Innovation Metrics

Innovation Metrics

Innovation Metrics Jonathan Poland

Innovation metrics are tools used to assess the innovation efforts of a company. It can be challenging to accurately measure innovation, as it is often intertwined with more routine activities such as continuous improvement. The objective of innovation is to create significantly superior techniques and products compared to competitors. Therefore, metrics for early stage innovation may aim to verify that ideas and experiments are bold enough. This requires specialized metrics, as traditional business metrics are typically geared towards evaluating end results like revenue and risk reduction, rather than risk-taking.

Cost Improvement Rate

In many industries, innovation is focused on reducing a particular cost. For example, in the solar energy industry a low cost per watt is a valuable competitive advantage. A new cost rate represents the annualized reduction in a critical cost.

Development Pipeline

The number of innovations at each stage in an innovation pipeline.

Experiment Cycle Time

The average time from initial acceptance of an idea to its ultimate rejection. A short experiment cycle time indicates that ideas are quickly being validated and tested. Successful ideas are measured with the length of full innovation cycles such as time to market.

Experiments

The number of experiments conducted per month or quarter and their success rate.

Growth Gap

The gap between your target and actual growth rate. Revenue growth is often the primary goal of innovation.

Idea Breadth

The number of unique categories of innovation ideas. May highlight problems such as an innovation program that is over focused on releasing a particular category of product.

Idea Depth

The number of unique sources for ideas. Measures how well your innovation program capture ideas from your employees, partners and customers as opposed to resulting from two people brainstorming in a room.

Idea Generation

The total number of ideas that you’re considering per month or quarter.

Idea Selection

The percentage of ideas that are being accepted for experimentation.

Innovation Compensation

The percentage of your performance based compensation that can is directly tied to successful innovation.

Innovation Overhead

Your total innovation spend as a percentage of revenue. Can be used to benchmark against an industry or competitor.

New Patents

The number of new patents is amongst the oldest ways to measure innovation. Patents can be dangerous as a primary goal because they aren’t necessarily valuable to your business. It is common for leading companies by number of patents to be large, well established firms that have moderate revenue growth. In some cases, such firms are perceived as lacking in innovation despite impressive patent numbers.

New Products

The number of new products launched in a quarter. The definition of new product is important here as a slight upgrade to a product is often considered new. The goal of product innovation is to create products that improve on the old by an order of magnitude. As such, only truly new products are typically counted for the purposes of innovation metrics.

New Revenue Rate

The percentage of your revenue that comes from products that didn’t exist 3 years ago.

Project Risk

The project risk related to late stage innovation initiatives. Innovation processes typically seek to shift risks to early stage lightweight experimentation. Late stage risks are often commercially relevant and are managed with standard risk management practices.

Return On Investment

Standard financial metrics such as return on investment are used to measure the returns of an innovation program as a whole with the understanding that innovation is a long term investment that is better measured over long periods such as 3 years as opposed to quarter over quarter.

Sustainability Metrics

Innovation may be geared towards an organization’s sustainability goals that are measured with metrics such as unit energy consumption or waste output.

Time To Market

The average cycle time from idea to launch.

Time To Volume

The average cycle time from idea to launch and achievement of commercial relevance as measured by business volumes such as service subscribers.

Lead Generation Jonathan Poland

Lead Generation

Lead generation is the process of identifying and attracting potential customers for a business. This is typically the first step…

Customer Research Jonathan Poland

Customer Research

Customer research involves gathering information and insights about customers in order to build a deeper understanding of their needs, preferences,…

Project Communication Jonathan Poland

Project Communication

Project communication is the exchange of information and messages that occurs during the planning, execution, and evaluation phases of a…

One Stop Shop Jonathan Poland

One Stop Shop

A one stop shop model is a business model in which a single company or organization offers a wide range…

Reputational Risk Jonathan Poland

Reputational Risk

Reputational risk refers to the potential for damage to an organization’s reputation as a result of its actions or inactions.…

Thought Process Jonathan Poland

Thought Process

Thought is the mental process of perceiving, organizing, and interpreting information. It is the foundation of all higher cognitive functions,…

Implementation Jonathan Poland

Implementation

Implementation is the process of putting a plan or idea into action. In a business context, implementation refers to the…

Growth Strategy Jonathan Poland

Growth Strategy

A growth strategy is a plan to increase or improve some KPI, like revenue, profit, subscribers, etc.

Administrative Burden Jonathan Poland

Administrative Burden

Administrative burden refers to the workload and effort required to comply with laws and regulations that do not directly contribute…

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Latent Need Jonathan Poland

Latent Need

A latent need is a customer need that is not currently being met by the market and is not actively…

Time to Volume Jonathan Poland

Time to Volume

Time to volume is a marketing metric that measures the time it takes for a new product to go from concept to launch and reach a significant level of sales or usage.

Risk Estimates Jonathan Poland

Risk Estimates

Risk estimates are predictions or projections of the likelihood and potential consequences of risks. They are used to inform risk…

Product Durability Jonathan Poland

Product Durability

A durable product, often referred to as a durable good, is a product that does not quickly wear out or,…

What is Leadership? Jonathan Poland

What is Leadership?

In the modern business world, where rapid changes, technological advancements, and global challenges are the norm, effective leadership is more…

Market Saturation Jonathan Poland

Market Saturation

Market saturation refers to a state in which a particular market is filled with a high number of similar products…

Project Failure Jonathan Poland

Project Failure

A project is considered a failure when it does not meet the expectations of sponsors and other key stakeholders. This…

Value of Offerings Jonathan Poland

Value of Offerings

Value is a concept that refers to the usefulness, worth, and importance that customers assign to products and services. This…

Productivity Rate Jonathan Poland

Productivity Rate

Productivity rate is a measure of the efficiency with which a company or organization produces goods or services. It is…