Innovation Governance in Chinese Family Business: A Case Study
Thomas Menkhoff and Ong Geok Chwee
Lee Kong Chian School of Business, Singapore Management University, Singapore
Keywords: Innovation Governance, Chinese Family Firms, Qian Hu, Singapore.
Abstract: Corporate innovation governance can be defined as a systematic approach to align goals, allocate resources
and assign decision-making authority for innovation, across the company and with external parties. While
the dos and don’ts of innovation governance approaches in non-Asian firms are fairly well researched, little
is known about the Chinese way of governing innovation in Asian family firms. This paper provides
insights into the innovation management capabilities of Qian Hu, an integrated ornamental fish service
provider incorporated in Singapore in 1998. Based on half-structured interviews with its Executive
Chairman and MD Mr. Kenny Yap, we exemplify the key components of Singapore’s Innovation
Excellence Award (I-Award) and how Qian Hu made them work. The paper attempts to shed light on some
of the unique innovation management approaches in Chinese family-owned enterprises, e.g. with regard to
‘family involvement in boards’ which divert to some extent from formal business excellence standards. The
paper is part of an on-going research project aimed at examining the specifics of innovation governance in
Asian enterprises.
1 WHAT IS INNOVATION
GOVERNANCE AND WHY
DOES IT MATTER
One approach to encourage more innovation in
business and beyond is to effectively govern it. In
contrast to the word innovation which refers to the
implementation of a new or significantly improved
product, service or process that creates real value,
the term governance is a bit more complex due to its
connotations of authority, control and influence. The
word itself derives from the Greek word kubernáo
with the connotation of steering a ship
(metaphorically, it refers to the challenges of
steering Men).
Broadly speaking, governance is about the nature
of authority relationships in a country or an
organisation as well as the degree of formality of
associated rules, norms, and actionable procedures -
which can vary widely (Deschamps, 2013; 2014;
2015). Corporate innovation governance can be
defined as a systematic approach to ‘align goals,
allocate resources and assign decision-making
authority for innovation, across the company and
with external parties’. Innovation governance is a
“top management responsibility” that cannot be
delegated to any single function or to lower levels of
an organisation (Deschamps, 2008).
Corporate innovation contexts are characterised
by uncertainty (How will our customers react?);
complexity (How best to manage diverse groups of
internal and external knowledge experts from
different disciplines?); low degree of predictability
(Who might disrupt us and what changes will occur
within our organisation when we develop a new
innovation strategy); and creativity (How to nurture
a climate where creativity can flourish?). Therefore,
business leaders need governance frameworks, tools
and techniques to effectively strategise innovation
efforts with a clear focus and a balanced portfolio of
innovation initiatives to make innovation work
(Adams et al., 2010).
While many would agree that winning firms are
characterised by strong innovation governance
approaches, empirical research about this topic in
Asia is rather poor. Anecdotal evidence suggests that
there are many organisations here where formal
innovation governance systems are completely
lacking. But there are also a couple of real
champions where innovation is effectively governed
via solid innovation management frameworks, top
leadership support and capable managers aimed at
creating sustainable business and societal value.
Examples include Defence Science Technology
Agency (DSTA), Sheng Siong Group and
158
Menkhoff, T. and Chwee, O.
Innovation Governance in Chinese Family Business: A Case Study.
DOI: 10.5220/0006851501580165
In Proceedings of the 15th International Joint Conference on e-Business and Telecommunications (ICETE 2018) - Volume 1: DCNET, ICE-B, OPTICS, SIGMAP and WINSYS, pages 158-165
ISBN: 978-989-758-319-3
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
Biosensors Interventional Technologies Pte Ltd - all
of which recently won the SPRING Innovation
Excellence Awards. Their summary reports are
available on the website of Enterprise Singapore and
provide valuable insights into key components of
innovation governance systems such as a compelling
strategic innovation vision and mission (to
determine the goals of innovation efforts), a system
of supportive values, ‘the right’ sources of
innovation, innovation process-related details and so
forth.
A good innovation governance system not only
clearly states the vision and intended goals of
innovation efforts, it also helps to clearly define
roles and responsibilities related to the innovation
process, including decision power lines (e.g. with
regard to innovation budgets) and the nature of
relationships with both internal and external
collaborators, e.g. in the context of open innovation.
It sheds light on the desired innovation culture and
specifies how the organisation intends to create and
sustain a climate in where new ideas are encouraged
and rewarded, and where failure is indeed an option
and not a shameful defeat.
