Many
organizations wonder what makes the Google the holy grail of productivity and
creativity? There’s no magic in the drinking water at the Mountain View, CA
company. The tech giant draws from what Google’s chief social evangelist, i
call the nine core principles of innovation.
Hmm,
I wonder why I keep emphasizing on this very company’s principles to success.
These guys are genius. What I like about Google team is that they think that everything
there do most solve a problem.
Here
are the nine rules that any enterprise, large or small, can adopt to steal
Google’s innovative culture.
It can come from the top down as well as
bottom up, and in the places you least expect. For example, a medical doctor on
Google’s staff argued persuasively that Google had a moral obligation to extend
help to those typing searches under the phrase “how to commit suicide.” He
ignited the charge to adjust the search engine’s response so that the top of
the screen reveals the toll free phone number for the National Suicide
Prevention Hotline. The call volume went up by nine percent soon thereafter.
The same change has been adopted in many other countries.
Worry about the money later, when you focus
on the user, all else will follow. Google improved the speed of its search
capabilities with predictive analysis so search suggestions come up after the
user types a few keystrokes. This Instant Search feature saves the user a few
microseconds with each entry. Google sales reps were concerned that this
shortened the time customers would view ads, but the company went ahead and
believed that it was worth the risk.
End result? Thanks to Instant Search, Google
estimates the time saved is equivalent to giving back mankind 5,000 years after
a year of collective use. “Create a great user experience and the revenue will
take care of itself,” says Og Elvis. In addition, more customers will be
attracted to your product’s increased benefits.
If
you come into work thinking that you will improve things by ten percent, you
will only see incremental change. If you want radical and revolutionary
innovation, think 10 times improvement, and that will force you to think
outside the box. For example, in 2004, Google started its Google Books project
and set forth a challenge to organize all the world’s information and digitize
all the books ever printed in history.
Google co-founder Larry Page built his own
book scanner, and the initial process required having someone manually turn its
pages in rhythm, one at a time, according to the pace of a metronome. Google
has now scanned 30 million of the 130 million books they first set out to scan,
and dozens of libraries around the world are participating in the project.
Sir, Not That every organization has unique
insights, and if you bet on it, it leads to major innovation. Google engineers,
not the auto industry, came up with the idea of driverless cars after seeing
that millions of traffic deaths come from human error. Google already had all
the building blocks in place to build a self-driving car–Google Maps, Google Earth,
and Street View cars. Working with an artificial intelligence team at Stanford
University, Google engineers have produced experimental cars that now have
travelled to Lake Tahoe and back to the Bay Area and have given the blind more
independence by driving them to shop and carry out errands.
Ship
your products often and early, and do not wait for perfection. Let users help
you to “iterate” it. When Chrome was launched in 2008, every six weeks Google
pushed out an improved version. “Today, using that approach, Chrome is the
Number One browser in many countries,” says Og Elvis, “You may not have
perfection in your product, but trust that your users will get back to you.”
Give
employees 20 percent of their work time to pursue projects they are passionate
about, even if it is outside the core job or core mission of the company. “They
will delight you with their creative thinking, At Google, engineers and project
managers have the freedom to set aside one day a week to work on a favorite
idea. Many can wind up as products or product improvements. Case in point: an
engineer planning a trip to Spain found that he could not get a close-up view
of the hotel since the road was too narrow for the Google Street View car to
enter. He later adapted a Street View camera to fit on a specially-made Google
tricycle to go places too narrow for a car and tourist locations that ban autos
from approaching the premises.
Make
your processes open to all users. Tap into the collective energy of the user
base to obtain great ideas. When Google created the Android platform, it knew
it could not hire all the best developers on the planet. For that reason, it
“defaulted to open,” and encouraged developers outside of Google to create apps
for the one billion people using Android devices daily. “That is how an
ecosystem is formed, In marketing, Google asked users how they would market its
voice search app, and children sent clever videos that rivaled the campaigns of
the big ad agencies.
There
should be no stigma attached to failure. If you do not fail often, you are not
trying hard enough. At Google, once a product fails to reach its potential, it
is axed, but the company pulls from the best of the features. “Failure is
actually a badge of honor,” he says. “Failure is the way to be innovative and
successful. You can fail with pride.”
“This
is the most important principle, note. “Everyone at Google has a strong sense
of mission and purpose. We believe the work we do has impact on millions of
people in a positive way.” Each person should have his or her own story.
Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a follower.
"Steve Jobs"
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