| Fail
Early and Often
By Seamus
McMahon
To extract the benefits of innovation
and limit its risks, companies need to elevate testing
to a science.
Innovation has gained a fairly dangerous
connotation of late. Bold ventures with Internet-only
banks have fizzled, as have cross-sell campaigns designed
to lift revenues. Broadly in the economy, more than 75
Internet startups have failed this year, and investors
are demanding that companies give a far more rigorous
accounting of their new projects. Instead of bold pioneers
opening new markets, the imagery has shifted to depleted
gamblers fleeing the casinos.
This reversal underscores an important
fact about corporate innovation, which is that it requires
far more than guesswork and emotion. From a managerial
standpoint, feverish pursuits and retreats to the mental
bunker are equally deficient, because in both cases there's
a lack of specificity about the circumstances under which
projects are failing and succeeding. A tool is needed
to illuminate project dynamics so that decision-makers
can make the best possible use of corporate resources.
That tool is rigorous testing. Although
many companies are either unfamiliar or struggling with
the concept, it is time that testing officially joins
the corporate lexicon as a key element of project design.
Historical data often sheds little light on what customers
will do next. Surveys show what customers want but not
what works best. Testing, by contrast, places new business
propositions in a laboratory setting where processes can
be carefully observed, modified and re-tested.
Such preparation sharply boosts the
odds for a successful full-scale launch. Indeed, this
methodology is applicable to a variety of customer-related
activities, including prospecting, cross-selling, retention,
service and billing/collection. By no means is this a
stretch for large-scale companies, whose every move can
affect throngs of customers.
From a larger perspective, testing also
can provide vital information for strategic decisions.
Assumptions, even highly educated ones, about what the
customer wants can prove an unstable foundation for pivotal
decisions. Executives who proceed unilaterally risk expending
enormous energies to acquire product-manufacturing capabilities
and enter new markets, for example, only to find themselves
out of step with customer demand and out of favor with
shareholders.
Realistically, though, managers must
come to grips with some serious issues if they are to
get a payoff from rigorous testing. Objectivity is crucial,
and achieving that often will entail involving people
from outside a given business unit, which some managers
will find threatening. A certain blend of resources and
expertise is needed, and capabilities must either be built
internally or outsourced. And developers will have to
adjust to unfamiliar quantitative techniques.
But the need for rigorous testing isn't
going away. Strategists know that cost-cutting alone won't
carry the day; they must innovate to assure organizational
viability. They also know that frenzied expansion, of
the sort attempted by many now-extinct dotcoms, can be
an invitation to disaster. The middle path is disciplined
innovation, which entails careful testing before rollout.
Instead of "build once and hope for the best," the initial
approach is to "fail early and often" and be sure
it's done in a controlled environment.
Inside
the Laboratory
Pharmaceutical companies for decades
have employed decision sciences and rigorous methodologies
at each stage of drug development, evaluation and rollout.
In the lab, researchers seek out specific therapeutic
effects. They combine thousands of compounds to test for
benefits in small-scale processes, with much rapid iteration.
Promising combinations are tested for efficacy and safety.
And dedicated facilities are utilized to test the ability
to expand production, considering issues ranging from
contamination to temperature control.
This level of care seems daunting enough
to replicate in other industries, but the developmental
challenge is even greater in financial services, where
volatile competitive dynamics also must be taken into
account. It's no accident that leaders in the credit card
industry, such as Capital One Financial Corp. and MBNA
Corp., are renowned for their expertise in conducting
disciplined innovation in a rapid-fire setting.
Indeed, the proliferation of card-like
competition in all sectors of financial services is the
driving force for testing as a corporate competency. Customers
are gaining infinitely more choices as they shake off
the constraints of geographic boundaries, physical branches
and paper-based transactions. Providers, in turn, must
learn to think on their feet. Testing can't be viewed
as a one-time activity, but rather as part of a continuous
process that helps the institution align itself with the
market and meet the competition.
One critical factor in incorporating
this approach in financial services is establishing a
complete setting. It's not only the solidity of the abstract
concept, but also how well it works in practice. Accordingly,
a truly thorough test "operationalizes" a concept by replicating
all of the processes and interactions that bring it to
life. This includes customers, company representatives,
variations of offers, various delivery settings, databases,
and even the scripts that reps will use for certain presentations
and responses.
