus under their own brand and
  • Develop proprietary design, product and process
    technologies!

22
QCI - Quanta computer Inc.
Established - May 1988 Market Cap - US7B Revenue
(04) - US 10.14B Employees - 25,000
23
Strong and diverse customer base
24
Industrialised countries are responding by
  • Changing business models
  • Networking
  • RD
  • Design
  • Innovation
  • Service

25
Networked RD
  • China and India accounted for 3.4 of foreign RD
    sites in 1990, increasing to 13.9 by 2004. 
  • 77 of new RD sites planned through 2007 slated
    for either China or India. 
  • By the end of 2007, China and India will account
    for 31 of global RD staff, up from 19 in
    2004. 
  • Participants projected 37 faster time-to-market
    and 24 lower costs with an integrated innovation
    network
  • Booz Allen Hamilton 2006

26
Networked design - Apple
  • A team of engineers designed and built the first
    iPod in less than a year,
  • PortalPlayer had a reference design based on two
    ARM cores
  • Pixo created and refined the user interface,
    under the direct supervision of CEO Steve Jobs

27
Open Innovation Supply PG
  • Entrepreneur spotted a rotating sweet!!
  • Healthcare professionals designed the product
  • Production outsourced
  • Leading PG brand Crest distributes.

28
Networked Services - Serco
  • Serco is an international service company
  • Manages people, processes, technology and assets
  • Offers operational, management and consulting
    expertise
  • The approach offers economies of scale and
    opportunities for innovation

29
Industrial Innovation involves
  • The full cycle from understanding markets
    through RD, product design, production, supply
    and services within an economic and social
    context
  • and is increasingly
  • Global, Connected, Multi- partner, Multi-business

30
What can industrial innovation do for us?
  • Improve efficiency
  • Exploit capabilities
  • Access global resources
  • Capture global business
  • Create new industries

31
BQ China
  • BQ is the leading DIY chain in China
  • It commissions designs, outsources production,
    distributes, sells and services
  • These activities are orchestrated from the UK

32
Plastic Logic
  • The power of electronics withthe pervasiveness
    of printing
  • Enables new product concepts including displays
    and sensors.
  • Potential to create a new industry through
    radical change in economics of production

33
So whose job is it to pull the bits together?
No single group has sufficient influence
  • Government sets the context
  • Businesses marshall resources
  • Professions develop share expertise
  • Academics develop coordinate knowledge

34
And experts have specific roles
  • Scientists to discover new knowledge
  • Engineers to design new products and services
  • Managers to make business more efficient
  • Industrialists to make money for shareholders
  • Policy-makers to create maximum value for
    society

35
So new approaches are needed to
  • Build better bridges between science,
    engineering, business and economics
  • Focus on the integrated development of products
    and services
  • Identify trends, trajectories and opportunities
    more clearly
  • Recognise that
  • Industrial Innovation Modern Manufacturing

36
We need a better understanding of
  • Value creation and appropriation which requires
    knowing what it is and how it can be captured
  • Partner identification and evaluation - which
    requires sophisticated due-diligence
  • Production ramp-up - which requires sophisticated
    technical capabilities
  • Management of dynamic relationships - while
    making sure they dont eat your lunch!

37
and new expertise including
  • Improved skills in global co-ordination
  • A sector by sector understanding of the role and
    dynamics of design, production and service
  • Enhanced early stage production capability
  • Control - not necessarily ownership - of
    production capacity
  • Comprehensive innovation capabilities

38
Conclusions
  • Making the most of new ideas requires
  • Inventiveness
  • Global reach
  • Appropriate institutions
  • An integrated approach to education
  • A comprehensive approach to innovation
  • for which the UK is particularly well placed!
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