//pragmatic leaders

Innovation

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

Innovation is not just about having many ideas. The actual job is generating ideas that can be converted into viable, profitable offerings. That is what counts as innovation in product management.

Innovation happens across multiple dimensions — not just product features or technology. These can include business models, processes, networks, and organizational structures. Recognizing where innovation can occur helps you find opportunities others miss.

Innovation is the creation of viable new offerings

When you hear "innovation," you might think of flashy new features or breakthrough technology. But innovation is broader. It is about creating something new that customers find valuable and that your company can profitably deliver.

Talvinder often references the framework by Doblin/Keeley, which identifies ten types of innovation:

DimensionWhat it meansExample from India or global
Profit ModelHow you make money from your offeringGillette selling cheap razors, expensive blades; Rivigo’s relay trucking
NetworkCreating value through partnerships and alliancesTarget partnering with designers; open innovation strategies
StructureOrganizing talent and assets for advantageW.L. Gore’s flat structure; Zappos’ Holacracy
ProcessHow you produce and deliver your productToyota’s lean manufacturing; Zara’s fast fashion supply chain
Product PerformanceFeatures, quality, and capabilitiesDyson’s cyclone vacuum; Corning’s Gorilla Glass; Jaipur Foot prosthetics
Product SystemHow products connect and complement each otherApple ecosystem; Flipkart’s integrated seller tools
ServiceSupporting and enhancing the product experienceSwiggy’s delivery and customer support innovations
ChannelHow you deliver your product to customersAmazon’s logistics network; Meesho’s social commerce channels
BrandHow you build reputation and emotional connectionCRED’s aspirational branding
Customer EngagementHow you foster interactions and loyaltyPhonePe’s rewards and gamification

The trap is to focus only on product features or technology. Innovation in profit model or network can be far more defensible and transformative.

How to generate innovation ideas: the SCAMPER technique

One practical way to generate ideas is SCAMPER — a checklist of action prompts that guide creative thinking about your product or business model.

LetterAction verbWhat it prompts you to consider
SSubstituteWhat can you replace or swap?
CCombineWhat can you merge or integrate?
AAdaptWhat can you adjust or modify to new contexts?
MModifyWhat can you change in shape, look, or function?
PPut to another useHow else can your product or service be used?
EEliminateWhat can you remove or simplify?
RReverseWhat can you invert or rearrange?

SCAMPER helps break mental blocks and encourages looking at your product from multiple angles.

// scene:

Product team brainstorming session at a Series A SaaS startup in Bangalore

You (PM): “Let's try SCAMPER on our onboarding flow. What can we substitute? Maybe replace the manual form with WhatsApp-based input.”

Priya (UX Designer): “We could combine onboarding with a tutorial video to reduce drop-off.”

Rahul (Engineering): “Adapting the flow for regional languages could help us reach tier-2 cities.”

Neha (Marketing): “What if we put the referral program to another use and tie it directly to onboarding incentives?”

You (PM): “Great. These are concrete ideas we can prototype next sprint.”

// tension:

The team needs fresh ideas to improve the 40% onboarding drop-off rate.

Innovation requires deliberate strategy and execution

Having ideas is only the start. Your actual job is to turn ideas into a profitable new offering. That means:

  • Value creation: Identifying new capabilities or features that customers want.
  • Value capture: Designing a business model that converts value into profit.
  • Execution: Organizing your team and processes to deliver the innovation reliably.

Many PMs focus on value creation alone — building the "cool" feature. But without value capture and execution, innovation fails to scale.

Profit model innovation example: Gillette and Hilti

Gillette changed how it made money by selling razors cheaply and charging more for blades. This shifted customer behavior to buying disposable blades regularly. Hilti, a power tools company, offers subscription-based rentals instead of outright sales, relieving customers from maintenance and upfront costs.

These are innovations in profit model, not product features.

Network innovation example: Target and open innovation

Target partners with external designers like Michael Graves to offer exclusive product lines. This network of partnerships creates unique value Target alone can’t build internally.

Structure innovation example: W.L. Gore and Zappos

W.L. Gore’s flat team structure empowers employees to self-organize around commitments, making the company agile and innovative. Zappos’ Holacracy removes traditional hierarchy, fostering autonomy and creativity.

Process innovation example: Toyota and Zara

Toyota’s lean manufacturing revolutionized car production, reducing waste and improving quality. Zara’s fashion supply chain cuts the time from design to store shelves to weeks, enabling fast response to trends.

Product performance innovation example: Dyson and Jaipur Foot

Dyson’s bagless vacuum took 15 years and thousands of prototypes to perfect. Jaipur Foot is a low-cost, high-quality prosthetic that transformed mobility for millions of amputees in India with limited resources.

Innovation in the Indian context

India’s market and ecosystem shape how innovation plays out:

  • Resource constraints force frugality. Innovations like Jaipur Foot show how to deliver high value at low cost.
  • Diversity demands adaptability. Products must serve a wide spectrum of languages, income levels, and infrastructure conditions.
  • Business models matter. Many Indian startups innovate profit models to navigate price sensitivity and distribution challenges.
  • Networks are critical. Partnerships, ecosystem plays, and open innovation can unlock capabilities startups cannot build alone.
// thread: #product-innovation — Discussion on innovation focus areas for a fintech startup in Pune
Anjali (PM)Should we focus on product features or explore new business models?
Karthik (CEO)Given our margins, profit model innovation is key. Maybe subscription-based lending fees?
Meera (Strategy)We can also look at partnerships with local kirana stores to expand reach.
Anjali (PM)Combining these could open new revenue streams beyond just product enhancements.

Embedding innovation in product design and execution

Innovation is not a one-time act; it is a continuous capability. To build this:

  • Encourage experimentation and safe failure.
  • Foster diverse perspectives and cross-functional collaboration.
  • Use structured ideation techniques like SCAMPER regularly.
  • Align innovation efforts with business goals and customer needs.
  • Measure impact not just by features shipped but by value created and captured.
  • Iterate on your profit model, network, and processes as much as on product performance.
// exercise: · 15 min
Apply SCAMPER to your product

Pick one feature or business process in your product. For each SCAMPER prompt, write down at least one idea:

  1. Substitute: What can you replace to improve?
  2. Combine: What can you merge with something else?
  3. Adapt: What can you adjust for a new context or user segment?
  4. Modify: What can you change in form or function?
  5. Put to another use: How else can this be used?
  6. Eliminate: What can you remove to simplify?
  7. Reverse: What can you invert or rearrange?

Choose the most promising idea and outline next steps to prototype or validate it.

Test yourself: The innovation pitch

// learn the judgment

You are a PM at a Series B Indian SaaS startup serving 200 enterprise customers. Your CEO asks you to propose one innovative change that can increase profitability this year.

The call: What innovation dimension do you focus on, and how do you justify your choice to the leadership team?

Your reasoning:

// practice

You are a PM at a Series B Indian SaaS startup serving 200 enterprise customers. Your CEO asks you to propose one innovative change that can increase profitability this year.

Your task: What innovation dimension do you focus on, and how do you justify your choice to the leadership team?

your reasoning:

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