We’ve talked quite a bit lately about how InnovationOps—an approach that brings together an organization’s people, processes and the innovation jobs they do—helps to make innovation a predictable and repeatable exercise. It removes silos and encourages collaboration as everyone deprioritizes departmental and team goals for overarching organizational goals. But what factors maintain a practical InnovationOps approach? In my experience, it’s portfolio management and governance management.
Often, when talking about innovation strategy, portfolios represent projects. But that’s not a 360-view of what portfolios mean for our purposes. Portfolios can also include ideas and products. Another misconception is that portfolios are independent, but most of our customers have significant overlap on project, product and idea portfolios. And within that overlap, you’ll find new strategies.
Take the push for sustainability, for example, where companies have a mix of ideas (incremental to radical innovation), projects (how to build sustainably and source materials) and products (environmental compatibility). Within each of these three portfolio buckets are pieces of the puzzle—one specific to your company. In an InnovationOps approach, that information is recorded and accessible for those who need it.
To move forward a predefined innovation strategy, portfolio optimization is key. First, identify and define your key performance indicators (KPIs). To be clear, KPIs vary from portfolio to portfolio. They could be based on return, cost-reduction or numerous other factors. Here are some questions you should ask to help ensure portfolio optimization:
Once you’ve answered those questions, portfolio managers are in a position to do the job of actually managing the portfolios. There are innumerable considerations a portfolio manager may have, but when boiled down, they’re continuously evaluating:
All three of these areas will help portfolio managers to support organizational goals, but that will require strategic governance.
As mentioned, InnovationOps helps to make any innovation process predictable and repeatable —and that’s why governance is essential to this approach. Within a portfolio structure, governance creates guardrails that help portfolio managers to address strategy, risk/return and capabilities.
However, governance should be more than a set of rules that tell you what and what not to do. Within an InnovationOps approach, governance should be flexible enough to adjust guardrails when necessary. Also, governance should be constructed to allow for collaboration and cross-functional integration. InnovationOps should unite people, but traditional governance models haven’t always encouraged that mindset.
To achieve flexibility and collaboration, governance should include the following elements to enhance your innovation process:
Managing innovation governance
What exactly are we trying to manage as we drill into governance within an InnovationOps approach? There are three critical areas that every company is trying to grow and balance, irrespective of the industry:
As organizations hone in on perfecting portfolio management and governance management techniques, InnovationOps becomes a much more straightforward approach to apply. Want to learn more? I recently conducted a webinar in Sopheon’s Mastering InnovationOps series that discusses this concept in depth.