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Topic: Innovation
Building an innovation nation
4 March 2009
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Update: A large number of commenters inquired about the location of specific cities on the chart that accompanies this article, or requested that we make available the data for the other cities. We appreciate the interest and have created an interactive version of the exhibit that will let you explore the other cities in the graphic. (19 March, 2009)

Co-author Luiz Pires responds to comments on this article.

The global recession is commanding most of the attention of business executives and government leaders. But they should not lose sight of innovation: managers know that the future of their businesses depend on it, and government leaders understand that the long-term growth prospects of cities and nations are tied to it. Even—perhaps especially—in times of economic turbulence, innovation remains the most important differentiator separating economic winners from also-rans.

McKinsey has partnered with the World Economic Forum to create an “Innovation Heat Map,” by identifying factors that are common to successful innovation hubs. As part of this effort, we have examined the evolution of hundreds of such clusters around the world and analyzed over 700 variables, including those driving innovation (business environment, government and regulation, human capital, infrastructure, and local demand) along with proxies for innovation output (for example, economic value added, journal publications, patent applications) to identify trends among the success stories. In the process, we have found patterns that suggest the critical ingredients required to grow, nurture, and sustain innovation hubs. At the same time, we have compiled thousands of data points that may be used to identify bottlenecks and benchmark the performance of cities, regions, and countries by measuring how they are evolving.

Exhibit: Mapping innovation clusters

Click the image above to launch an interactive version in a new window.

Creating a cluster: Of fundamentals and focus

Our analysis identified a set of fundamentals that are needed to establish a minimum infrastructure base. Criteria such as the quality of the physical infrastructure (for example, electrical, transportation, and telecommunications) and governance indicators (for instance, rule of law and government stability) are essential for a location to “earn the right to play.” Meeting this minimal threshold is an important prerequisite. Further improvements to this base, interestingly, are associated with only incremental growth in innovation capacity.

Once a base is established, innovation hubs must then develop a specific sector focus. Our analysis of the world’s most successful clusters shows that they have first established themselves as world-class players in an emerging specialty before expanding. This focus allows locations to concentrate limited resources, such as labor and capital, on developing competence and credibility. When successful, the result of these first two steps is the emergence of what we call an “innovation hot spring”: a small and fast-growing hub that relies on a small number of companies to establish itself as a relevant world player in a narrow sector. Our analysis indicates that these early innovation hubs have historically followed one of three primary paths.

  • Heroic bets: large, government-led, targeted investment efforts that focus on a specific promising sector and provide substantial initial support in the form of subsidies, tax holidays, and direct investments, to name a few. While this has been an attractive option for many locations, it has historically been a challenging path: governments are often ill equipped to identify the right sectors, to define nondistorting incentive structures, and to ensure an effective path out of the initial support phase.
  • Irresistible deals: regions that are able to attract established companies (often foreign players) who want to capitalize on a significant local advantage, such as low cost of qualified labor or access to large local markets. When done effectively, the location can build on this base to add greater value over time, moving, for example, from manufacturing to basic engineering to design and innovation. To be successful, regions need to create mechanisms that encourage the effective transfer of knowledge to the local ecosystem, as well as tools and processes to raise the skills of the local labor pool.
  • Knowledge oases: locations with a critical mass of highly specialized talent (for instance, a large research university or government R&D lab). These hubs capitalize on breakthrough technical advances for commercial success. This path is less frequently successful, however. It requires that locations attract the capital and entrepreneurial skills needed to bridge the chasm between idea creation and commercialization.

While innovation clusters may grow quickly in the short term, only a small proportion of these promising hot springs stand the test of time. Most hit a ceiling of limited resources that severely constrains their growth.

Nurturing the cluster: Securing the talent base

Our work has shown that critical drivers of innovation vary from sector to sector. The local regulatory environment, for example, is a critical determinant for some sectors; for others, the availability of venture capital or the presence of a demanding local customer base are key. However, the single common factor that drives—or, indeed, constrains—innovation across all sectors is the availability of a well-qualified and specialized talent pool. While a hub’s initial success can often be fueled by relying primarily on local talent, the importance of attracting, developing, and retaining a vibrant base of world-class talent increases as clusters mature and grow in complexity.

While the need for talent is the same all over the world, different locations are currently facing very different challenges. Japan and Western Europe must overcome a severe demographic challenge—their fast-aging populations and growing number of retirees need to be replaced or their labor efficiency further enhanced. North America is struggling with the challenge of replacing a large number of highly specialized immigrants who are now choosing to stay or return home. Emerging Asian economies, while able to draw from a very large demographic pool, need to train a larger proportion of their population to reach world-class levels. They also must increase the attractiveness of their hubs to better compete for top global talent. While simply meeting basic infrastructure needs is sufficient to sustain initial growth, a region must establish itself as an attractive destination for global talent in order to establish itself as an innovation hub.

