Any Company Can Innovate Like Google

Especially a small, non-tech business like yours.


In fact, it is completely reasonable for your company to launch a new, innovative product or service to market within the next 100 days.

Sound too good to be true? Let’s take a look.

The struggling small business

A typical small business employs between 1–100 employees and generates up to $50M in revenue. According to the Small Business Administration, there are 28 million small businesses in the US which account for 54% of all US sales.

So then, imagine you’re the owner of a small, $5M/year distribution business. You sell fasteners (i.e. nuts and bolts) to OEMs that use your fasteners to assemble the products they sell to their customers.

You’ve been in business for 30 years. And for the first 20–25 years you sold the same product to the same customer in the same format.

But recently, the industry has shifted. Your customer has become more attuned to buying directly from the online Amazons and big box Home Depots. And so you now find yourself scrambling to sell amongst an entirely new arena of competitors, products, services, and customers.

And as a result you’re losing market share, as your products & services no longer provide the value they once did.

Related: How to Write Successful Technology RFPs

Keeping up with the Googles

Compare your small fastener distribution company with Google…

  • In 2017 Google is the world’s most valuable brand
  • Google has a $109.5B valuation
  • Google has acquired approximately one new firm per week since 2010
  • As of Feb 2017, Google employs 72,053 people with 1,000 job vacancies
  • Beyond that, Google is operating within the white-hot technology sector while you’re servicing an industry dating back to the 1700's.

    Of Google’s 72k employees, the largest function is engineering. Your company has never employed a single technologist — no engineers, designers, UX researchers, or product managers. And if you have, you’re not quite sure what they do other than tinker with your website and cycle the router when the internet is flaky.

    Stuck

    If you’re like most small business owners you’re probably feeling stuck, thinking you’ll never be able to dig yourself out of the hole you’re in.

    And even if you could…

    Where would you start?
    Who would you need to hire?
    How would you ever come up with the millions of dollars it must cost?
    How would it all impact your established business lines?

    These are the types of uncomfortable unknowns that keep most small business owners from doing anything.

    But the truth is, getting started is a lot simpler (not necessarily easier) than you’d imagine.

    Google-esque innovation inside your small businesses

    First things first, your small size is a phenomenal advantage. Imagine the planning + resourcing + alignment it takes for a corporation like PepsiCo’s 800,000 employees to begin such an initiative.

    As a small business, you have the the company leaders you need within arm’s reach. You can probably call a meeting and have all of your key players sitting in your office within the next hour or two.

    Instead, if you were PepsiCo, you’d spend weeks coordinating a leadership summit in order to arrange executive sponsorship. Because without such sponsorship in such a massive enterprise, the initiative would be DOA.

    So with your core team at the ready, you need 2 things to begin:

  • Select someone in your company to own the process
  • Tackling the first, most important problem to solve
  • Here’s how it works.

    Process owner


    You’re going to need someone to drive consistent momentum. Otherwise, people will hear “innovation” and, at best, roll their eyes. Otherwise, you will begin, like the dozen or other so big company initiatives, and then pause indefinitely to put out everyday fires.

    This person’s mission of pushing for speed (remember: 100 days) and cadence will keep the team engaged.

    You won’t need to create a new department or hire a bunch of expensive consultants. 1 person will do.

    This person does not need their title changed to include the word “Innovation” in it. Avoid tactics like these which only lead to unnecessary org changes, inflated company announcements, and political drama.

    Select someone in the company with enough authority to make decisions and get others to follow their lead.

    This person should be open-minded and eager to experiment. This person should love big challenges and being uncomfortable. This person should have a passion for learning new things.

    Tackling a big problem


    What follows is an introduction into a practical framework your team can use to surface big problems (opportunities), prototype solutions, validate assumptions, and launch those validated solutions to market in the form of an MVP (minimum valuable product).

    First, decide what kinds of problems your business leaders are interested and experienced in. Generate a list of 5-10 problems you’ve encountered in your market. These could be gaps in your products & services or entirely new ideas — things your leadership team has seen first-hand, ideas you’ve heard bubble up from on-the-ground employees, or suggestions existing customers have made.

    Next, figure out who is impacted by those problems and talk with them. You want to learn if this is truly an important problem to the actual consumers of a potential solution; i.e. would a solution to this problem be something they need and want?

    You also want to learn how they’re solving it today — if existing solutions are getting the job done and your solution won’t be 10x better (i.e. revolutionary) move on to the next idea.

    Once you’ve identified your top handful of ideas, select 1 to start out with. We recommend organizing a 5-day Google Design Sprint to prototype solutions and validate with actual customers. If you’ve never run a design sprint, there are training options available.

    If your customers validate your solution, commit to spending the next 2–3 months to launch your MVP . From that point, it will be a matter of observing it’s practicality in a live market, and iterating.

    If your customers invalidate your early solutions, move on to the next idea. It will be tempting to feel you’ve wasted ~1 week only to “fail.” Instead, consider the time & money saved that would have otherwise been committed to building, marketing, and staffing a solution that was doomed from the start.

    Pause and celebrate


    If you make it so far as to execute these 2 steps, take time to celebrate. Even if it was messy (it will be), it’s a win.

    Why, what did you just accomplish?

  • You’ve given your company a viable chance to reclaim market share within an existing business or altogether created new lines of business
  • You’ve saved your company months of effort & lost opportunity
  • You’ve saved tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars by not only launching validated solutions within 100 days, but avoiding building the wrong ones
  • You’ve built a reputation for being innovative, which on its own provides tremendous brand equity
  • You’ve re-energized and re-committed your staff
  • You have a lot of work in front of you to get the process honed and baked into the culture and mindset of your entire organization. However within the span of 1 quarter, you officially began practicing the same format Google, Uber, Home Depot, and hundreds of the world’s most innovative companies use to launch their groundbreaking products & services.

    You’re also now in the grittiest top 1% of companies that see the ground coming out from beneath them and decide to embrace the challenge by taking action to adapt, grow, and come back stronger than ever.

    Reactions

    So what do you think? Does this approach make things seem more within reach or you’re still not sure where to start or if this applies to your business.

    We’d love to continue the conversation and narrow in on your specific challenges — leave a response below where we can keep the discussion going and help other readers learn.