So many business terms that we take for granted - like "survival of the fittest" - are actually based on Charles Darwin's seminal work on the ways that species adapt to their environment in the wild -- and the way these adaptations are handed down to their progeny. So it's always fun when other innovation bloggers combine smart thinking about corporate innovation with insights about Darwinian evolution. Here, Michael E. Driscoll of Dataspora asks What Can Darwin's Finches Tell Us About the Downturn?
"Newspaper articles paint the markets in metaphors like “difficult climate” and “harsh landscape” –but these clichéd phrases have a kernel of truth. Thinking about markets as natural environments reveals that selective forces are at work. But it also predicts when they work. In the natural world, as the story of Darwin’s finches tells us, selection acts in times of crisis: drought, famine, and disease. For our markets, that time is now."
As Driscoll points out, companies can learn a lot about how to survive the current downturn by looking to the example of Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands. During the wet seasons, it was hard to see how a finch’s beak made any difference to its fitness. However, when the rainy season brought no rain, they found that drought became the determining factor that shaped the survivors of the species:
In the same way, the benefits of having the right innovation processes in place are often masked during good times. "Firms with both new and old technologies remain solidly profitable, happily hopping along... But when hard times hit, innovators survive. More importantly, they flourish when the business cycle swings up again... But like Darwin’s finches, the survivors are not just those who have more technology investments, but those who get the dimensions right." At the end of the day, downturns are not only good for innovation, they are necessary.
[images: Darwin's Finches via Calgary Public Library]
Darwin's fame and popularity led to his name being associated with ideas and movements which at times had only an indirect relation to his writings, and sometimes went directly against his express comments.
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