Here is the first 2013 blog post from Woody Bendle. It's a fun personal, yet still very economically sound blog post that's worth its salt when it comes to . . . creative innovation with salt! Here's Woody:
Ideas for new articles on creative innovation sometimes come at the strangest times and in the oddest ways.
As I was mixing up a batch of chocolate chip oatmeal cookies for the holidays, I went into the pantry to get the various ingredients and did a double take as I grabbed for the salt. I had to choose from four different types of salt. I mean come on. . . do we really have four different types of salt in this house? Salt is salt . . . right? Well, yes . . . and no.
As someone who is nearly always thinking about creative innovation, I had to chuckle. Just look at all of these different salts. They’ve literally innovated SALT! Of all things . . . SALT! Good old NaCl!
OK, I have to let you in on this inside joke. I’m also an economist; and table salt is often used as a classic example of a commodity that has nearly perfectly elastic demand. That means there isn’t much you can do through pricing and promotion to change the amount of ordinary table salt purchased by consumers. Think about it this way; if your neighborhood grocery store ran a 1¢ special on salt tomorrow, would you rush out and fill up a grocery cart with it? No? Why not? It’s nearly free! Who wouldn’t want tons of nearly free table salt?
Thing is, one can only use so much salt, and there in lies the rub (pun intended). The demand for your ordinary, run of the mill, table salt is pretty stable and fairly finite.
So, if you find yourself in this type of a situation – meaning you are finding it increasingly difficult to affect demand through pricing and promotions – what can you do through creative innovation to grow your business?
Let me provide you with the perspective of another economist:
“The fundamental impulse that sets and keeps the capitalist engine in motion comes from the new consumers' goods, the new methods of production or transportation, the new markets, the new forms of industrial organization that capitalist enterprise creates.” - Joseph A. Schumpeter
In economics, what Schumpeter is talking about is considered non-price determinants of demand. The rest of the world calls this innovation – (which sounds a whole lot better than "non-price demand determinants").
For starters, let’s step back and think about what it is that we as an organization do, and what we might be able to innovate.
Innovation isn’t just about making a new product; far from it. In fact, an innovation will have a greater chance of succeeding if you adopt a broader notion of what can be innovated. Aside from innovating the product (i.e., lower sodium, coarse sea salt, etc.), we might be able develop a creative innovation on:
The point being that when you find growth has stalled, perhaps as a result of your market maturing, you have to do something very different in order to create growth. You have to innovate. And, this something different doesn’t always have to be all about the product itself.
Look, if they can successfully come up with a creative innovation for salt, what’s your excuse!?
Get innovating! - Woody Bendle
Download the free ebook, “Taking the NO Out of InNOvation” to help you generate fantastic creative thinking and ideas! For an organizational innovation success boost, contact The Brainzooming Group to help your team be more successful by rapidly expanding strategic options and creating innovative plans to efficiently implement. Email us at info@brainzooming.com or call us at 816-509-5320 to learn how we can deliver these benefits for you.