Think Big, Start Small, Scale Fast

 
December 30th, 2009

We need to try more stuff.  Innovation is never about silver bullets. It’s about experimentation and doing whatever it takes, even if it means trying 1000 things, to deliver value.

Making progress on the real issues of our time including health care, education, and energy will require a lot more experimentation than we are comfortable with today.  These are all systems challenges that will require systems solutions.  Tweaking the current systems will not work.  Technology as a sustaining innovation may improve the efficiency of current systems but will not result in the transformation that we all know is needed.  We need to learn how to leverage technology for disruptive innovation and to experiment at the systems level.

My mantra is Think Big, Start Small, Scale Fast. The imperative for all innovators is R&D for business models and systems.  We know how to do R&D for new products and technologies.  We need to also do R&D for new business models and systems.  It is not technology that is getting in the way, it is humans and the intransigent organizations we live in that are both stubbornly resistant to change. We have plenty of technology available to us. We need to learn how to leverage it to open up transformative ways to deliver value.  Designing and experimenting with new system approaches, particularly those that cut across sectors and silos, is the path to the transformation that we need.  We must design around the end user and learn how to harness the potential of social media platforms and storytelling to enable purposeful networks.

I recently watched a 60 Minutes segment highlighting the success of the Harlem Children’s Zone in NYC.  Listening to Geoffrey Canada, the program’s founder, was inspiring and reminded me of the importance of systems level change.  Everyone wants to know the one thing that makes a program like HCZ successful.  What is the silver bullet that will allow the program to be replicated with ease across the country?  We are always looking for an easy answer.  There is no silver bullet and it is not easy to transform systems.  At HCZ it is doing 1000 things with passion to help those children succeed.  It is about focusing on the customer, in this case, the children within 100 city blocks in Harlem and doing what ever it takes to help them secure a bright future.  There is no one thing.  There are a lot of things that were tried, many that didn’t work or add value, and a strong appetite for trying new approaches to achieve the goal.

Systems transformation is all about experimentation. It is about combining and recombining capabilities from across silos until something clicks and value is delivered in a new way.   It is never just one thing.  It starts with a big idea that gets the juices flowing and attracts others with similar passion to the purposeful network.  The big idea has to be translated from the white board on to a real world test bed to demonstrate that the idea is feasible.  Starting small and demonstrating progress is key to building credibility and expanding a network of interested stakeholders.  An ongoing portfolio of small-scale experiments to fail fast on those without merit and to prioritize those with the potential to scale is critical.  Those experiments that demonstrate the feasibility of a new model or approach become candidates for expansion.  Scaling fast becomes more likely with the ability to leverage the proof point of a successful real world experiment and the opportunity to leverage a network of passionate supporters.

Systems level innovation is about enabling purposeful networks with the capacity to Think Big, Start Small, Scale Fast.

5 Responses to “Think Big, Start Small, Scale Fast”

  1. Danny Wong says:

    Saul,

    I agree that experimentation is always going to be important in business development. Not all businesses understand that they never have the “silver bullet” at first try. It’s incredibly important to have a “lean business model” - start small with the absolute minimum for launch, then get true user feedback and reiterate accordingly. But test test test! See what works, what doesn’t, what adds value, and what’s effectively useless. In today’s world, we certainly have to be quick. We have to launch quick, learn quick, and reiterate quick. That’s the most efficient approach to development. Theory can only take you so far. And theory (in most cases) isn’t 100% correct.

    Cheers and Happy New Year,
    Danny

  2. Ron Jordan says:

    Hey Saul: Happy New Year. Did you ever connect with Dave here? The EDC challenge that developed lately offers and opportunity to think Big, Start Small, and Scale Fast. How about if EDC becomes The URI ED Institute. We can quickly engadge intellectual asset teams of undergrads, grad students, post docs, faculty and administrative staff, who can quiclkly analyse, engadge, and respond to various EDC staff specified sectors and opportunities. We should engadge groups with short reporting leases that quickly deliver various R&D trials so their results and impact can be measured, invested in further or discarded. Let’s us people in Rhode Island, vested in RI to reach out for local regional and global ED opportunities and partnerships. THe old model has not delivered what RI needs. EDC model spawned a few good things but other parts of the strategy including Slater have had limited big hit sucess. UIR could lead other state higher education assets (RIC, CCRI) to join an education driven revolution in our small, medium and large business areas with the unbridled energy of our youth guided with expereinced educators and interested innovators from everywhere.

    Ron

  3. Often, innovation in education involves learning to use two tools in combination with each other that the school or institution already owns. I’m trying this, this week, with the Keynote slideshow software bundled with our students’ Mac computers, and the Flip cameras we already own.

    It’s a big innovation, but we’re starting with a pilot project of two students, and we’ll see where things go from here.

  4. [...] what do these ideas mean in practical terms? Saul Kaplan makes the case compellingly in his post Think Big, Start Small, Scale Fast – here’s a quote, but go read the whole post: Systems transformation is all about [...]

  5. [...] Saul Kaplan frames this sentiment nicely too: Thing Big, Start Small, Scale Fast. [...]

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