Thinking about Innovation as the new asset bucket

I had a moment this week where I was utterly absorbed by how indulgent my job can be. I interviewed Tim Hodgson, head of the Thinking Ahead Group at Towers Watson. He gets paid to think, and I was getting paid to talk to him about thinking. Anyway, it’s had a knock-on effect and ever since I’ve been mulling the origination of ideas.It’s admirable that an investment consulting group has a dedicated group of individuals whose job is to challenge the status quo. That in an environment where businesses are pre-occupied with “value add”, it dedicates resources to essentially what is purely research and development (or in other words, a cost centre).

A number of pension funds are looking at how to incorporate new ideas into their investment thinking too, with large institutions such as APG and CalSTRS allocating investments to “innovation” buckets.

In my experience, ideas come randomly. But it is possible to create an environment where ideas are “allowed” to come more easily. Ideas come from never being satisfied with an answer. (In this context ideas are a little misrepresented. Ideas don’t have to be solutions. They can simply be observations, and resisting the urge to solve something can be quite liberating.)

Good ideas challenge and lead, and in speaking about the ideas generation at Towers Watson, Hodgson quotes Henry Ford: “If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.”

Ideas also come with perspective, and perspective comes from time and knowledge. Within this context Hodgson says his group needs to be “networked in to thinkers”, they read widely and have relationships with institutions outside of the industry, such as the Santa Fe Institute, the US science think tank that was the originator of complexity science.

Collectively speaking, ideas come from diversity in thinking. This is convention on well-governed boards, or indeed sports teams, where distinct specialist but complementary skills imply the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. This is true of the Thinking Ahead Group (TAG) where all the individuals approach an idea from a different angle.

Sponsored Content

They recognise that the world is interconnected – that politics, economics, society, environment, technology and finance all interact on almost all issues in many different ways. “There are very few self-contained problems,” he says.

An example is Hodgson’s approach to thinking about sustainability.

“We do work on this but there are some questions we haven’t worked on, and I would say my thinking is not yet complete. If growth is linked to physical elements then in the long term the sustainability of growth is about 0 per cent per annum because there are finite resources. This may be over the very long term, and then I wonder if homo sapiens are wired for long-term thinking?”

TAG is tasked with trying to improve the investment map to make it more detailed and useful. TAG is brimming with competing forces: its ideas need to be as global and generic as possible, and its members are specialists at generalism.

“We are trying to create more accurate mental models to better describe how the world works, then we can make better decisions, and better decisions are more profitable,” he says.

It was also Henry Ford who said “thinking is the hardest work there is, which is probably the reason so few engage in it.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Experts mull strategies in slow growth climate

Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford University’s Rhodes House Fiona Trafford-Walker, director of consulting at Frontier Advisors argues that Australian investors are operating in a changed environment and need to “get used to slower economic growth.” Speaking as part of an expert panel on how the continued environment of slow growth and low

Macro diversification: How do investors diversify risk?

“Geopolitics does matter and how to navigate geopolitical events on a portfolio is challenging,” argues Tom Clarke, partner and portfolio manager at William Blair speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Rhodes House, Oxford University. In a session dedicated to macro strategies for investors to best navigate today’s complex investment universe and diversify risk, Clarke argues that “hiding” from

Oxford Professor urges urgent European reform

The University of Oxford’s distinguished Professor of Economics David Vines predicted the ongoing crisis in Europe will turn into a “train wreck with implications for investors” unless governments undertake significant reforms. He urges for large write downs of the sovereign debt of southern European countries, a loosening of austerity in those countries and a significant

Indexing pressure improves active management

A new study of active and indexed-based mutual funds shows the impact of different countries’ regulatory and financial market environments. The study finds that the average alpha generated by active management is higher in countries with more explicit indexing and lower in countries with more closet indexing. The evidence suggests that explicit indexing improves competition in the mutual fund

Investors need to revamp portfolio construction

Investors should re-consider their investment processes in order to achieve the needed “step-change in efficient portfolio construction” in a low return environment, the chief executive of the A$109 billion ($83 billion) Future Fund, David Neal, says. “It is the investment process that turns the universe of opportunities into a portfolio, and right now that process

Investors need to rethink operating model

A neat little story of investment flows, asset allocation changes, and relationship and service demands is emerging from the third annual Top1000funds.com/Casey Quirk Global Fiduciary CIO Survey. If you’re a CIO of an asset owner what that means is more control but also more responsibilities and the demands of more internal resources. For managers it

Previous