The World Bank's innovation market.

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  • Author(s): Wood RC; Hamel G
  • Source:
    Harvard business review [Harv Bus Rev] 2002 Nov; Vol. 80 (11), pp. 104-10, 112-3, 134.
  • Publication Type:
    Journal Article
  • Language:
    English
  • Additional Information
    • Source:
      Publisher: Harvard Business School Pub Country of Publication: United States NLM ID: 9875796 Publication Model: Print Cited Medium: Print ISSN: 0017-8012 (Print) Linking ISSN: 00178012 NLM ISO Abbreviation: Harv Bus Rev
    • Publication Information:
      Original Publication: Boston, MA : Harvard Business School Pub.,
    • Subject Terms:
    • Abstract:
      Large, tradition-bound organizations can make space for radical, low-cost (and therefore low-risk) innovations. Just ask executives at the World Bank. The story of this best practice begins in 1998, when a young new-products group at the international funding agency proposed holding an Innovation Marketplace to capture novel ideas within the Bank for alleviating poverty. The forum, which eventually was opened to external participants, let people informally present their antipoverty ideas to potential funding sources. Funders could move among hundreds of booths and evaluate proposals for, say, a program that would provide postdisaster reconstruction insurance in developing countries or a vaccination development initiative. The marketplace truncated the Bank's standard project-review processes, which often stretched to a year or more, and gave funders permission to make commitments in the tens of thousands of dollars, rather than in the tens of millions more typical of Bank-financed projects. The marketplace concept met with some skepticism at the beginning. Some senior executives at the Bank felt no group had the right to spend the agency's money without following its well-established resource allocations process. But the marketplace team believed an open process for allocating grants would produce more breakthrough ideas in the long run than a centralized one. In this article, the authors describe how the new-products team brainstormed to create a market for ideas, how it got senior management's support, and how it has expanded on the original concept for these innovation marketplaces. The program's success, they contend, offers hope both for the world's poor and for business leaders looking to find new ideas under the hard crust of corporate dogma, conformance, and bureaucracy.
    • Publication Date:
      Date Created: 20021109 Date Completed: 20021202 Latest Revision: 20021108
    • Publication Date:
      20231215
    • Accession Number:
      12422794