I had the wonderful opportunity at the 2013 Marketing World (sponsored by Frost and Sullivan) to spend time talking with Pam Didner, Global Integrated Marketing Strategist at Intel Corporation. I'd met Pam previously, but the Marketing World setting provided time to learn more about her work, interests, and blog. Pam's "Savory Bites" blog focuses on a variety of business and personal topics relevant for Brainzooming blog readers. And as of 2014, Pam is set to publish a new book, "Global Content Marketing: How to Create Great Content, Reach More Customers, and Build a Worldwide Marketing Strategy that Works" for McGraw-Hill.
To introduce you to Pam Didner, Savory Bites, and her strategic perspective, she agreed to let us share a recent post on making idea sourcing innovative ideas sustainable for the long-term through a sound process. While crowdsourcing ideas to shape a business sounds attractive, Pam's post sheds light on how two organizations have not only kept cultivating innovative ideas but have also done something about them for more than five years:
It’s interesting to compare the results of a technology company and a restaurant company:
Ideas submitted | Ideas implemented | % of implementation | |
Dell | 19,102 | 537+ | 2.8% |
Starbucks | 150,000 | 277 | 0.18% |
Once you set up a community or a website to solicit customer feedback, you need a back-end process to ensure the ideas are evaluated and the innovative ideas are implemented.
Although it’s easy to build categories on your website, it’s important to think through how you’d like to categorize your customers’ ideas. Should you categorize by your products, organization structure, topics, etc.? The way you categorize will determine the subsequent steps for reviewing and implementing. To make it easier to engage with internal stakeholders from different organizations, it may make sense to classify your ideas by products and organization structures.
Key consideration: How do you make it easy for a customer to classify his ideas and also easy for internal stakeholders to sort through the ideas for further follow-up?
This needs to be a frequent, regularly scheduled process, especially if the volume of submissions is high. A team from multiple organizations needs to be formed and a workflow process needs to be established for the initial screening, parsing and prioritization based on categories. No organization has unlimited budget and resources. To select the right innovative ideas to implement, a second or third round of review and prioritization may be necessary. Depending on the scope of the ideas, upper management may need to approve them. It’s highly recommended to have senior managers involved in the selection of ideas in the 2nd or 3rd round of reviews. Management cares about the bottom-line. Quantify how the idea will impact revenue, cost or customer experience and satisfaction. Identify key success metrics.
Key consideration: Resource properly from internal organizations to review, screen and prioritize ideas. Establish an automatic workflow process to make it easy for internal partners to review and prioritize ideas. It’s a plus to get senior managers involved.
Some ideas may be low-hanging fruit, but they still require time and resources to implement. It’s important to take care of two things before implementation: budget and resource. Clearly identify who should take ownership for implementation and how much it will cost to do it. Sometimes, it makes sense to incorporate implementation of these ideas into the existing product launch or revision processes. Setting up regular review meetings to track progress is essential.
Key consideration: Settle budget and resources first. Identify clear project owners and allocate the right budget to support implementation.
A process to track and report on the success or failure of idea implementation is essential. Starbucks is able to create a 5-year celebration infographic, due to its discipline in tracking idea implementations. Track actual results against the key success metrics you designed in step 2.
Key consideration: Have a process for tracking the results and share the results with the community and customers.
It takes time, process, budget, and people to implement ideas from your customers. Once an idea is piloted successfully, it also takes time and effort to “scale” to different stores, different manufacturing facilities, or different countries. Customers should not see the effort behind the scenes, but they should know you’re listening to them and working on ideas and issues they care about. - Pam Didner