A broad perspective enables developers
to assess ramifications in places where those effects
might not be instinctively apparent, both inside and outside
the organization. Internally, second-order effects such
as cannibalization of profits from other product streams
need to be taken into account. External considerations
might include ensuring the efficacy of suppliers, or determining
whether call center support is acceptable.
Another critical factor is rapid pilot
testing accompanied by statistically sound evaluation.
The idea is to begin with a few promising approaches (hypotheses)
and then test a variety of permutations. With every change
in ingredients such as price, features and sales script,
measurements are taken on customer responses, logistical
implications, profitability implications, and so on. These
measurements are then used to refine the concept, which
then is subjected to further testing. Successive cycles
of feedback and revision ultimately lead to the creation
of prototypes fit for larger-scale rollout.
This is not to suggest that the judgment
of skilled professionals no longer has a place. To the
contrary, the starting point for hypothesis testing rests
on lessons the organization has learned from its own experiences.
Science is something that supplements not obliterates
the best practice of intuition and experience.
In any case, rigorous testing is an
improvement over conventional developmental methods. In
one common approach, strategic thinkers develop and implement
propositions almost entirely on the basis of their planning,
often corroborated by exhaustive market research. That's
like composing the score of a symphony and then attempting
to play it, without rehearsal or revision, in a crowded
music hall. Experience shows that "theoretical testing"
is rarely sufficient to assure the success of innovative
propositions.
The same applies to firms that place
all their faith in the past behavior of their customers
as revealed by the miles of information generated from
their data warehouses. The wonder of this information
is that it generates a million observations about customer
behavior patterns. Unfortunately, the data cannot say
which variables cause which events to happen. Nor can
it tell the observer whether the same thing would happen
again especially given the rapid pace at which
business circumstances are changing.
The market research model and the behavioral
model are thus inherently limited, and it is a tribute
to the intuition of business leaders that innovation succeeds
as often as it does.
Terms
of Engagement
That said, there are many challenges
in setting up a proper testing facility. A lot of pieces
have to come together in a certain way if the exercise
is to be worthwhile. For example, it can be difficult
for creators to objectively assess their own work, raising
the question of whether testing facilities should be housed
outside the respective business units. A certain blend
of people, processes and technology is required. And managers
have to adapt to the new procedures.
On the surface, it seems to make sense
to operate a testing facility in the same environment
where services are developed and produced. But that approach
can prove counterproductive. Production environments are
usually optimized for consistency and efficiency, as are
the mindsets of the people who work there. Even with the
best will in the world, it can prove impossible for a
group of people to design what they perceive to be the
best crafted products and services and then perform the
truly objective tests needed to verify the circumstances
if any under which their creations actually
work.
Instead, testing is best done in a separate
learning environment. A completely different atmosphere
is needed, one that can rigorously replicate the key real-world
circumstances in which the services would be offered.
That entails assembling the right combination of resources
necessary to ensure the most scientific levels of testing
rigor. In particular, such an environment would always
need the following resources to ensure the optimum success:
The right
people. A testing environment draws on four kinds
of staff expertise. The team begins with strategic and
marketing experts, who are responsible for developing
the lines of services. Then there are the technical experts,
who envision, construct and validate the analytical tools
necessary to measure cause-and-effect relationships between
variables. Technology experts build the databases and
communications tools. Finally, customer interaction specialists
evaluate live research and feedback.
The right
process. The people involved in this environment
need to develop the most efficient and disciplined process
for quickly testing and retesting initiatives through
changes in variables. Their mission is to test a prototype
to extremes, adjust variables, retest to extremes, and
so on until the optimal balance of variables is found.
Instead of "build once and hope for the best," the new
approach is "fail early, fail often."
The right
technology. To test multi-channel propositions
as faithfully as possible, you have to replicate them
in the testing environment, from the phone and Web customer
interfaces, to the campaign management and analytic tools,
through to the databases and scripts used in live situations.
Even after all of these capabilities
are in place, many companies still will experience initial
difficulties in taking advantage of them. For managers
weaned on "brave intuition," rigorous testing of pet hypotheses
can feel very uncomfortable. Others will be reluctant
to share ideas and knowledge. It can take a long time
for key managers to accept these techniques and consistently
apply them in making important decisions.