Sustaining the cluster: Sowing the seeds of reinvention

While focus is critical for emerging innovation hubs, as they mature, they need to broaden their portfolios of businesses and sectors. This diversification is vital to the long-term survival of an innovation hub—it allows the hub to survive the unavoidable downturns that affect specific sectors and provides the impetus for continuous reinvention. New innovators typically emerge in adjacent industries, or as hubs attract nonlocal players that want to capitalize on the local infrastructure and available talent. Our data indicate that, depending on the strategy, mature innovation clusters will evolve toward one of the following categories:

  • Dynamic oceans: large and vibrant innovation ecosystems with continuous creation and destruction of new businesses. Leading innovators and primary sectors change organically as the hub frequently reinvents itself through significant breakthrough innovations.
  • Silent lakes: slow-growing innovation ecosystems backed by a narrow range of very large established companies that operate in a handful of sectors. These clusters are frequently the source of a steady stream of “evolutionary” innovations and step-wise improvements.
  • Shrinking pools: innovation hubs that are unable to broaden their areas of activity or increase their lists of innovators and so find themselves slowly migrating down the value chain, as their narrow sector becomes less innovation driven and increasingly commoditized.

The data-driven methodology of the Innovation Heat Map sheds new light on the innovation process and allows for an objective diagnosis of both innovation output and local bottlenecks. Going forward, we look to built upon this approach to evaluate conventional wisdom about the drivers of innovative environments and thus bring new perspectives to this vitally important topic.

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Comment [46]

Agree? Disagree? Let us know what you think. Please include your full name with your comment. Comments may be edited.

  • “This heat map slightly contradicts report by NYTimes (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/25/technology/25innovate.html?partner=rss&emc=rss) that ranked United States sixth in innovation and highlighted countries like Singapore, Taiwan, Finland and China but all these regions seem to missing in the heat map prepared by McKinsey.”

    Source(/thanks to): http://www.labnol.org/

    Posted 3 March 2009, 05:31 by Yuva

  • From the picture that you have shared, it seems the driving factor behind this finding is the # of patents.

    Is that true?

    Posted 3 March 2009, 05:21 by ashish

  • This is a beautiful analysis with great insights. Three areas which would make me cautious:

    - I’m not sure about the correlation between patents and actual innovation. To give an example: Twitter brings enormous innovation of the real kind (i.e. used by actual people and companies in the economy), but I haven’t heard about them filing any patent whatsoever. Another example without any patent would be www.jamendo.com a company that is transforming distribution of music with their http://pro.jamendo.com service…

    - in hindsight correlations often look like causality and we can build great theories about what made something successful… theories that can be statistically verified over a period of time, but do not necessarily constitute the “truth” if there’s such a thing. I mean, read Taleb’s Fooled by randomness and you might want to extend the study to past periods of History when there was innovation without any patenting system and without established institutions like governments or companies doing anything to facilitate innovation.

    - which brings me to the last point: to me the world is a chaotic place that you cannot shape with recipes. All one can do, whether a CEO or the President of the most powerful nation on Earth, is create turbulence that causes the overall self-adapting system to change its form… taking into account the fact that other turbulences exert their own influence (see current financial crisis)…

    My two dimes. Thanks for publishing this work which gave me food for thought :)

    Posted 3 March 2009, 04:21 by alex Papanastassiou

  • I agree with the comment above that a searchable version of the map would be helpful for finding also other cities around the world.

    Posted 3 March 2009, 04:10 by philos

  • Is there a flash version of this map so we can see the rest of places. I am from India and am disappointed to see India not in the picture.

    Posted 3 March 2009, 03:17 by Ritesh M Nayak

  • Interesting. Can you provide a searchable version of the map? Thanks in advance!

    Posted 3 March 2009, 02:03 by Paola Bonomo

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01 Apr 2010 · 09:45:33 PM GMT
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In response to Nurturing the innovation reef

05 Jan 2010 · 10:38:34 AM GMT
Gross oversimplification on many different levels. I like the resulting dialog, questions and comments more than the article.
—thesullster

In response to Nurturing the innovation reef

10 Nov 2009 · 04:31:17 AM GMT
Intriguing article.
—George Kalakanis

In response to Building an innovation nation

07 Oct 2009 · 05:55:13 AM GMT
While I support the ideas presented, I think it is narrow minded to talk about the “national” perspective. It is not necessary to keep educated immigrants in America for Americans to benefit from their deeds. We live in a global economy a...
—Bengt Bjorck

In response to Nurturing the innovation reef

05 Oct 2009 · 05:16:06 PM GMT
I want to associate myself strongly with the comments here regarding the relationship between smart immigration policies and innovation. I was the project director for the recent Independent Task Force on U.S. Immigration Policy, sponsored by the Cou...
—Edward Alden

In response to Nurturing the innovation reef

04 Oct 2009 · 06:54:40 PM GMT
Silicon Valley has created a technological innovation ecosystem. Since the economy is 80% service, the ecosystem for developing innovative services that truly serve human and community needs is not as well developed here. BVA is supporting developm...
—Darlene Crane

In response to Nurturing the innovation reef