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How do you shake things up and turn things around? Do you hire from within, which brought us Dick Hackborn (who nurtured the printing cash cow responsibility for the vast majority of HP’s profits over the past 15 years) but also two undistinguished CEOs, John Young and Lew Platt. Hiring from outside brought both Carly Fiorina (a disaster) and Mark Hurd (for whom the jury remains out).
Today the Merc (dead tree edition) ran a story (registration required) on Phillip McKinney, a blogger and VP and CTO of HP’s personal systems group. For most, his claim to fame would be convincing Hurd to spend a few hundred million buying Voodoo PC.
But the most interesting thing about McKinney is his effort to incubate new ideas through a formal process of open innovation, by creating the Innovation Program Office. McKinney seems to have a highly original take on internal incubation, one that just might make a difference in restoring the company’s once-great record of innovation.
From the Q&A (not yet online):
We actually ask that every initial idea has to be able to answer five questions. …
- “Will this idea fundamentally change the customer’s expectation?” …
- “Does this idea fundamentally change the competitive landscape?” …
- “Does this idea fundamentally change the economics of the industry?” …
- “Does HP have a contribution to make?” …
- “Will this idea generate enough margin?”

Technorati Tags: HP, open innovation, R&D
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