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Due to its sheer size, Procter & Gamble faces an especially steep growth challenge. The consumer products giant called on Innosight to help meet this ongoing imperative by turning innovation from a serendipitous activity into a systematic discipline—resulting in a tripling of P&G’s new project success rate.

MEETING THE CONTINUAL GROWTH CHALLENGE

Best known for its marketing might, P&G’s legacy as an innovator is equally rich. Over its 175-year history, the Cincinnati firm has consistently created new categories of consumer goods—from the first disposable diaper (Pampers) to the first fluoride toothpaste (Crest) to the first synthetic laundry detergent (Tide).

But in March of 2000, a dip in sales and an earnings warning sent its stock tumbling. By June, the board named a new CEO, A.G. Lafley, who brought in fresh thinking about corporate strategy. When an internal analysis revealed that only 15% of innovation projects were meeting success targets, senior executives began searching for ways to turn around this key metric. During this time, a number of top P&G leaders were exploring ideas in The Innovator’s Dilemma by Innosight co-founder Clay Christensen. Soon after, P&G began collaborating with an Innosight team to build innovation capabilities that would spawn new business models. The idea was to institute a process that was analogous to a factory—making innovation systematic, repeatable and reliable.

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P&G: A System for Bringing Successful Innovations to Market

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