Innovation governance ensures that the right
innovation metrics (e.g. ratio of incremental to
game-changing innovation in the portfolio,
measured in the number of initiatives and/or
expenditures) are used (Adams et al., 2006), and it
establishes proper management routines regarding
innovation project management, information sharing
and timely decisions with reference to the stages of
the product innovation process, such as ‘Go to
Development’, ‘Go to Testing’ and ‘Go to Launch’
(Cormican and O'Sullivan, 2004). Without a well-
balanced portfolio of incremental and radical
innovation initiatives, organisations may become too
product centric and/or too revenue impatient.
2 ENTERPRISE SINGAPORE’S
BUSINESS EXCELLENCE
FRAMEWORK
A useful tool to develop a governance system for
innovation is Enterprise Singapore’s business
excellence framework. Enterprise Singapore is a
government agency championing enterprise
development (https://www.enterprisesg.gov.sg)
under the Ministry of Trade and Industry. Its
Business Excellence Framework helps companies
build their business capabilities, improve their
organisational strengths and identify areas for
improvement. The Business Excellence (BE)
initiative was launched in Singapore in 1994 to help
organisations assess which stage they are at on the
excellence journey and what they need to do to
achieve a higher level of performance. This is done
by an assessment of organisational performance
against the requirements of the BE framework which
provides a holistic standard that covers all critical
drivers and results for business excellence. It
illustrates the cause and effect relationships between
the drivers of performance, what the organisation
does, and the results it achieves. It covers the
following areas:
Figure 1: Areas Covered by the Business Excellence
Framework.
The organisational profile sets the context for the
way the organisation operates and serves as an
overarching guide for how the framework is applied.
So-called “attributes of excellence” describe key
characteristics of high performing organisations and
are embedded throughout all critical drivers of the
framework. These are: 1. Leading with Vision and
Integrity, 2. Creating Value for Customers, 3.
Driving Innovation and Productivity, 4. Developing
Organisational Capability, 5. Valuing People and
Partners, 6. Managing with Agility, 7. Sustaining
Outstanding Results, 8. Adopting an Integrated
Perspective, and 9. Anticipating the Future.
Together, the organisational profile and the
attributes of excellence form the context and
foundation that encapsulate the entire framework as
shown in the diagram above. To achieve excellence,
an organisation needs strong leadership to drive the
mind-set of excellence and to set a clear strategic
direction. Customer-centricity is positioned after
leadership to demonstrate the focus on anticipating
customer needs and creating value for them.
Strategy is developed based on understanding
internal and external stakeholder requirements to
guide people and process capabilities required to
drive desired results. To sustain excellent
performance, organisations need to continually
learn, improve and innovate. Continuous learning
and innovation is demonstrated through acquiring
Innovation Governance in Chinese Family Business: A Case Study
159
knowledge from the lessons learned and the
measurement of results, and using them in a closed
feedback loop to support decision-making and drive
improvements.
The so-called Singapore Innovation Class is one
of four standards and certification programmes
based on the BE framework interested companies
can choose from (based on the same seven
dimensions of excellence, namely, Leadership,
Planning, Information, People, Processes, Customers
and Results). Singapore Innovation Class (I-Class)
offers certification for business excellence in
innovation aimed at helping organisations to develop
their innovation management capabilities. There
were 107 I-Class certified organisations as of
October 2016.
Launched in 2001, the Innovation Excellence
Award (I-Award) recognises organisations for
outstanding innovation management capabilities
resulting in breakthrough or impactful innovations
observed in areas such as business models,
processes, and products and services (Mcgrath,
2010).
3 MANAGERIAL AND
ORGANIZATION FEATURES
OF CHINESE FAMILY FIRMS
Asian enterprises are dominated by Chinese family
businesses, i.e. both small and large business
organizations owned and managed by ethnic
Chinese business leaders (Menkhoff et al., 2008;
Menkhoff and Gerke, 2004). Despite prevailing
notions about their growth restrictions due to
cultural characteristics such as familism (nepotism)
or lack of professionalism, many of them have
developed into globalised MNCs as exemplified by
firms such as the Oversea-Chinese Banking
Corporation (OCBC), the Hong Leong Group or Eu
Yan Sang International. Contrasting ‘traditional
Chinese’ vs. ‘modern Western’ organisations and
their ‘typical’ attributes does not always reflect
empirical reality in fast changing Asia because of
growth dynamics and intergenerational transitions as
stressed by Fock (2009) or Menkhoff et al., (2014).
