News: Asia sees fewer than 20% of innovation projects spring to life: Report

Employee Engagement

Asia sees fewer than 20% of innovation projects spring to life: Report

Two thirds of those questioned in a survey say 80% of innovation projects never make it to market.
Asia sees fewer than 20% of innovation projects spring to life: Report

Fewer than 20 per cent of innovation focused projects are coming to life, according to a new report from cloud company, Oracle, primarily caused by lack of focus and leadership, poor processes and an ongoing resistance to change. The survey of 1,850+ decision makers across the Asia Pacific region in the cloud solutions and software market also showed that despite a clear link between growth and innovation, most of the companies interviewed have little plan to be proactive in innovation over the next three years.  

“While Asia has taken a lead globally in innovation, the research confirms the growing feeling that there is an impending innovation winter coming,” said Andrew Sutherland, Senior Vice President, Technology and Systems, Oracle APAC and EMEA. “In today’s highly competitive global economy, companies cannot afford to sit back. Those who do risk being outpaced with little hope of catching up. Instead, they need to look at the barriers and actively seek to address them.  With an effective and supportive culture, clear vision from leaders, the prioritization and funding of chosen projects and new approaches like co-innovating, activities in this area are more likely to see success. Being innovative isn’t just about ideas, it’s about execution.” 

Key findings

  • Two-thirds of those questioned say 80% of innovation projects never make it to market 
  • Over one-third of companies are overwhelmed by too many innovation projects 
  • 28% cite ongoing inertia and resistance to change
  • One quarter say lack of process is hampering their innovation efforts (26%), a lack of vision (27%) and a lack of commitment from business (23%) are major barriers to innovation.
  • Key factors preventing new products, services, and customer experiences from reaching the market include not having the technology to enable execution/ delivery, having the innovation team too separated from core business and poor execution. 
  • Yet, 86% of companies experiencing strong to significant growth are investing in innovation

Not enough focus and structure 

Over-commitment of resources is preventing companies from bringing their innovation initiatives to life, with one third admitting to being overwhelmed by too many projects. The issue was particularly evident in high-growth companies, with 41 percent reporting an excess of parallel initiatives. Having the innovation team too separated from core business was also identified as a key barrier.

Lack of leadership 

Insufficient commitment from the business in terms of leadership support, investment and vision, coupled with a lack of clear ownership, were shown to be key barriers to a company’s success in innovation. 

Customer engagement 

Organizations are moving away from traditional critical success factors measuring the success of employee productivity (52%) and revenue (53%), and increasingly looking towards areas like customer experience (57%) and retention (52%) as the key measures for ROI. 

The report, “Having a successful innovation agenda” is based on a global survey of 5,000+ decision makers in cloud solutions and software. The respondents represented companies across 24 markets, comprising Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Korea, China, Japan, and India within the Asia Pacific region, with revenues of up to £500 million and workforces of 100 to 50,000 employees.

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Topics: Employee Engagement, Leadership, Technology, #Innovation

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