“Innovation Management: A Synthesis of Academic and Industrial Points of View.” (Tomala, F. and Senechal, O. , 2003) International Journal of Project Management, 22: 281-287.10. Link to this paper
Abstract: This paper synthesizes several works about innovation management. By blending both academic and industrial points of view, we hope to help those participating in innovative projects become aware of the latest thoughts of other groups involved in innovation management. Our discussion underlines the importance of innovation as well as the various problematical aspects of innovation management. Three principal points are considered: the types of actors involved in innovation, the organizational perimeters for innovation and the types of organization chosen for innovative projects. The case study of the Renault automobile company highlights a new means of managing innovation, called orbital management, which involves a new project structure specific to innovation management.
Extract :
“… Each project group is animated by a pilot group of 8–15 people, including both internal and external partners of the company. This committee meets every 2 weeks to verify the progress of the results chains described in each convergence plan. The pilot groups of each innovation project proceed in the same manner, and each one of their members is connected, via an intranet, to all the other innovation project team members.
Each innovation project is managed like a start-up, with the nomination of a project leader, the ‘‘pilot of the innovation system’’, who is seconded by the innovations project leader during the preliminary meetings. Thus, the primary manager of innovation projects [...] is ultimately responsible for 15 innovative projects.
Project leaders must both master the technological complexities of the project and exhibit excellent interpersonal skills; their job is to bring together the skills and energy needed to achieve the end results the innovation project.
The galaxy in Fig. 1 [...] thus makes it possible to visualize the complex grid of relationships existing between the various entities that make up the project team.
The diagram in Fig. 2 shows that the success of innovation can be achieved only at an ‘‘extended’’ company level and requires both horizontal and vertical decompartmentalization. This structure is different from the matrix structure because an innovation project manager supervises the whole project. This person must make sure that internal and external skills are in synergy: innovation is a broad collective action, requiring the collaboration of various services with the same the fixed objective. At an in-house level, this person plays the role of consultant.
The diagram in Fig. 3 presents an example of a convergence plan. In each box, the results to be obtained are specified, as are the actors who will be involved. (To make the table easier to read, a color can be associated to an actor or to a type of result.)
[...] The objective of innovative project management is to better integrate and control the risk associated with the stress that accompanies the process of innovation; it is the management of uncertainty. [...] the convergence plan is central. It aims to control the process by focusing on
the desired results. It requires the careful definition of the project actors, the stakes, the problem evoked in the project and the results expected at each stage. Starting with the results desired by the customer, chains of intermediate results are constructed, all of which must converge towards the ultimate goal. Each intermediate result is a very clearly specified commitment. These results chains enable the project teams to concretely develop their technological contributions and to set up their actions in practical terms.
Using the convergence plans, the teams can see where they need to go and what resources and competences will be needed to get there. These plans formalize all the relationships that must be managed to obtain the desired final result.
[...] All of these imply learning to manage stress; management by results means dealing with uncertainty and doubt on a day-to-day basis, without taking refuge behind procedures. “
F.D.
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The project manager role is to care about interfaces. All the problems always come from the interfaces. Basically you can rely on experts to manage their domain, care about each detail to solve issues and to build a product with quality following their engineering rules.