10th October 2006
The 'Golden 24 Hours' could help corporations add tens of millions to turnover
If a large company wants to bring a radically new product to market, then its director-level management must invest substantial time into the project, especially during the initial concept-generation phase. If the senior director team do not commit at least 24 solid hours during the formative stages, then the project will almost certainly fail, notes innovation specialist Cambridge Consultants.
After 18 years of experience helping corporations to embrace innovation, and work on over 50 major R&D projects, Cambridge Consultants' innovation expert Lucy Rowbotham has developed a 'Golden 24 Hours' principle to help ensure innovations make it to market. Her concept has already been recognised by many international clients, who typically look for new product lines that will generate additional turnover of tens of millions of dollars.
To succeed, the 'Golden 24 Hours' investment needs to involve directors covering the key disciplines such as marketing, manufacturing and engineering. The director with each of the major responsibilities needs to invest at least 8 hours in kick-off meetings, covering topics from the initial blue sky thinking, to project budgeting and objective-setting.
From her long experience with major projects with blue-chip organisations, Lucy has noted that if the initial time investment comes to less than a combined total of 24 hours, then an idea is unlikely to come to fruition, no matter how good it is.
"When a major R&D project is cancelled, it's often attributed to some spurious reason such as a change in corporate organisational structure, or change of market emphasis. The underlying problem is almost always that key director-level staff have not signed up", says Lucy Rowbotham. "Between them, they have to commit at least 24 solid hours to the ambition-setting processes or the project will almost certainly fail."
Most R&D departments are well suited to handling the development of new generations of existing products, which move technology along in moderate steps. However, more radical ideas are often shelved because by their nature they often necessitate significant change. That change might involve new production processes and capital equipment, or new types of sales channel, and only the most senior echelon of management is able to sanction this.
As examples, Cambridge Consultants has worked with Royal Philips Electronics and Scotts to develop radically new product lines. With Philips, the result was an additional 55 million Euros of turnover in the first year. With Scotts, a whole new product area was identified. Both cases involve serious changes to production, marketing and distribution. If at least 24 hours of input are required, then how does that time get used to best effect? Cambridge Consultants has developed a robust methodology to bring together the needs of the developers and the corporate management, one that has mechanisms and moderation to resolve internal conflict and barriers to progress.
"On more than one occasion I've had clients jealously say of a competitor's innovation: 'but we did that in our own labs X years ago'", adds Lucy. "The solution to getting more radical ideas out of the lab lies in significant effort being applied to generating a clear understanding of the implications, across all key corporate levels. Understand the 'Golden 24 Hours' well, and a company's innovation culture can really be brought to life".
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Notes for editors:
Cambridge Consultants develops breakthrough products, creates and licenses intellectual property, and provides business consultancy in technology critical issues for clients worldwide. For nearly 50 years, the company has enabled its clients to turn business opportunities into commercial successes, whether launching first-to-market products, entering new markets or expanding existing markets through the introduction of new technologies.
With a team of over 270 engineers, designers, scientists and consultants, in offices in Cambridge (UK) and Boston (USA), Cambridge Consultants offers solutions across a diverse range of industries including medical technology, industrial and consumer products, automotive, transport, energy and wireless communications. For more information visit: www.CambridgeConsultants.com
Cambridge Consultants is part of the Altran group. Altran Technologies, which is listed on the Paris Stock Exchange (FR:003463), employs over 16,000 consultants in 20 countries around the world. In 2007 the group generated a turnover of €1,591.4 million. For more information visit: www.altran.com
For further information:
Cambridge Consultants Ltd
Patrick Pordage
Marketing Communications Director
Tel: +44 1223 420024
Patrick.Pordage@CambridgeConsultants.com








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