Building for breakthroughs: The leadership of innovation in UK retail

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Building for breakthroughs

The leadership of innovation in UK retail By Sally Elliott, Ben Twynam, and Sian Connell

March 2012 Retailers have three levers of innovation: products, service, and ways of working. With traditional retailing upended, companies today must push all three simultaneously. But to do so, they must dedicate talent and resources to creating the new and different. Multi-channel is the focus of much innovation, and will likely produce the sector’s next chief executives.

Sally Elliott, Senior Client Partner and Head of Retail, presented this research at Retail Week Conference, in March 2012.

As the UK suffers its worst trading environment since the Great Depression, British retailers that fail to innovate risk being overtaken by competitors, or fighting for survival. Chief executives in the sector know this and are striving to accelerate the generation and implementation of new ideas. Many retailers are working apace to capitalise on innovation, yet others might best be described as ‘tinkering’ at the margins. Korn/Ferry Whitehead Mann interviewed 30 chief executives from leading British retailers and fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) companies and found that many seem to be optimising existing products and services rather than reinventing themselves with breakthrough ideas (with some notable exceptions). However, signs of reluctance to steer resources directly into innovation efforts were unveiled: There was no formal budget for innovation at 70 percent of the retailers surveyed, and 80 percent had no dedicated innovation function, team or leader. Only 50 percent of retailers were proactively recruiting and developing innovation skills in their businesses. Although retail has many impressive examples of ingenuity—especially in customer services and multi-channel sales—our findings suggest a lack of focus that may be hampering progress at the pace required to thrive (and survive) in today’s economic climate. Investment in innovation has never been more important. Personal technology is driving change at a dizzying rate. Customers expect the same brand experience across all channels, including mobile. Comparative shopping is a mouse-click away. Advertising and marketing are undergoing tectonic shifts. At the same time, manufacturers and wholesalers have themselves entered the e-commerce market (and in some cases bricks-and-mortar as well), creating a whole new class of competitor. How to grow the base of consumers, especially in a dismal economic climate? “Lots of small, innovative things can help you win market share,” said Melissa Potter, Chief Executive, Clarks International.


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