A typical example of a local Chinese family firm
is integrated ornamental fish service provider Qian
Hu which was incorporated in 1998 (Menkhoff,
2008). Since 2000, it is listed on the Singapore
Exchange. The firm’s business activities include the
breeding of Dragon Fish as well as farming,
importing, exporting and distributing of over 1,000
species and varieties of ornamental fish. The
company under the leadership of Kenny Yap also
produces and distributes several aquarium and pet
accessories (http://www.qianhu.com/about-qian-
hu/corporate-profile). In 2013, Qian Hu won the
Innovation Excellence Award (I-Award).
3.1 Comment on Research Method
In the following, we will present selected insights
from an ongoing study on the innovation governance
specifics of Asian family firms based on the
grounded theory (Glaser and Strauss, 1967) and case
study approach (Yin, 2014; Bernard, 2000) to
uncover what makes innovation tick in Asian
enterprise.
4 INNOVATION GOVERNANCE
AT QIAN HU
4.1 Visionary Innovation Leadership
According to Kenny Yap, innovation is extremely
important in the changing business environment,
especially in Singapore with its continuous emphasis
on improving productivity:
“How do you increase your productivity? It's
only through innovation. There's no other way. You
say ‘you save a little bit here and there’. That’s not
significant. You've got to create some significant
and impactful kind of productivity increase. You
have to go for innovation because innovation is
about finding new things to do, which you can do to
increase the value added…It's extremely important
for any company, especially for SMBs, because the
impact of the disruptions of technology is going to
make them die faster than the bigger company”.
The CEO “must be the key driver” of innovation
efforts because the management staff may not
always have the complete picture about finance and
other resources:
“If the CEO does not have the heart and the
belief in making innovation work, I don't think that
the organization can do that. Who are those groups
of people that are heavily involved? Usually all the
top management members … and then you have to
empower all the other people to try, you know, to
come up with new things. This is why I say
innovation is broad-based. Of course, you have to
have a certain kind of hierarchy and chain of
command. But basically, I want to involve
everybody. Every project small or big must make a
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difference”.
4.2 Strategy as Driver of Customer
Satisfaction, Innovation and
Productivity
Since its ISO 9002 certification in 1996, Qian Hu
has put emphasis on value creation through quality
products and processes. Through Qian Hu’s new e-
shop, for example, customers have easy access to the
firm’s quality products at competitive prices. Qian
Hu started to innovate internal processes in 1997 by
semi-automating their packing processes while most
of the other fish farms still relied on manual
processes: “But we semi-automated. We also
integrated the weighting machine, computers, and all
these to generate packing orders or the invoice. We
started the whole thing back in 1997. There was a
government agency called Productivity Board which
helped us”.
In 2009, a strategically integrated R&D division
was formed to spearhead the firm’s research and
development efforts. For Kenny technology is a key
innovation driver:
“No matter what kind of new things you do, you
have to involve technology. So technology is
something that I wanted to put in. Before I retire, I
want people to call Qian Hu a technology company.
Not a fish company because, regardless of what we
do, we use technology to enable what we are doing”.
Over the years, Qian Hu has implemented
numerous innovative projects, automated processes
and increased efficiency, for example, by developing
a new filtration system called HydroPure as part of
its R&D driven technology innovation efforts:
“Conventionally we used filter material but now
we use current electrolytes to break down the things
that we don't want like ammonia. We retain all the
minerals. So that’s new. Of course, we have to spend
a lot of money on it. During the past few years, Qian
Hu was not doing too well but is profitable - not as
profitable as before. I always tell my shareholders,
‘if I stop doing innovative projects or invest in R &
D, I can show you the numbers; but Qian Hu will die
after I leave the company’. So this is why I always
say, ‘a CEO’s job is to think beyond the current
generation kind of business’”.
R&D is critical for further differentiating Qian
Hu from its competitors. Recently, the firm has
moved into edible fish:
“Innovation helps us to diversify into other
things. This is why it is extremely important for
Qian Hu. We have been doing a lot of innovative
things, and we invested a lot in R&D. We are able to
diversify quite smoothly. The learning process of
going into edible fish is slightly shorter than any of
the things that we attempted before”.
To ensure business continuity and successful
strategy execution, a long-term business perspective
is important. A short-term business perspective
based on quarterly reporting can hurt the business
quite badly:
“I'm lucky because nobody can fire me because
my family owns the business so I can think long
term. Just imagine an employed CEO, the bonus tied
to annual results and he not being ethical, the
company will collapse. So I say, ‘sometimes I do not
know what shareholders want’… When they buy a
share today, they expect that it appreciates by 10%
the next day. They never have the heart, and so I
say, ‘I will care for my employee more than you.
