Innovation of innovation.
An interesting paper has been jointly published by MIT and The Wall Street Journal. Entitled "The New, Faster Face of Innovation." Written by MIT Professor's Erik Brynjolfsson and Micheal Schrage.
What we have learned is innovation and science are iteratively advanced. As innovations are developed, they have an impact on the underlying sciences, which enable further innovations. It is difficult if not impossible to make any reasonable comparisons between "most industries" and the oil and gas industry. Few share the high levels of pure science and almost pure capital orientation. The prospective prototypical producer needs to be built specifically to enable innovation, and the Joint Operating Committee is the ideal organizational structure to enable the innovative producer.
There exists bureaucracies that are the legacy of the 20th century. These bureaucracies are ill suited to meet the needs of the changing environment brought about by innovation. In addition to these organizations are the systems that support and identify that bureaucracy. And as I stated in the Preliminary Research Report, "SAP is the bureaucracy". We have also learned that if we want to change any organization, we need to address the software that the organization uses. To achieve the innovation we need in oil and gas requires the People, Ideas & Objects application modules to be built.
Much, if not all of the Draft Specification is based on the research that was conducted from 2003 to 2008. It's about innovation and how that can be enabled in the oil and gas industry. Development of the ideas from this point forward has to involve the users. As the producers iterate on the innovations and science. The need for the organization and systems will have to change with them. Users are the front lines of these changes and will implement them through the purpose built systems and software development capability of People, Ideas & Objects.
But the essential point remains: Technology is transforming innovation at its core, allowing companies to test new ideas at speeds—and prices—that were unimaginable even a decade ago.Setting the tone of this document as a technological focused article, this first quotation also reflects the generic nature of "most" businesses. Oil and gas is unique due to the orientation towards science and capital. These two attributes conspire to make the business a long term strategy fight as opposed to one that can benefit from such tactical iterations. Irrespective of the tone of this article, the next quotation is valid and should be considered as a necessity of the innovative oil and gas producer.
Companies will also be willing to try new things, because the price of failure is so much lower. That will bring big changes for corporate culture—making it easier to challenge accepted wisdom, for instance, and forcing managers to give more employees a say in the innovation process.It may seem to many that the Draft Specification introduces to much change into the oil and gas producer. However, I would suggest that in the very near future many of the changes in the People, Ideas & Objects application modules will seem tame in comparison. What users should take from this is that the changes are not being made for the purpose of change itself or for technological reasons. Research in to the cognitive and motivational paradoxes as identified by Professor Wanda Orlikowski reflects the need for the scope of these changes in the organizations.
Already, this powerful new capability is changing the way some of the biggest companies in the world do business, inspiring new strategies and revolutionizing the research-and-development process.and
Increasingly, the more innovative companies—the Googles and Harrah’s of tomorrow—will shift away from traditional research-and-development methods. Five years ago, for instance, a leadership team might have reviewed two or three “big” innovation proposals from consulting gurus; executive teams today might compare the outcomes of 50 or 60 real-world experiments to decide which ones to act upon.Are we right? Basing the research done in the past six years in academic thinking is necessary to ensure we remain on track. One of the most valuable resources has been McKinsey Consulting. The number one consulting firm in the world have published volumes of pertinent research in these areas, and I have reviewed their material in 60 different posts on this blog. This is the process that I will continue to work on, and as the following quotation reflects, will become the means in which the total industry develops.
Even if a test doesn’t produce a workable idea, there’s usually something important to be gleaned from it. “Genius is born from a thousand failures,” says Greg Linden, an entrepreneur who has been an innovator at both Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp. “In each failed test, you learn something that helps you find something that will work. Constant, continuous, ubiquitous experimentation is the most important thing.”Learning from failures is a difficult lesson for those concerned. But the risks and rewards are higher, particularly with today's oil and gas prices. Please join me here.
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