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Why business innovation must be led by the customer

Big businesses are feeling the pressure from smaller rivals and the need to innovate has never been stronger. But the real masters of disruption are not tech startups, but customers.

Letting customers lead

UK companies know that innovation must be led by their customers’ needs, a survey of 200 executives from large businesses in the UK reveals, but understanding those needs and incorporating them into business innovation are easier said than done

When customers drive innovation

“The biggest disruption is that the customer is the most powerful party, because information and knowledge is with him,” says Olaf Koch, chairman of German distributor Metro AG. As a result, business innovation must be informed by the needs of the customer. Although German companies acknowledge this, many are struggling to make it work.

Letting customers lead

In a survey of business leaders in the UK, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Rackspace, almost seven out of ten (69%) respondents say that incorporating customer feedback to drive innovation is part of their company’s growth strategy. More than four out of five (82%) survey respondents describe the perspective of customers as a significant or primary focus of their organisation’s innovation initiatives. 

When customers drive innovation

With a constant stream of new technologies and emerging business models to choose from, businesses need their innovation initiatives to retain a clear focus. According to Harald Schwager, deputy chairman at chemicals firm Evonik, that focus must be the customer. 

“As long as the customer is not in the picture, we only talk about ideas,” says Dr Schwager. “Only once the customer is in the picture and has started to buy into the product and solution, can we talk about innovation.” 

From data overload to effective decision-making

The same data deluge applies to business—never before have companies and the executives who lead them had access to so much readily available data. But is this abundance of data leading to better decisions?

A survey of European C-suite executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Workday, set out to answer this question. The results show that those who consider their organisations to be market leaders are more data-driven in their decision-making. But they also reveal widespread room for improvement in making decisions with data.

Mainstreaming: The future of corporate ESG

We know the future: it’s both challenging and opportune. On the one hand, we face an increase in natural-resource constraints, political polarisation and demographic instability. On the other hand, the atmosphere is warming and sea levels are rising. By this measure, the outlook ahead appears pretty grim. But, as the saying goes, necessity is the mother of invention and opportunities abound as a result of these challenges. The private sector has recognised that global threats are critical to business success. Solving these problems is good business. Solving them well is better business. In fact, companies that manage their environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues are better able to manage risk, are quicker to identify opportunities and are outperforming their peers.

How to limit global warming to 1.5°C

According to a draft of a report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, to be finalised and published by October 2018, there is a "very high risk" that the world will miss the target of limiting global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels by the 2040s. What actions need to be taken so that the world gets back on track to achieve the target?

Embracing the chatbot

An efficiency boost for the professional services industry

The Right Skills: Bridging the strategy design-delivery gap

When Benoît Claveranne was appointed Chief Transformation Officer of the AXA Group in 2016,1 his first act was to hire Sébastien Van Dyk to head up HR for the transformation teams. Mr Claveranne recalls, “If I did not have someone focusing specifically on people, I had no chance. Integrating talent strategy with the company’s overall strategy may be the most important question of all [for successful delivery].”

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