Open Innovation. Pascal Latouche

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Open Innovation - Pascal Latouche


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      A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-78630-575-6

      Acknowledgments

      First of all, I wish to thank my children, because they help me to advance every day. Most certainly, my thanks go to Mrs. Chantal Ammi, because she has always been there to support the apprentice author that I am. Finally, for all the entrepreneurs who took the time to answer my questions and beyond the entrepreneurial ecosystem in which I progress.

      Without becoming self-centered, this book, in retrospect, is probably also a way for me to thank myself for wanting to weather the storm….

      Preface

      There was a time when, for the most part, start-ups offered “pure and hard” technological innovations. While this time has not yet come to an end, we have observed during the last two years, the appearance of other innovations (processes, HR, communication, marketing, legal, etc.).

      All these innovations do not escape the appetite of major groups, which intend to maintain their positions. Developing relationships with start-ups has now become strategic for many of them. In the framework of such relationships, the impacts inherent to the innovations proposed by start-ups cover a much wider field than the mere question of integration into Information Systems. Indeed, these innovations are transforming large groups from within. We can now speak of integration in the plural form because there are multiple dimensions to consider.

      Through observations, anecdotes, testimonies, it is a question of presenting the three major protagonists of the scene that is going to be played out before us. It is the corporate open innovation system that welcomes start-ups, and the two players from different worlds, the start-up CEO and the employee of a business unit (or business line) of a large company. We’ll see what obstacles stand in their way time and time again.

      However, these obstacles can still be overcome by the action of the members involved in the corporate open innovation system team, who are true architects of interactions. Their skills, their involvement and their ability to dispose of useful resources can enable them, by manipulating the large group’s internal ecosystem as well as the start-up’s external ecosystem, to address the objective: to marry (contractually) protagonists from two different worlds (the world of start-ups and the world of large established companies/institutions).

      Enjoy!

      Pascal LATOUCHE

      May 2020

      Introduction

      What were you doing in November 2013? For my part, it was in November 2013 that I discovered a vocation of which I had not been fully aware until then.

      A combination of circumstances put me in the shoes of someone who had to implement something that was unknown to many in my company: a corporate start-up accelerator. You will understand that I do not wish to go into more detail than that on the basis of circumstances, assuming that I owe myself a certain level of reserve as to what happens within the company of which I am still an employee. I pay tribute to this company, by the way. In any case, the story began like this and, as it turns out, would take me on many journeys….

      Let’s get back to the point at hand. So here I am, called to launch quite quickly (in three months), a corporate start-up accelerator. Do you know what this is? Without extending myself at this stage, I will just tell you that this is a type of open-innovation mechanism tasked with making internal teams within a company interact with external ones, for example, start-ups. I had previously worked a lot on marketing, sales, innovation from R&D (internal innovation) and with the world of developers (those who code). In hindsight, I guarantee you that this did not predestine me to hold a position as head of a corporate start-up accelerator and did not presuppose my ability to do it well. Indeed, I had never created a start-up and this ecosystem was quite unknown to me in fact.

      I.1. No obvious predisposition

      In sales, I had never held a sales position (too shy and unassuming, a lack of chatter, as we would commonly say, the person you don’t notice). I don’t know how to sell and I never knew how to sell myself (it’s still true today)! My tasks have always concerned product argumentation. In short, writing down for salespeople what they needed to say to sell the product well. But you can well imagine that a salesperson sells more as they are rewarded for the sales in question. Not all products are rewarded. My sales arguments and other commercial tools were therefore sales aids and did not in any way presume the success of the sale itself. I rather like to consider my tasks in sales as a natural extension of my marketing expertise.

      With the innovation coming out of R&D, my job in essence was to identify solutions not used to date (tucked away in drawers) and to evaluate what the company could do with them in consultation with the marketing and sales teams. This task was very interesting. I hadn’t worked with pure engineering profiles until then. I admit that it took me some time to adapt to understanding what they were saying. By understanding, I mean knowing how to ask the right questions so that the expression of their technical discourse could become audible to the non-engineer that I am. It was also during this period that the scope of my tasks broadened, because technical products often require development. For those who experienced the 2010–2013 period, I think they would recall the emergence of the start-up weekend-type events. The latter were very badly labeled “start-up weekends”, since they were mostly developers who were in between pitching sessions, eating pizza and drinking cola! During these weekends, I really appreciated supporting, with my marketing and sales expertise, developers who on Friday evenings proposed their ideas and had the weekend to develop it. Developing an application in a weekend to hope to be the winner on Sunday night was very challenging. Modestly, I was making my contribution to these “techy” weekend warriors who have my total respect!

      So, as I was saying, in terms of the profile for taking responsibility for a corporate start-up accelerator, I wasn’t quite in the picture, as some would say. I’ve never created a start-up, and I’ve always been an employee. Thanks to my diplomas and a strong work ethic, I enjoyed working in relatively stable comfort. I say relatively stable because the sociology of large organizations sometimes imposes a balancing act on employees and we must avoid falling off. Finally, if you do it well, if you work well and avoid expressing too many sincere opinions, you receive your salary and finally, unless you have a social plan, you have peace of mind.


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