intrapreneurship/ corporate entrepreneurship fred mugambi mwirigi

95
Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Upload: victor-elijah-morris

Post on 13-Jan-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship

Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Page 2: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

2

Entrepreneur

An individual who, rather than working as an employee, runs a small business and assumes all the risk and reward of a given business venture, idea, or good or service offered for sale.

The entrepreneur is commonly seen as a business leader and innovator of new ideas and business processes.

Page 3: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Entrepreneurship Vs Intrapreneurship

What is the difference:• On the basis of theory?

- Supported by the same theory • On the basis of practice?

- Different practice

3

Page 4: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

The need

• Firms are constantly on the look out for creative and innovative minds• Owing to intense competition there is need to

have employees who can think outside the box• Very few employees have that capacity• Firms find themselves in a dilemma- do we

hire/poach or do we develop our own creative minds??• What are the challenges involved in either option?

4

Page 5: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

The Creativity Model

This is an incremental model where the sum total of creativity over time translates into higher value to customers and so better business.

5

Creativity Value adding activities

Innovative Behavior

Page 6: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

What keeps most people from becoming entrepreneurs?• Funding• Manpower• Strong backing• Branding/Marketing• Fear

6

Page 7: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Intrapreneur

A person within a large corporation who takes direct responsibility for turning an idea into a profitable finished product through assertive risk taking and innovation.

Intrapreneurs have entrepreneurial skills blended with managerial skills but operate within the confines of an organization.

7

Page 8: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

8

Also defined as…

Intrapreneurs are “dreamers who do”, those who take hands-on responsibility for creating innovation of any kind within an organization. Gifford Pinchot

The intrapreneur is an essential ingredient in every innovation. Dr. William Souder

Page 9: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

So, What is Intrapreneurship?

• Innovative corporate management style that encourages employees within an organization to create new product ideas.

• If employee ideas are approved, management will finance research and development of the product while sharing an equitable partnership arrangement with the employee.

9

Page 10: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Why intrapreneurship?

Most support factors are easy to find:• Funding• company/organization often has capital to fund the

project

• Manpower• intrapreneurs do not have to worry about finding the

talent to get tasks performed

• Branding• intrapreneurs can use the branding of the

company/organization to get their ideas to take root 10

Page 11: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Characteristics of Intrapreneurs

• Results driven• Ambitious• Creative• Original • Self Confident• Risk Tolerant

• Persistent• Influencing• High Energy• Action oriented• Interpersonal • Innovative

11

Page 12: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Misdiagnosed Characteristics

• Ambitious – over zealous• Creative – does not follow guidelines• Persistent – pushy• Self confident – too egoistic • Innovative – dreamer• High energy – Over ambitious• Risk Tolerant – bends the rules / challenges the

systemWhen we misdiagnose we block ambition and

innovativeness on the part of the employee12

Page 13: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Discussion Questions

•What is the cost of embracing intrapreneurs for a company?•Should we develop intrapreneurs or should we hire/poach? Advantages? Disadvantages?

13

Page 14: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Innovation

• To create and bring into use profitable new products, processes, services, and ways of doing business.• Creation of new or alternative products• Opening of a new market• Capture of new sources of supply

• Innovativeness can be developed through a deliberate and elaborate structured program • It is, however, expensive in the short term, but

cost-effective in the long term 14

Page 15: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Intrapreneurial Activities

Innovativeness can be embraced in any of the following broad areas:

• Improvement of service/products

• Saving of time, money, or making processes easier

• Diversification of processes, products, services

• Improvement of communication with customers

• Market identification and nurturing 15

Page 16: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

How does Business benefit?

• Firms create competitive advantages by discovering new and better ways to compete in an industry and bringing them to market

• An enterprise that does not daily innovate inevitably ages and declines

• Even in a successful business the disease of bureaucracy and complacency is dangerous

16

Page 17: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

How do Intrapreneurs benefit?

