November 30, 2023 By IBM Think 2 min read

Arvind Krishna recently spoke with former IBMer and author Danny Sabbah about a new book he co-authored, The Heart of Innovation: A Field Guide for Navigating to Authentic Demand. In their conversation, Arvind and Danny discussed the secret to determining authentic demand and building innovative products that achieve runaway success.

Here are five facts about innovation, taken from the book and their conversation, that may surprise you:

  1. While major technology breakthroughs dominate our perception of innovation—think the Xerox machine, the IBM PC, the Apple iPhone—those are few and far between. In fact, around two-thirds of all market launches collapse within a year.
  2. Successful innovation requires understanding demand. One example from The Heart of Innovation centers around building a product for recreational fishermen. The product faltered at first. Why? Because the focus was on the “fishermen” aspect rather than the “recreational” appeal. Once the team realized it was really the “recreational” aspect that drove demand, the market exploded.
  3. A key to achieving runaway success for a product is the notion of “negative thinking.” Think about demand from a “not‑not” perspective; how to evolve the product from “It would be nice to have this” to “I can’t not have this.” It’s about understanding what turns the product into something that is compelling and unavoidable to help you overcome that wall of fundamental indifference.
  4. Inherent biases, blind spots and false assumptions can impact innovation. This can include seeking out information that confirms our existing beliefs; continuing to invest time, money and resources in a project because of what we’ve already put into it; and misunderstanding information based on the way it is presented or framed. For example, patients will consistently choose a doctor who describes a medical procedure as having a 90% success rate over another doctor who describes the same procedure as having a 10% failure rate.
  5. Innovation rarely relies on a “eureka moment.” It is often a slow, grinding process. As this uniquely insightful book reveals, that process should start by developing a rigorous, science-based approach to identifying authentic demand and recognizing the effects of bias.

Go deeper into the secrets to successful innovation with Arvind and Danny in their fireside chat, including moving from “alchemy to chemistry,” addressing an unmet need to create authentic demand and more.

Watch the video via the IBM Media Center
Was this article helpful?
YesNo

More from Business transformation

How will quantum impact the biotech industry?

5 min read - The physics of atoms and the technology behind treating disease might sound like disparate fields. However, in the past few decades, advances in artificial intelligence, sensing, simulation and more have driven enormous impacts within the biotech industry. Quantum computing provides an opportunity to extend these advancements with computational speedups and/or accuracy in each of those areas. Now is the time for enterprises, commercial organizations and research institutions to begin exploring how to use quantum to solve problems in their respective domains. As a Partner in IBM’s Quantum practice, I've had the pleasure of working…

AI in commerce: Essential use cases for B2B and B2C

9 min read - Four AI in commerce use cases are already transforming the customer journey: modernization and business model expansion; dynamic product experience management (PXM); order intelligence; and payments and security.  By implementing effective solutions for AI in commerce, brands can create seamless, personalized buying experiences that increase customer loyalty, customer engagement, retention and share of wallet across B2B and B2C channels.  Poorly run implementations of traditional or generative AI in commerce—such as models trained on inadequate or inappropriate data—lead to bad experiences…

The CFO’s role in the age of generative AI

4 min read - CFOs are the stewards of investment capital, orchestrating a movement with transformative technology and innovation to evolve businesses, accelerate revenue streams and drive meaningful outcomes. The current business environment has CFOs facing headwinds for decision-making in less-than-ideal conditions with rapidly shifting regulations, tedious reporting standards, ESG requirements and inflationary pressures; however, the need for growth and profit expansion remains, and as CEOs look for ways to increase productivity, the CFO is emerging as a new advisor on technology and innovation.…

IBM Newsletters

Get our newsletters and topic updates that deliver the latest thought leadership and insights on emerging trends.
Subscribe now More newsletters