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Innovation in Product Leadership

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Innovation is the creation of a viable new offering — it’s the act of developing a breakthrough for profitability.
Talvinder Singh, from a Pragmatic Leaders session on product innovation

Innovation is not just about flashy new features or the latest technology. It is the deliberate act of creating something new that drives profitability and customer value. The trap many PMs fall into is equating innovation solely with product performance or R&D. Innovation is broader — it includes how you make money, how you organize, how you engage customers, and more.

Understanding the full spectrum of innovation types and the frameworks to navigate them is what separates pragmatic product leaders from feature factories.

Innovation is multidimensional — not just product features

You have probably seen innovation described as a single thing: new product features, new technology, or breakthrough design. That is only part of the picture.

The framework I use breaks innovation into three layers:

LayerWhat it meansExamples
ConfigurationHow you organize and capture value internallyProfit model, network partnerships, company structure, processes
OfferingThe core products and services you deliverProduct performance, product systems, service enhancements
ExperienceHow customers perceive and interact with your offeringsChannels, brand, customer engagement

Each layer contains multiple types of innovation. You can innovate in profit models without changing a product feature. You can innovate in customer engagement without new technology.

Configuration innovations

These focus on the internal setup of your business to create value in unique ways:

  • Profit model: How you make money. For example, Gillette flipped the razor market by selling cheap handles and expensive blades, teaching customers that blades are disposable. Hilti offers a subscription for power tools, removing the need for ownership and maintenance.

  • Network: Leveraging partnerships to create value. Open innovation is a classic form — working with external experts to accelerate innovation. The US retailer Target partners with designers like Michael Graves to create unique products.

  • Structure: Organizing talent and assets in ways competitors cannot easily copy. W.L. Gore’s flat organization and employee ownership model is a classic case. Zappos uses Holacracy, distributing authority across teams.

  • Process: Your signature way of working. Toyota’s lean production system and Zara’s rapid fashion supply chain are examples of process innovation that create competitive advantage.

Offering innovations

This is what most people think of as innovation — the product itself and related services:

  • Product performance: Features and quality improvements. Dyson’s bagless vacuum technology took 15 years and thousands of prototypes. Corning’s Gorilla Glass transformed smartphone durability. In India, the Jaipur Foot is a prosthetic designed for flexibility and affordability, enabling millions of amputees to regain mobility suited to local lifestyles.

  • Product system: Creating value by combining products and services. Mozilla’s browser ecosystem with add-ons enriches user experience. Oscar Mayer’s “Lunchables” combine snacks into a convenient meal. Gillette’s Venus line expanded with complementary products like shaving gels and refillable razors.

  • Service: Enhancing ease of use and customer satisfaction. Zappos is famous for exceptional customer service, empowering employees to solve problems creatively. Men’s Wearhouse offers lifetime pressing on suits — adding value beyond the product.

Experience innovations

How customers discover and interact with your offerings:

  • Channel: Innovative ways to connect with customers. Nike’s NikeTown stores offer immersive experiences. Tesco Korea’s virtual stores use QR codes at subway stations to enable smartphone shopping with home delivery, gaining market share without physical stores.

  • Brand: The values and ideas your brand represents. Virgin stands for being different and fun, disrupting multiple industries. Intel’s “Intel Inside” campaign elevated a commodity chip into a sought-after feature.

  • Customer engagement: Understanding and leveraging customer desires. Blizzard Entertainment’s World of Warcraft keeps players engaged for hundreds of hours through social and gameplay mechanics. Apple thrives on loyal customers who evangelize its products.

Configuration, Offering, and Experience form a useful innovation map

ConfigurationOfferingExperience
Profit ModelProduct PerformanceChannel
NetworkProduct SystemBrand
StructureServiceCustomer Engagement
Process

This map helps you see innovation opportunities beyond the obvious. Most PMs focus on product features and miss the other nine types. That is a missed opportunity.

Innovate on the right things, in the right ways

Innovation is costly and risky. You cannot innovate everywhere at once. Focus matters.

One way to prioritize innovation is to map it against your knowledge of the market and technology:

Market / Technology KnowledgeExisting Tech UsedExisting Tech Not UsedNew Tech
Existing Market ServedHorizon 1: Improvements, cost reductions, variants (70%)Next-gen productsExploration with new tech
Adjacent MarketHorizon 2: Adjacent growth (20%)
New MarketHorizon 3: New markets, breakthrough innovation (10%)

Most innovation effort should go to Horizon 1 — incremental improvements on existing products for existing customers. Adjacent growth is riskier but can unlock new revenue streams. Horizon 3 is speculative and requires heavy investment in technology and market understanding.