• Flexibility

• Less restrictions but supportive environment

• Recognition

• Their ideas are vehicles towards advancement

• Increased value to organization - increased PAYCHECK

17

Page 18: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

IMPLEMENTING INTRAPRENEURSHIP: PROCESS

AND CHALLENGES

18

Page 19: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Support factors

19

Enhanced (Intrapreneurial) Corporate Performance

Entrepreneurial culture

Sound Resource Allocation

Mechanism

Skilled HR

Management and peer tolerance

Management Support

Obligated (Basic) Corporate Performance

Page 20: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Implementing the Intrapreneurship Culture• Institutionalization of intrapreneurship is

important in modern organizations• Some ways of institutionalizing intrapreneurship

are:1. Encourage employees to be creative and to look for

new ways to improve your current way of doing business

2. Grant intrapreneurs something akin to ownership rights in the internal intraprises they create

3. Encourage company wide involvement by insisting on truth and honesty in marketing and marketplace feedback

20

Page 21: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Discussion Break

• Is it true that IT and research firms are more intrapreneurial than banks and hospitals?

• Why?• Do banks and hospitals have capacity to get intrapreneurial?

21

Page 22: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Implementing the Intrapreneurship Culture• Manage more through teams as opposed to

managing through individuals • Treat intrapreneurial teams as profit centers

rather than as cost centers- negative Vs positive management attitude• Allow team members a variety of options in jobs,

in innovation efforts, alliances, and exchangesAllow some degree of self regulation within teams• Encourage employees to develop themselves

through training and embracing new challenges 22

Page 23: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Challenges of implementation

• Organizational culture• Management attitude• ‘sensitivities’ of tasks (e.g. Banks and Hospitals)• Intolerance of change and challenge • Risk averseness

23

Page 24: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Managing Entrepreneurially

Key Cocepts• Entrepreneurial Management • Entreprenurial leadership

24

Page 25: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Key Competencies

• Ability to identify skill, knowledge, commitment, ambition, • High degree of tolerance• Creativity/Innovativeness• Team orientation (vs manager orientation)• Confidence in staff• Adaptability to dynamics• General balance (esp. between goals and goal

achievement process, tasks and people, etc) 25

Page 26: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Business Leadership and Intrapreneurship contrasted

26

Business Management

Plans Coordinates Leads Staffs Controls

Intrapreneurial Management

Plans creatively

Coordinates Creatively

LeadsCreatively

Staffs Creatively

Controls Creatively

Page 27: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

DEVELOPING INNOVATIVE ENTERPRISE CULTURES

27

Page 28: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

What is Culture?• Culture consists of a fairly consistent set of beliefs, values and

norms developed by a group of people in response to their environment.

• Culture acts to keep people together and focused to a specific value adding course

• Culture creates identity while identity sets aside the organization from competition

• If the identity is viewed favorably, this enhances value for the firm and its products

28

Page 29: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Contd. • There is a powerful connection between the culture of an

organization and its propensity to be entrepreneurial • It is important to identify some values around which to create

an entrepreneurial culture • Some cultures are pro-entrepreneurship while others are

counter-entrepreneurship

29

Page 30: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Distinctive Elements of Organizational Cultures

• Symbols• Heroes• Rituals • Values• Artifacts• Stories, Histories, Myths, Legends, Jokes

30

Page 31: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Symbols • Symbols are words, objects and gestures which are recognized

only by "insiders". • In a large sense, symbols include the entire area of language. • At the level of the individual or organization, symbols include

slang, modes of address, dress codes and status symbols.

31

Page 32: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Heroes• Heroes are real or imaginary people who serve as models for

behavior within an organization. • Past successful managers or directors often serve as role

models who can be emulated, and provide a model for behavior at work.

• Heroes need to be celebrated

32

Page 33: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Rituals

•Rituals are collective activities that are socially essential. • In organizations, rituals include how

meetings are run, who gives opinion, key ‘initiation rites’ (e.g. parties for new employees, retirees or those newly promoted), known activities (e.g. cakes for ‘birthday babies’) 33

Page 34: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Values

•Values represent the deepest level of a culture. •They are broad feelings, often unconscious about what is good or bad, beautiful or ugly, normal or abnormal.

34

Page 35: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Artifacts

• Artifacts are the physical things that are found that have particular symbolism for a culture. • They may even be endowed with mystical

properties. • Examples include the first products of a company

and prizes won in grueling challenges • Artifacts can also be more everyday objects, such

as the bunch of flowers in reception. • The main thing is that they have special meaning,

at the very least for the people in the culture. • Most artifacts have stories behind them.

