Over the past month the headlines have been dominated by the BP oil-spill crisis. Unfortunately, much of this noise is filled with individuals and organizations that are leveraging the crisis as a cheap PR opportunity. They try to force half-baked solutions on BP, and when BP does not adopt these solutions, they are accused of “coming up empty,” and “ignoring help” that is being presented to them. The reality of this type of situation is typically more complicated than it appears, and players in the open innovation space should have the experience to recognize this.
One of our Program Managers brought to my attention a similar story that occurred back in the early days of WWI where the English tried to use a pre-Internet form of “crowdsourcing” to quickly remedy the unexpected sinking of many ships in the English Channel by German U-Boots. This was a new phenomenon that was causing great losses to the British fleet, yet nobody knew how to deal with the situation when it began. So they placed ads in all major newspapers asking the public to send in ideas on how to defend against these unexpected stealth intruders, and within a short period of time they were flooded with proposals ranging from human swimmers to trained seals. Despite the massive response, none of the outside ideas provided a viable solution to the crisis. The practical solution ended up coming from those scientists working directly with the military, who understood all of the details and parameters of the situation.
The lesson that we can take from this story is clear. Unsolicited solutions do not work without first coordinating with those directly responsible for the crisis. Without a full understanding of the situation, the resources already allocated, and the actual environment of the crisis, unsolicited responses are as effective as an armchair quarterback.
I would be interested to hear the opinions and insights of others who are involved in the open innovation space.