Because I'm the bigger shareholder. I know how to
take care of the shareholders already. You are the
short term ones. I'm the long term one. And my
employees actually create value for you’. This is the
truth but nobody wants to say that. But I dare to tell
my shareholders that. I say, ‘whether you like it or
not, it's a free market, free will, you can always sell
Qian Hu share’”.
With regard to the importance of formalizing
innovation strategy per se, Kenny has a dualistic
view. On the one hand, Qian Hu has implemented a
strategic, formalised approach towards innovation
based on a 5-year plan which has helped the firm to
clinch the SPRING innovation award:
“We have all the systems of doing innovative
things. The whole process is being audited and we
got the Singapore SQA award. We are also a people
excellence award winner. We also got the
innovations award. We have the whole systems of
getting all the people involved in place”.
But on the other hand, Qian Hu’s boss believes
that it is important to maintain a more organic, less
structured approach towards innovation management
driven by an innovation-friendly environment:
“Structuring innovation is so unreal. I remember
in the army we had these work improvement teams,
a structured work improvement approach. The HQ
forced us to come up with an innovation and then, if
you did not, you had issues. You know innovative
ideas can just suddenly appear. So we give our staff
a good environment - whenever they have a good
idea, when they propose it to us, and we think its
good, we will implement it, and we'll recognize
them by giving them a plaque or a monetary award.
So we have this system of asking all the people, the
ground people, to be innovative. And, of course,
during top management meetings we always talk
Innovation Governance in Chinese Family Business: A Case Study
161
about the new things that we do that can create an
impactful outcome”.
With regard to budget-driven, strategic R&D
management approaches, a flexible approach works
better according to Qian Hu’s leader: “Budgeting R
& D does not really make sense because you never
know when a good idea comes out. Between 2011
and 2017, our expenditures for R&D were higher
than our annual net profit. The R & D budget
fluctuates. Besides my revenues, it's based on what
kind of good ideas come up every year. You don't
wait or say, ‘oh, I don't have a budget - let's wait.
No, no, no’. This year I have three projects on hand.
I know it's going to eat into a lot of my expenses and
all that. But I say, ‘do it now’. I mean, like, why do I
have to schedule it. Just do it. Unless you say you
can't because you do not have the right people.”
4.3 Differentiation and Impact:
Criteria for Project-related R&D
Decisions
Asked how he determines and decides whether a
project is worth investing into, Kenny stressed that
important criteria include its impact and whether it
helps Qian Hu to further differentiate itself from
other companies. At the moment the firm is doing a
project with NUS (National University of
Singapore) to produce high value fish albino. It
involves two Ph.D. researchers: “We had to sponsor
them for four years. Their Ph.D. projects focus on
this technology. Later, I might employ them if I
think they are good and if they can strengthen my
R&D”.
Sometimes he uses his gut feelings when it
comes to decisions about innovative R&D projects:
“You can not always put numbers on the paper
and do all the changes because those really stifle
your decision making process. You have to look at a
person. Can I trust you? Yes, I think I can. Because
the way you talk. Okay, anyway, I know this
professor X for several years already. So I know his
character. All these kinds of things will come
together and help to form my opinion to say ‘yes
we'll do this project’”.
Minor decisions about potential new projects are
delegated to his Deputy Directors and the MDs of
the firm’s subsidiaries:
“Only when it comes to major ones involving
millions of dollars or half a million or so that are
going to drag down profit, they have to inform me.
And then I will approve or not. Minor ones, you
know, as long as they are below hundred thousand
Singapore dollars they can go and do that so they
don't go bothering me”.
4.4 Valuing and Rewarding People
Kenny puts great emphasis on building a robust
culture of innovation:
“You must have a culture of doing these kinds of
things. It's all about culture anyway. The identity of
any company is determined by the culture and the
behaviour of the upper management”. One way of
endorsing this is to put it into the mission statement
so that employees know that the company tries to be
different.
In terms of staff participation and innovation
efforts, management tries to involve everyone by
making people “a little bit more creative” and by
creating an environment to try things without getting
penalized when mistakes are made:
“Making a mistake twice is a stupid mistake.
They must learn from the first mistake. How do
people get wisdom? You make a lot of mistakes.
You have a lot of experiences, and when you come
to a certain age you become wiser because of these
experiences. Without all the mistakes do you think
you can have the experience? I don't think so”.