35

Page 36: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Stories, Histories, Myths, Legends, Jokes• Culture is often embedded and transmitted through stories,

whether they are deep and obviously intended as learning devices, or whether they appear more subtly, for example in humor and jokes.

• The power of a story lies in when and how they are told, and the effect they have on their recipients.

36

Page 37: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Five Dimensions of Culture

• Individualism/collectivism • Materialism/quality of life • Uncertainty avoidance • Power distance • Masculinity/ femininity

37

Page 38: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Individualism/collectivism

• Captures the relationship between individuals and the group. • Individualistic cultures advance self-interest, self

determination, autonomy and notions of fairness. "Everybody for himself and God for us all". • In collectivistic cultures people see themselves as a

group. • The focus is on common goals. People expect the

group to look after them and in return give absolute loyalty to the group. 38

Page 39: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Materialism/quality of life

• Reflects the degree to which material as opposed to spiritual ends are pursued by individuals. • In materialistic cultures people are ambitious and

assertive. • They pursue material acquisition and career success;

they live to work and they see work as having an intrinsic value. • Less materialistic cultures emphasize quality of life. • People emphasize interpersonal relationships and

concern for the environment. • Hard work results from a sense of duty or obligation

to ones family or society. People live to work 39

Page 40: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Uncertainty avoidance

• Refers to the extent that individuals feel threatened by ambiguous, uncertain or unknown situations. • In ‘low uncertainty avoidance cultures’ people are

risk lovers. Risk is sought out as being challenging, interesting and fun. • High uncertainty avoidance cultures prefer stability. • Here, people believe in absolute truths, established

rules and regulations. Deviant ideas are rejected. People seek agreement and consensus and desire a stable long term employment relations. Conservatism is rife.

40

Page 41: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Power distance• Refers to the extent that members of a culture accept equal

distribution of power. • In ‘high power distance cultures’ individuals accept class

differences and clear organizational hierarchies. • ‘Low power distance cultures’ belief in equality of opportunity,

individual involvement and participation and democracy.

41

Page 42: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Masculinity/ femininity• The degree to which "masculine" values like assertiveness,

performance, success and competition prevail over "feminine" values like the quality of life, maintaining warm personal relationships, service, caring and solidarity - from tender to tough, or vice versa

• A good balance is ideal depending on the situation

42

Page 43: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Spotting Entrepreneurial Gaps in Corporate Culture

Lack of one or two performance norms signifies a gap. These norms include:

1. Task support norms- have to do with information sharing, helping out colleagues and general concern with efficiency

2. Task innovation norms- emphasize creativity in everything all the time such as " improve everything every time"

43

Page 44: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Contd.3. Social relationship norms- norms for socializing with one's work

group and mixing friendship with business (such as "get to know the people in your work group" versus "don't bother“)

4. Personal freedom norms- norms for self-expression, exercising discretion and pleasing oneself (such as "live for yourself and your family" versus "live for your job and career“)

44

Page 45: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Importance of Values in creating and

nurturing a culture • Values represent the deepest level of a culture. • They are broad feelings, often unconscious about

what is good or bad, beautiful or ugly, normal or abnormal.• When new employees enter a work environment,

they are usually diverse individuals, with most of their values already variously but firmly entrenched. • Through a socialization process they can take up the

new values and slowly entrench into the new culture45

Page 46: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Developing a Culture of Innovation

• Research (Howard Oden in Managing Corporate Culture, Innovation, and Intrapreneurship) indicates that intrapreneurship succeeds when companies provide their innovators with support, encouragement, and an atmosphere that promotes innovation.

• Specifically, Oden enumerated a host of attributes often found in innovative cultures.

46

Page 47: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Attributes of Innovative cultures

1. Long-term strategic and cultural leadership: upper-level management provides long-term strategies and challenging goals for the company's innovation.

2. Promotion of innovation and intrapreneurship: the company encourages new ideas and new ways of doing things at all levels and promotes risk taking.

3. Flexibility and adaptability: the company does not have a hierarchical structure, rather a flat structure, and the innovation process involves different teams of workers, not different levels of management.

