3 M Innovation
3 M Innovation
3 M Innovation
It
may
be
104
years
old,
but
the
company
churns
out
cutting‐edge
products
like
a
brash
new
startup.
Here
are
the
secrets
of
its
success.
After more than a century in business, it would be understandable for a company to
run out of fresh ideas. But 3M (MMM) is still at it, at age 104. The manufacturing
conglomerate -- an abrasives maker that broke out by inventing masking tape in
1925 -- is introducing new products as if it.
The latest: Post-it Picture Paper. Rolled out nationally this spring, the product
marries the adhesives of 3M's iconic sticky notes with photo paper so consumers can
print digital snapshots at home and slap them up on the fridge or any other flat
surface. Moreover, the company already is testing its next Post-it extension:
stickable index cards. "The innovation machine remains strong," observes analyst
Mark Gulley of Soleil Securities Group in New Canaan, Conn.
1. From the chief executive on down, the company must be committed to innovation.
One sure way to show that is with money. In 2005, 3M spent $1.24 billion on
research and development, or 6% of its $21.2 billion in revenue. That's an unusually
high amount for an industrial manufacturer. And of that R&D outlay, a fifth went
to basic research or pursuits that have no immediate practicality. "If you're going to
be an innovative company," Wendling says, "organic growth and new products
have to be what drives the company."
2. The corporate culture must be actively maintained. Though 3M has had a new
CEO every five years on average over the past 40 years, the philosophy of William
L. McKnight, its inspirational leader from 1929 to 1966, is passed along by old-
timers like Wendling to every new scientist or engineer. In a nutshell: "Hire good
people and let them do their job in their own ways. And tolerate mistakes."
Newcomers also quickly learn the stories of how 3M developed the first audio tapes,
for instance, or Scotchgard. Tribes and peoples keep their cultures alive through
oral histories; so does 3M.
5. Set individual expectations and reward employees for outstanding work. The
folks who call themselves 3Mers take pride in discoveries that lead to real-world
products. Management reinforces this by fostering a dual-career ladder so veteran
researchers can continue to move up without becoming managers. It also honors
hundreds of employees -- nominated and selected by their peers -- for scientific
achievements every year. And it gives the top 20 overachievers and their spouses a
four-day holiday at 3M's corporate retreat in Park Rapids, Minn.
6. Quantify efforts. 3M tallies how much of its revenue comes from products
introduced in the past four years to judge whether its R&D money is being spent
wisely. That way management can assess which lab is hitting its mark and which
may be falling short. After reviewing its data, the company centralized basic
research from 14 centers around the world to its headquarters campus in 2003.
7. Research must be tied to the customer. Employees spend a lot of time with
customers to understand what their needs are so they can go back to the labs to
come up with valuable products. The Post-it Photo Paper came out of such research.
While digital photography is easy, 3M researchers learned that most people store
their images on a computer, which means they might have to scroll through them all
to find a particular shot. And if consumers do print out their favorites, they often
stuff them in a drawer, where they're just as hard to find. The solution: Photos that
are as easy to display as a Post-it note.
Of course, results will vary. Still, Wendling says his points have made the difference
at 3M. "We do think innovation is more than an accident," he says, "and that you
can create the environment for innovation by paying attention to these seven
things."