Indian startups, for example, often innovate in Horizon 1 and 2 — refining products for local markets or adjacent segments. Horizon 3 breakthroughs happen but require deep commitment and patience.

Technology Readiness Levels (TRL) help you assess innovation maturity

TRL is a scale from 1 (basic research) to 9 (full commercial application) that measures how mature a technology is:

LevelDescription
1 Basic research: concepts identified but unproven
2 Technology formulation: basic principles studied
3 Proof of concept: analytical and lab studies begin
4 Small scale prototype tested in lab
5 Large scale prototype tested in relevant environment
6 Fully functional prototype model
7 Demonstrated prototype in operational environment
8 Tested and qualified for commercial use
9 Full commercial application and deployment

TRL helps product leaders assess risk and roadmap innovation investments. A new AI algorithm at TRL 2 is very different from a mature feature at TRL 8.

The invention cycle: mindset for breakthrough innovation

Innovation is a cycle, not a one-time event. The invention cycle includes:

  1. Be a quilt maker, not a puzzle builder: Combine existing ideas in new ways rather than solving isolated problems.

  2. Create prototypes: Build early versions to test assumptions quickly.

  3. Question the questions you ask: Challenge your problem framing to uncover better opportunities.

  4. Inspire others: Rally your team and stakeholders around your vision.

The cycle moves through imagination (envisioning what doesn’t exist), creativity (applying imagination to challenges), innovation (developing unique ideas), and entrepreneurship (bringing ideas to market).

MeetingScene: The innovation leadership moment

// scene:

Product strategy offsite at a mid-stage Indian SaaS startup

CEO: “We need to innovate faster to stay ahead. Let’s invest heavily in R&D and build the next big thing.”

You (PM): “Before we commit, can we map our innovation efforts across the configuration, offering, and experience layers? We might find low-hanging fruit in profit models or customer engagement that deliver more ROI.”

CTO: “Good point. We’ve focused heavily on product features but have not revisited our delivery channels or customer service.”

VP Sales: “Our customers often mention support responsiveness as a key differentiator. Maybe service innovation is a strategic lever.”

This conversation shifts the team from chasing shiny tech to focused, profitable innovation.

// tension:

The team must balance the urge to build new tech with the need to innovate profitably.

FieldExercise: Map innovation in your company (15 min)

Pick your current product or company. For each of the three innovation layers, write down:

  • One example of innovation your company has done in this layer.
  • One opportunity you see for innovation.
  • One risk if you neglect this layer.

Then prioritize your next innovation effort based on impact and feasibility.

SlackChat: Debating innovation focus

// thread: #product-strategy — Cross-functional debate on where to focus innovation
Anjali (PM)I think we need to innovate on product performance — our competitors have better features.
Rahul (Ops)Service is where we lose customers. Faster support responses would differentiate us.
Meera (Finance)What about profit model? Subscription tiers could unlock more revenue.
YouAll valid. Let’s map these against market needs and technology readiness to pick the best bets.

JudgmentExercise

// learn the judgment

You are a PM at a Series B Indian fintech startup. The CEO wants to invest heavily in building new AI features (product performance innovation) to compete with larger players. Your support team is overwhelmed, and customer churn is rising due to poor service experience.

The call: How do you advise the CEO to balance innovation efforts across product, service, and profit model?

Your reasoning:

// practice

You are a PM at a Series B Indian fintech startup. The CEO wants to invest heavily in building new AI features (product performance innovation) to compete with larger players. Your support team is overwhelmed, and customer churn is rising due to poor service experience.

Your task: How do you advise the CEO to balance innovation efforts across product, service, and profit model?

your reasoning:

0 chars (min 80)

FromTheField: Innovation in India from Talvinder

"In India, innovation often gets boxed into product features or technology breakthroughs. But the most lasting advantages come from configuration and experience innovations. The Jaipur Foot is a perfect example — it’s not high-tech, but it changed millions of lives by innovating for affordability and local needs. Similarly, companies like Flipkart innovated in logistics networks and customer engagement to win the market, not just with product features. As a product leader, your job is to spot these broader innovation levers and prioritize them."

BranchingScenario: The innovation portfolio decision

// interactive:
Balancing Innovation Bets

You are leading product at a mid-stage Indian healthtech startup. The CEO pushes for a new AI diagnostic tool (offering innovation). Your customer success head reports rising complaints about appointment scheduling delays (service innovation). Your CFO suggests exploring subscription bundles (profit model innovation). You have a fixed innovation budget for the next quarter.

Where do you allocate most of your innovation budget?

Where to go next

PL alumni now work at Flipkart, Razorpay, Swiggy, PhonePe, and many other leading Indian tech companies.