47

Page 48: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Attributes Contd.

4. Collaboration and teamwork: the company encourages teamwork and collaborative innovation.

5. Ongoing learning: workers are expected to improve their skills and learn new ones continuously.

6. Toleration of failure: since some innovations fail to bear fruit, companies must accept failure as part of the innovation process in order to keep intrapreneurs free from the fear of failure.

7. Democratic leadership: fosters development of new ideas among staff and removes fear of reprisal 48

Page 49: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

The Effect of Structure on innovative cultures

• Organizational structures can foster or kill the culture of innovation in an organization

• Flat structures are seen to foster innovative cultures more than tall bureaucratic structures

• Structures that promote team work tend to also promote innovative cultures

• Structures that are goal-focused are more likely to promote innovative cultures than those that are means-focused

49

Page 50: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Signs that the firm lacks an innovative culture

• General disinterest among staff• Interest only in matters pertaining to the self • Staff are generally risk-averse • High levels of ‘fear of management’ among staff• High levels of pessimism (as opposed to optimism)• High staff turnover

50

Page 51: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

So, what should managers do?

• Develop work teams • Rid your system of unnecessary bureaucracies • Share credit• Provide supportive leadership rather than just

management• Allow staff opportunities to create formal and

informal bonds (within proper boundaries)• Protect your innovators and their innovations • Reward your innovators

51

Page 52: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Things that kill innovative cultures- Manager-specific • Regarding new ideas with suspicion • Cumbersome approval mechanisms, rules, regulations • Pitting departments and individuals against one another • Expressing criticism and withholding praise • Treating problem identification as signs of failure • Controlling everything ‘too carefully’ • Reorganizing your systems rapidly and secretly • Keeping tight control of information • Delegating unpleasant duties to ‘inferiors’ • Assuming that you those lower down have no

contribution to make 52

Page 53: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

The Intrapreneurship Culture Development Framework

53

Challenging Organizational

Goals

Organizational Policies

SupportiveEmployee-Specific

Factors

Management Style (Democratic)

Organizational Strategies

Supportive Task-specific

Factors

Intrapreneurial Culture

Page 54: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

CEATIVITY AND INNOVATION IN CORPORATE SETTINGS

54

Page 55: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Introduction • Idea generation and idea nurturing are the bedrocks upon

which corporates are grown• Idea generation is, in turn, built on creativity and innovation• The more creative the workforce in a given firm the higher the

likelihood of increased growth of the firm• Creativity and innovation among staff has to be nurtured for

the firm to stay ahead of competition

55

Page 56: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Creativity and Innovation

Creativity- developing something newInnovation- Improving an existing process, idea,

product, system, etc• Both creativity and innovation are driven by the

concept of ‘uniqueness’• It is possible to have a creative innovation- a

change that is very unique• Some one has argued that whereas creation

(invention) is the conversion of cash into ideas, innovation is the conversion of ideas into cash.• Idea Generation sits at the core of both.

56

Page 57: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Areas of Idea Generation (Creativity and Innovation)

• Improved quality • Creation of new markets • Extension of the product range • Reduced labor costs • Improved production processes • Reduced materials • Reduced environmental damage • Replacement of products/services • Reduced energy consumption • Conformity to regulations

57

Page 58: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Innovation Adoption

• Innovations are often adopted by organizations through two types of innovation-decisions:

1. Collective innovation decisions- when the adoption of an innovation has been made by a consensus among the members of an organization.

2. Authority innovation decisions- when the adoption of an innovation has been made by very few individuals with high positions of power within an organization

Read Everett Roger’s Diffusion of Innovation

(DoI) theory58

Page 59: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Divergent Vs Convergent Thinking

Creativity requires the input of at least two types of thinking:

