Literature DB >> 18271321

Innovation killers: how financial tools destroy your capacity to do new things.

Clayton M Christensen1, Stephen P Kaufman, Willy C Shih.   

Abstract

Most companies aren't half as innovative as their senior executives want them to be (or as their marketing claims suggest they are). What's stifling innovation? There are plenty of usual suspects, but the authors finger three financial tools as key accomplices. Discounted cash flow and net present value, as commonly used, underestimate the real returns and benefits of proceeding with an investment. Most executives compare the cash flows from innovation against the default scenario of doing nothing, assuming--incorrectly--that the present health of the company will persist indefinitely if the investment is not made. In most situations, however, competitors' sustaining and disruptive investments over time result in deterioration of financial performance. Fixed- and sunk-cost conventional wisdom confers an unfair advantage on challengers and shackles incumbent firms that attempt to respond to an attack. Executives in established companies, bemoaning the expense of building new brands and developing new sales and distribution channels, seek instead to leverage their existing brands and structures. Entrants, in contrast, simply create new ones. The problem for the incumbent isn't that the challenger can spend more; it's that the challenger is spared the dilemma of having to choose between full-cost and marginal-cost options. The emphasis on short-term earnings per share as the primary driver of share price, and hence shareholder value creation, acts to restrict investments in innovative long-term growth opportunities. These are not bad tools and concepts in and of themselves, but the way they are used to evaluate investments creates a systematic bias against successful innovation. The authors recommend alternative methods that can help managers innovate with a much more astute eye for future value.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18271321

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Harv Bus Rev        ISSN: 0017-8012


  3 in total

1.  'Necessity is the mother of invention': Specialist palliative care service innovation and practice change in response to COVID-19. Results from a multinational survey (CovPall).

Authors:  Lesley Dunleavy; Nancy Preston; Sabrina Bajwah; Andy Bradshaw; Rachel Cripps; Lorna K Fraser; Matthew Maddocks; Mevhibe Hocaoglu; Fliss Em Murtagh; Adejoke O Oluyase; Katherine E Sleeman; Irene J Higginson; Catherine Walshe
Journal:  Palliat Med       Date:  2021-03-23       Impact factor: 4.762

2.  Money for nothing: How firms have financed R&D-projects since the Industrial Revolution.

Authors:  Gerben Bakker
Journal:  Res Policy       Date:  2013-12

3.  Financialization impedes climate change mitigation: Evidence from the early American solar industry.

Authors:  Max Jerneck
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2017-03-29       Impact factor: 14.136

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.