Journalism

Despite the easy headlines about consumer apps, tech startups, and special departments or incubators set up to do innovative things, the real innovations occur when established companies draw on what makes them unique (history, skills, customers) and dare to change processes, challenge expectations, and take risks in their operations.

Innovation isn’t a thing that stands on its own or has inherent value, but rather evidences the willingness to throw out even the most cherished practices, and risk transforming them into new, better, faster, more meaningful routines. It may involve tech, nor not...but it certainly involves people, processes, and the messy reality of inventing the future.

I've written 250 or so such stories at Forbes over the past half decade. Prior to that, I wrote about brands and marketing for Advertising Age, and brands & technology for Information Week.

PC Ads Could Have Reinvented Category

Early next week, some big PC makers will launch a $70 million ad campaign intended to get people to buy new computers. The spots are jarringly awkward — characters in differen...

Playboy’s Relevance After Nudity

In a move that would appear unfathomable at first stolen glance, Playboy announced earlier this week that it will forsake nudes. Many experts questioned what would be left for the...

A Kindlier, Gentler OPEC?

OPEC is considering ways to “enhance” its image, according to a story earlier this week in the Wall Street Journal, potentially using social media to help it communicate “cor...

Enel Matches Performance With Sustainability Vision

When Francesco Starace told the recent UN Conference on Climate Change how different the world’s energy use will look in the future, it carried particular weight: As CEO of Enel,...

PPG Innovation More Than Skin Deep

Buildings using smart coatings that absorb pollution. Airplanes wrapped in heat-deflecting tech borrowed from eggplant biology. Surfaces of wind turbine blades that slice through t...

United Should Innovate Its Rebirth Before Narrating It

United Airlines’ new CEO ran full-page newspaper ads yesterday in which he apologized to the world for the carrier’s poor service, vowed improvements, and provided a slick webs...

Booking.com Channels Its Inner Geek Toward Engagement

“We were a bunch of geeks who saw the chance to fix a broken marketplace, and then woke up one day to find ourselves booking an average of a million+ rooms,” said Pepijn Rijver...

Bad PR Won’t Impact ExxonMobil

Last week, InsideClimate News revealed that scientists at ExxonMobil in the mid-70s were acutely aware of impact of fossil fuels on global warming, though shortly thereafter the co...

AB InBev & SABMiller Risk Differentiation Without A Difference

The possible $122 billion merger between the world’s two largest beer conglomerates might yield significant economies of scale, but in doing so put at risk the consumer brands up...

Caterpillar Turns Fast Fail Into Sustainable Success

In early 2011, a development team from Caterpillar chanced on an opportunity to pitch its work on its first hybrid-electric excavator to potential customers visiting the same plant...

Vale Researches The Context For Its Innovation

Vale, the world’s largest producer of iron ore, has been quietly operating a basic research center near the mouth of the Amazon River since 2009. The project illustrates the impo...

The Rise of Snark Marketing

Snippy, in-joke marketing content is all the rage these days. The reasons why, and whether it accomplishes anything, are worth exploring. It was most recently apparent earlier t...

While Politicians Debate, Munich Re Innovates

Without wading into the public debate over global climate change,Munich Reinsurance America is quietly innovating both how and what it brings to the post-Sandy flood insurance mark...

3 PR Lessons From The Brand Attack On Chipotle

Late last week, an ad challenging Chipotle’s health and environmental claims appeared in the New York Post. It also provided a website link at which each of the chain’s major b...

Apple Ad Blocking Should Be Good News For Publishers

Apple’s latest iOS will allow users to block ads on their smartphones, thereby letting them join a consumer trend that has already turned nearly two hundred million personal comp...

Subway After Its PR Crisis: Nobody Cares, And That’s The Problem

It has been a couple of months since rumors started about the sexual proclivities of Subway’s former spokeseater Jared Fogle. Despite many expert predictions that the lingerin...

3 Lessons From Spotify’s Privacy Snafu

When Spotify published an update to its privacy policy, a loud group of users threw it back at the company. What happened, and why, should be instructive to every marketer. Earl...

A Tale of Two Cards

It was the best of offers, it was the worst of offers, it was the age of customer service, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of engagement, it was the epoch of incred...

Arby’s Goes Where Spam Won’t

Jon Stewart all but slandered Arby’s mercilessly on his TV show for the past 16 years, so how did the restaurant chain react to the airing of his final episode this week? It bo...

National Grid Looks Past The Switch For Utility Innovation

Most consumers probably think that electricity comes from a light switch or, as National Grid’s Ed White says, “Nobody wakes up and says thank goodness my utility invested in t...

RBC Innovation Starts With Principles, Not Tech

Royal Bank of Canada arguably leads its market in technology innovation, having been first with Mondex phone payments in the 1980s, then introduced chip and pin, contactless, and p...

A Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights

How is it even possible that we wonder why most people feel that they've lost their privacy, can't control how it's exploited and, as a result, feel less trusting of the brands wit...

An Über Lie

I awoke this morning to news that Uber had raised another billion dollars, and it got me to ruminate about how our society talks about technology and innovation. Like the histor...

Philips Uses Hospital Footprint To Drive Design Innovation

A short time ago, reports of bad images on some of its MRI machines was worrisome to Philips. Like airplanes, MRIs get cost-effective the more hours they’re used, so rescans cut ...

Continental’s Innovation Starts Where The Rubber Meets The Road

As Google and Apple spark talk of automobiles as self-driving computers with glorified iPod user interfaces, Continental is quietly but actively innovating ways to improve driving...

Silent Pocket Bets On Privacy As Fashion Accessory

Although surveys say most of us don’t like the fact that businesses and government can use our smartphones to watch us, the technical complexities of doing something about it, al...

Halliburton’s Disruptive B2B Innovation Can Take Years

Imagine introducing a disruptively novel, simple, low-cost solution to a problem that plagues an entire industry and then, three years later, seeing it mostly in trials with your l...

Pandora Doesn’t Open the Box on Privacy

Since I'm a Pandora user (it's an Internet streaming music service), I just received an email notifying me that it has updated its Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. It generously c...

ABB Delivers Disruptive Innovation Out At Sea

Anybody who understands the history of technology knows that innovation is additive, as new inventions build upon the insights yielded by older ones. “Disruption” is a quality ...

3 Ways to Disrupt Your Marketing

The practice of marketing has been innovated pretty much since it was first conceived, and many of those changes have been disruptive. Advertising was once a disruptive idea. So ...