1.Divergent thinking 2.Convergent thinking

Divergent thinking precedes and, indeed, sets the stage for convergent thinking

59

Page 60: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Divergent Thinking• Divergent thinking refers to ‘free-wheeling” of ideas where

ideas are left to flow without hindrance• Brainstorming is commonly used in divergent thinking

sessions• People need to be open to the idea that there may be many

“right” answers. The goal of using divergent thinking is to generate as many potential “right” answers as possible. • In order to do this, the potential “wrong” answers must be

included. One of the benefits of using divergent thinking is knowing that in the second phase, during convergent thinking, the best responses will be selected and ideas not worth considering will be left behind, modified, or saved for later. • Some times it pays to ask people to give even the most

outrageous of ideas60

Page 61: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Convergent Thinking • This a “narrow-down” way of thinking. • During the convergent stage, we apply critical thinking;

that is, we use some criteria to evaluate, select, and analyze the output from the divergent phase. • If the divergent output is kept in the verbal realm, only

in talking or in conversation, it is quite challenging to do a good job in the convergent stage. • As a result, one of the standards for idea generating is

to capture the ideas in a way that makes it easy to evaluate the total output later on.

61

Page 62: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Divergent and Convergent thinking contrasted

Divergent Thinking Perception- Source of creative ideas

Convergent Thinking Judgment- Evaluating creative ideas

Extraverted Sensing (Se)•Change what is. •Give new uses and tactics for what is contextually happening now, what’s right in front of you •Experiencing and noticing the physical world, scanning for visible reactions and relevant data

Extraverted Thinking (Te)• Improve efficiencies, structures,

measurements, and organizing principles.

• Demonstrate excellence using provable and profitable standards.

• Organizing, segmenting, sorting, and applying logic and criteria

Introverted Sensing (Si)•Change what was. •Recombine past elements. •Recalling past experiences, remembering detailed data and what it is linked to

Introverted Thinking (Ti)•Improve understanding of how something works.•Provide clear categorical shifts •Analyzing, categorizing, and figuring out how something works 62

Page 63: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Contd. Divergent Thinking Perception- Source of creative ideas

Convergent Thinking Judgment- Evaluating creative ideas

Extraverted iNtuiting (Ne)•Change what might be.•Infer new patterns, potentials, and spin-offs from the current situation.•Inferring relationships, noticing threads of meaning, and scanning for what could be

Extraverted Feeling (Fe)•Improve harmony among people.•Facilitate cooperation and interpersonal harmony in the outcome. •Considering others and responding to them

Introverted iNtuiting (Ni)•Change the representation of the future. •Integrate insights to form new concepts. •Foreseeing implications, conceptualizing, and having images of the future or profound meaning

Introverted Feeling (Fi)•Align with values, personal and corporate.•Demonstrate commitment to what is truly important to those impacted and involved. •Evaluating importance and maintaining congruence

63

Page 64: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Idea Generation Process: Divergence Phase

• Step 1: Clearly identify the issue that is to be addressed

with the innovation process

• Step 2: Immersion: Explore information relevant to the problem. This

could be trends, current operating environment, market research, competitive data, etc. — specific information that helps to shed light on the issue being explored.

64

Page 65: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Contd.• Step 3: Identify opportunity areas: The team identifies “opportunity areas” where a solution

may be found. For an innovation session focusing on introducing a new snack product the opportunity areas might be “healthy snacking”, “kid focused snacks”, “snacking for energy”, and “indulgent snacks.”

• Step 4: Idea Generation: For each of the opportunity areas, the facilitator leads the

team through idea generation techniques to help uncover new possibilities. During this process, the rules of brainstorming apply. As you move through the idea generation, new ideas become harder to find and the facilitator must be prepared with exercises that stimulate the group’s thinking. This is often when the best new ideas are born!

65

Page 66: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Idea Generation Process: Convergence Phase:

• Step 1- Setting criteria: The group works together to set the criteria for how ideas will

be selected to move forward to the next step. At this stage, be careful not to narrow the sieve too much or you may lose some great ideas before they get a chance to be explored.

