Questions from Our Opportunity Cost Webinar
By David Matheson 5 min read
During our May 15 webinar, “Opportunity Costs and The Cost of Opportunities”, the audience asked Shawn Williams, VP of R&D at Rogers Corporation, Udi Chatow, Business Management at Applied Materials, and I questions on how to leverage opportunity costs to drive the upside value of innovation projects and portfolios. I’ll address these in this ValuePoint.
SmartOrg’s Innovation Screen by Difficulty compares projects by relative probability of success vs. expected return. Expected return is a net present value that incorporates time into its calculations through discounting of investment and return cash flows. SmartOrg’s Innovation Screen by Time compares projects by time to maturity vs. expected return, showing the distribution of short-term and long-term opportunities. It supports assessments of whether a project’s potential upside justifies a long-term investment and suggests where to pivot long-term projects into several short-term ones that accelerate returns. Additionally, SmartOrg’s projected P&L roll-ups expose troughs in future returns that could be filled by adding or time-shifting projects.
During our May 15 webinar, “Opportunity Costs and The Cost of Opportunities”, the audience asked Shawn Williams, VP of R&D at Rogers Corporation, Udi Chatow, Business Management at Applied Materials, and I questions on how to leverage opportunity costs to drive the upside value of innovation projects and portfolios. I’ll address these in this ValuePoint.
You shouldn’t waste time on a White Elephant (a project with both a low probability of success and a low potential return) unless it’s forced on you, for example, by a specific demand from a key customer. Try to pivot a White Elephant to a Bread & Butter (higher probability of success) or an Oyster (much higher expected value). If such a pivot isn’t possible or practical, then cancel the White Elephant.
Learning plans that guide projects efficiently are built from proof points:
The key to a culture that accepts the need to cut projects is credibility. When projects are evaluated objectively and compared consistently, stakeholders can agree the evaluations are fair. Even if a project owner doesn’t like the decision to cancel a project, that owner can accept the decision because it was made fairly on objective evidence.