To be sure, there are quick payoffs
from this form of testing, flowing to the bottom line
within a matter of months as margins and growth rates
improve and losses on failed campaigns are minimized.
The really serious returns are slower in coming, however,
taking up to two years. That's the amount of time it might
take for this form of scientific testing to be absorbed
into a company's business processes.
There is a political dimension as well.
This is one more area where a new way of doing things
threatens established hierarchies and the way people are
valued within the company. Traditional star developers
may resist out of a fear of losing status. The heads of
business units may resist out of a fear of losing control.
Rather than ignore or fight these tendencies, senior managers
should prepare themselves by emphasizing the individual
and organizational rewards that can be gained by adopting
the new approach.
Also, senior managers will have to make
some crucial decisions about how to avail themselves of
testing capabilities. Companies will have to build their
own laboratories if they want to lift development activities
out of narrowly focused business units while still keeping
the process within the confines of the organization. But
it doesn't always make economic sense for individual companies
to build and maintain such capabilities.
Alternatively, companies can outsource
testing activities. Parallels in the manufacturing world
include BMW Group, which uses the labs of Porsche Group
to test the use of high-tech material in advanced applications,
and General Motors Corp., which uses subcontractors to
test elements of ergonomic design. Engineers at BMW and
GM retain the overall architecture/solution. But they
outsource testing to ensure objectivity and speed, and
to simplify the decision process.
The
Business Case
It's important to keep sight of the
varied potential advantages of testing when weighing the
options for acquiring and configuring such capabilities.
Testing enhances and accelerates the developmental process,
can be used in diverse areas, and can yield powerful results.
But it poses its own challenges.
The decision to relocate testing/ developmental
activities out of the business units and into an independent
environment can be a momentous one, but the potential
payoffs are many. A dedicated unit can help ensure that
customer initiatives are founded on objective, rigorous
testing. It can build a rich database of empirical results.
It allows live interaction with customers and prospects
and accelerates the process of design, test and scale-up.
And it lifts a burden from end users, allowing them to
focus on desired results.
As companies grow more comfortable and
adept with scientific developmental processes, they will
find them to be applicable in a variety of spheres. After
all, companies are constantly devising new ways to acquire
customers, sell more products to each client, preserve
valuable relationships, refine service and improve billing
and collection. There are testing activities that will
more than pay for themselves in each of these five areas.
Testing also can play an important role
in strategy formulation. For example, one strategy that's
in conspicuous use today is vertical integration, where
an institution buys an entire company in order to obtain
new product and service capabilities. A prominent practitioner
is Citigroup Inc. But there's a strong countervailing
force, aggregation, which allows providers to establish
"best of breed" product sets through partnerships and
alliances. Obviously, a lot is riding on what the customer
really wants, and testing certainly seems preferable to
conjecture in making momentous "buy-or-network" decisions.
In fact, serious setbacks can befall
companies who eschew rigorous testing. Nowhere has this
been more amply illustrated than with some of the much-hyped
Internet-only banks in the United States, whether launched
by newcomers to the banking industry or long-established
players. In both cases, marketing budgets running into
tens of millions of dollars were spent to little effect,
mainly because the protagonists never verified general
demand in the first place, much less tested specific market
segments or value propositions.
Cross-selling is another area requiring
far more testing/developmental activity. Innumerable institutions
have pinned their hopes for growth on selling more to
each customer. As these efforts have fallen short, executives
have had a tendency to blame execution, citing factors
such as poor systems integration or inadequate training.
But in many cases, the true culprit is misalignment with
what the customer wants. Managers didn't spend enough
time test-ing various combinations of products, delivery
alternatives and pricing arrangements before launching
cross-sell campaigns.
There's a better way. After a period
in which rigorous testing has been in place, a library
of test data can be built up and acted upon, and a business
can truly distinguish itself. Services can be devised,
tested and implemented with confidence that they have
been constructed in response to rigorous testing, rather
than the fashionable whims of investment trends or as
a "me too" response to rival maneuvers. That's the sort
of disciplined innovation that will be required of market
leaders.
Mr. McMahon is a
managing director of Novantas, a consultancy based in
New York.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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