• Step 2- Idea Selection: Using a variety of convergence techniques the facilitator

helps the group narrow down the number of ideas to a manageable number. This will include voting, combining like ideas and championing favorite ideas. Championing favorite ideas is important so that the consensus oriented process doesn’t drive out really creative, unique (but sometimes difficult) ideas. 66

Page 67: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Contd. • Step 3- Synthesis/Discussion: The team comes to agreement on the ideas that will

move forward into concept research or whatever the next step of your process will be. The group provides definition around each of the lead ideas — perhaps, at this stage, creating concept outlines that can be written into concepts for the research step.• Step 4- Research Preparation: This is the process where the new concepts are

finalized and the research parameters are identified. Parameters include the key objectives of the research, the audience to test with, the screening criteria and the survey or discussion guide. 67

Page 68: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

USING INCENTIVES TO REINFORCE INTRAPRENEURSHIP

68

Page 69: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

What is Reinforcement?• Reinforcement is the process of rewarding desired behavior to

ensure it recurs• Reinforcement of behavior is most effective when the reinforce

occurs immediately after the behavior. • The longer the time delay between the behavior and the

reinforcement, the less likely the desired behavior is to be reinforced.

69

Page 70: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Reinforcement Process

70

Antecedents Behavior Consequences

Page 71: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Schedules of Reinforcement

• Continuous Reinforcement (CRF) • Fixed Interval Schedules (FI) • Variable Interval schedules (VI) • Fixed Ratio Schedules (FR) • Variable Ratio Schedules (VR)

71

Page 72: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Continuous Reinforcement

• Continuous reinforcement occurs when each behavior results in a reinforcing consequence.

• Continuous reinforcement must be used to increase the performance of an activity.

• Here every improvement is reinforced

72

Page 73: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Fixed Interval Schedules• A fixed-interval schedule of reinforcement is one in

which a behavior is reinforced following a constant passage of time (e.g. every 6 months). • The FI schedules produce uneven response patterns

with an increase in response rate near the end of the interval. • For example, if we offer a salesman an incentive for

reaching a quota within a six- month period, his strongest performance is likely to occur during the sixth month. • Fixed Interval reinforcements are not very effective

when trying to reinforce entrepreneurial behavior73

Page 74: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Variable Interval Schedules

• A variable-interval schedule of reinforcement involves delivering a reinforcement following an average, but varying passage of time.

• For example, if the manager wishes to reinforce behavior thrice every month he might choose different timings in each month depending on desired performance

• Another example is reinforcing behavior after two weeks for the first time, after four weeks the 2nd time, after three weeks the 3rd time, etc

74

Page 75: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Fixed Ratio Schedules• A fixed-ratio schedule of reinforcement involves presenting a

reinforcer after a fixed or constant number of responses have occurred.

• Reinforcement is uniformly based on a fixed number of occurrences, e.g. paying a commission for number of items sold

• Fixed-ratio schedules of reinforcement result in the second highest rate of response of all the reinforcement schedules.

75

Page 76: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Variable-ratio schedules

• Variable-ratio schedules involve presenting a reinforcer after a variable, or unfixed number of responses has occurred. • Variable-ratio schedules of reinforcement lead to

the very highest rate of response. In addition, behavior which is reinforced on a variable-ratio • basis is also the most difficult to extinguish. • Variable-ratio and fixed-ratio schedules allow an

individual to exert a good deal of control over how much reinforcement is received. • Working harder or increasing the frequency of

behavior, will result in more reinforcement. 76

Page 77: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Comparative Framework of Reinforcement Schedules

Description Effectiveness

Cost When Used

CRF Each behavior results in a reinforcing consequence.

Moderate Cost-effective

In developing or increasing the performance rate of a behavior

FI Behavior is reinforced following a constant passage of time.

Least

effective Can get expensive

When an increase in response rate near the end of the interval is desired

VI Reinforcement delivered following an average, but varying passage of time

Higher than moderate

Moderate When relatively even response patterns are expected

FR Presenting a reinforcer after a fixed or constant number of responses have occurred

Second

highest Cost-effective

When high levels of response and conformity are expected

VR Presenting a reinforcer after a variable, or unfixed number of responses has occurred

Highest Cost-effective

When high levels of response and conformity are expected

77

Page 78: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Characteristic of a Good Incentive Scheme

• As a scientific organizational intervention, a well-designed incentive program should include six essential phases:

1. Specification of performance. 2. Measurement of performance. 3. Behavior analysis. 4. Design and implementation 5. Evaluation6. Maintenance of Performance

78

Page 79: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Specification of Performance

• The performance to be changed must be pinpointed so that it may be observed and accurately counted and recorded.

• The performance may be stated either as a behavior, or as the result of a behavior.

