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Achieving performance excellence through an integrated strategy of radical innovation and continuous improvement

Milé Terziovski (Milé Terziovski is the Director of the European Australian Co‐operation Centre (EACC) at The University of Melbourne. He was recently invited by the President of The Republic of Macedonia to participate on an e‐Commerce Advisory Committee chaired by the President. He was recently recognized by the International Who’s Who of Professionals. He has consulted to over 30 organisations in Australia and overseas in strategic, quality, and operations management.)

Measuring Business Excellence

ISSN: 1368-3047

Article publication date: 1 June 2002

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Abstract

Innovation is a complex process, one easily identified as being of critical importance for organisational success yet not easily managed. As international competition intensifies and product life cycles shorten, the pressure to innovate heightens. This paper compares the effectiveness of radical, incremental, and integrated innovation strategies on performance excellence. Hypotheses are tested in a cross‐sectional study of Australian and New Zealand manufacturing companies. Quantitative data was gathered from a large sample in a mail survey of manufacturing site managers and analysed using multivariate analysis techniques. Three performance excellence outcomes (customer satisfaction, productivity, and technological competitiveness) were used as dependent variables in the regression models. The major finding of the study is that a “bottom‐up” continuous improvement strategy is the preferred strategy to improve customer satisfaction and productivity in Australian and New Zealand manufacturing firms. On the other hand, a “top‐down” strategy is considered appropriate for increasing relative technological competitiveness. Surprisingly, an integrated strategy had the least explanatory power on performance excellence. This is consistent with the literature perception that firms have not reached a stage of systems integration and networking. The main implication of the study for practicing managers is that a continuous incremental improvement strategy is the major driving force behind any improvement effort, and that radical innovations should be used to “jump start” critical products, services, and processes intermittently. Once these strategies are in place, managers will be well on their way in achieving systems integration.

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Citation

Terziovski, M. (2002), "Achieving performance excellence through an integrated strategy of radical innovation and continuous improvement", Measuring Business Excellence, Vol. 6 No. 2, pp. 5-14. https://doi.org/10.1108/13683040210431419

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited

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