• Sales volume is a result, while the number of sales calls made is a behavior.

79

Page 80: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Measurement of performance

• Performance should be measured before an incentive program is instituted, in order to establish a base line. • It must also be measured during and after the

program. • Behavior may be measured according to

frequency or duration of the behavior, while results are generally measured in terms of quantity, such as sales or production volume.

80

Page 81: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Behavior Analysis

• The first question to be answered in a behavioral analysis is whether the performance problem is one of skill, or of rate of performance.

• If the problem is lack of skill, training is required to help the individual acquire the necessary behaviors.

• If, on the other hand, the problem is one of low rate of performance, then the contingencies of reinforcement must be changed.

81

Page 82: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Design and Implementation

Design is based on:1. Expected outcome2. Period within which outcome must be achieved3. Organizational capacity• In general, the broader the offering of incentives, the greater

the likelihood that more people will find something that is a reinforcer for them, and will therefore change their performance.

82

Page 83: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Evaluation

• Evaluation is done to gauge the extent to which the incentive accounted for the change in performance

• Each result/outcome must be linked to a specific reinforcer or reinforcers

• If the outcome is positive after reinforcement has occurred then the reinforcer may be seen to be effective

• Evaluation must be done periodically

83

Page 84: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Maintaining Performance

• The high levels of performance achieved during a short period of time under an incentive program will not necessarily remain at that high level without a planned effort to maintain that performance.

• Once a high level of performance has been achieved, that level can be maintained by planning a reinforcement schedule which will maintain the behavior.

84

Page 85: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Using Incentives

• Incentives, if used well, have capacity to reinforce intrapreneurship among staff• However, if used wrongly they could create

incentive-dependent intrapreneurship which is not only undesirable but can also be difficult to sustain• It is important to identify the right incentives to

use and favorably tailor them to the organizational situation to avoid undesirable backlashes• The secret is to align incentives as closely as

possible to the desired intrapreneurial behavior (e.g. reward creativity if you wish to reinforce it) 85

Page 86: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

How should they be used?

The Incentive tool can be used in two ways:

1. Availing incentives- to positively reinforce intrapreneurial behavior

2. Withdrawing Incentives- to negatively reinforce intrapreneurial behaviour

86

Page 87: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Categories of Incentives

Two general categories:1. Monetary incentives 2. Non-monetary incentives

87

Page 88: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Monetary Incentives

They Include:1. Salary2. Allowances 3. Share schemes (ESOPs)4. Bonuses5. Retirement schemes6. Profit sharing

88

Page 89: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Non-monetary Incentives

• Flexi-times• Commendations and approvals• Job/Task designs• Manipulation of working environment factors• Medical schemed• Club memberships• Staff development

89

Page 90: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Group Task• Identify the key incentives that you could use in your

organization to reinforce intrapreneurial behavior.• How would you use them?

90

Page 91: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Mistakes in Designing and Implementing Incentives

• Incompatibility with organizational mission, strategic objectives and culture

• Inadequate or wrong communication of incentives• Unforeseen (and undesirable) side effects• Inadequate or excessive incentives• Technical deficiencies (inadequate formulae etc.)• Misaligned incentives• Misapplication of incentives

91

Page 92: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Key Concerns by Staff1. Distributive fairness- How much do I receive and how much

do I compare with my peers?”2. Procedural fairness- What is the process that was used to

decide how much I receive?3. Status consistency- do staff lower down earn more than

staff higher up?4. Transparency- How were my incentives arrived at?

92

Page 93: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Factors that Influence Choice of Incentive

1. Technology2. Composition of Workforce 3. Culture 4. Task factors5. Hierarchy6. Market (competitor/ peer) factors

93

Page 94: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Steps to Designing An Effective Incentive Scheme

1. Analysis of the organization’s capacity2. Definition and clarification of the strategic goals

of the organization 3. Determination of the Intrapreneurial behavior

needed to achieve corporate goals4. Identification and development of incentives

that have capacity to reinforce the identified behavior

5. Implementation of incentives 6. Evaluation of performance of the incentives in

reinforcing behavior94

Page 95: Intrapreneurship/ Corporate Entrepreneurship Fred Mugambi Mwirigi

Thank you