As Kenny pointed out, responsible employees do
care about the survival of the company and its
sustainability:
“If the company can survive, they will bring
good things to other people. Responsibility is a
must. The other thing is attitude. The attitude
towards life and towards what is right and what is
wrong also determines how you want to run the
company. Try to bring good things to other people.
When I employ an employee, we look at attitude
first of all”.
Qian Hu has a system to reward staff for
suggesting good ideas: “Every month or any week,
staff can come up with some things that we think are
fantastic, and immediately we will reward them
during that month rather than drag it to the end of
the year... Innovation things cannot have KPIs.
Innovation is a feel. Innovation is a behavioural
thing. Creativity is about certain daily behaviors and
certain actions that define certain kinds of outcomes.
You don't go and measure this. When they do all the
things right, eventually the outcomes will show. You
don't have to specifically reward certain types of
ideas because you stifle the way you come up with
new ideas… Let them try everything. Think outside
the box”.
To generate innovative ideas through external
collaborations Qian Hu has recently invested into a
start-up:
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162
“We have one project which is a start-up. A few
years ago it was struggling but I really believe they
have a good product, and they have knowledge that
we need… We might want to acquire the company. I
think the best way to assess that is to do a project
first and then see whether the management people
are comfortable with it. If we are, then we might
acquire the company. We have attempted to do that
before, e.g. acquiring medical plant-based formula.
You know, we tried to go into aquaculture but we
refused to use antibiotics. But we must have some
things to treat them when they get sick, right? We do
acquire herbal formula or other kind of things
because it would take us years to develop that on our
own”.
4.5 Innovation Governance at Board
Level
Asked about the role of the board in the area of
innovation (Zahra and Pearce, 1990; Liang et al.,
2013; Zhou and Li, 2016), Kenny stressed that this is
contingent upon the stage of business development,
the importance of technology as innovation lever
and the required expertise. Board members may
change according to the needs of the company:
“Initially we only had lawyers, accountants or
consultants. Some of my ex-consultants became my
board members. The IPO lawyer became my board
member. A few years ago I started replacing some of
the board members or added in new board members
with more emphasis on innovations or technology.
Two or three years ago I asked a retired AVA
expert, head of fisheries with a PhD in fish disease
and other things, to become a board member. I
believe that if NUS has no problem with the lecturer,
after the albino project I might invite him to become
my board member. So I develop board members
according to the needs of the company”.
Kenny doesn’t want to have “all the politics”
which are typical for larger organizations:
“A small company can be controlled by me or by
my family. I know exactly what the company needs.
We hate politics. I told my people ‘if you want to
play politics, become a politician. Don't become a
Qian Hu family member. We don't do this. If you
have anything, put it on the table. Address it. Move
on. Life should be like that. Life should not, you
know, be about back stabbing or having grievances
or grudges against someone. Just be a happy ... I
want Qian Hu to be a happy company, and in a
happy company employees are happy… Not happy
in terms of financial results but whether I'm also
doing some things that are beneficial to other people.
One of the greatest things I told my brothers, my
friends and during some other open occasions, the
greatest satisfaction for me is not because I'm the
CEO of Qian Hu, it's because when I look at my
brothers and I look at my employees, Qian Hu has
made many millionaires over the years. If they know
how to save and if they don't spend it all”.
4.6 Family Matters
Most of Qian Hu’s shares are owned by the Yap
family (over 50% according to Kenny). Top
management comprises 30% family members while
70% are outside professionals.
Kenny puts strong emphasis on family values:
“Actually, you know, when I created Qian Hu, when
we listed the company, I was aware of the
importance of corporate culture and values. So this
is why you have to put in something to tell people
what we believe in and what we care about. So the
kind of behavior dictates our attitude. How do I
come up with all these kinds of things? It's because I
pick and choose from my Yap family values and
culture and I just put it there and I said, ‘we call it
Qian Hu family members’ so there are family
elements of all the people involving in this entity.
This is what you see right now, whatever you can
sense in terms of culture and values, its part of the
Qian Hu family values. Regardless of race, sexual
preferences, gender, you know, religion and all that,
if you concur with my values and you agree with my
culture, right, you're part of the Qian Hu family. So
we expanded the definition of the Qian Hu Family”.
Kenny is proud that the Qian Hu business has
helped its staff to provide their families with a
brighter future:
“We came from a poor family … Maybe I have
helped society to keep certain families well-off by
working. That’s one of the biggest incentives for me
to come to work, rather than anything else. I think
maybe Qian Hu has created something good in the
broader sense of it”.
5 CONCLUSION AND
IMPLICATIONS
In this paper, we provided insights into the
innovation management philosophy of Kenny Yap,
the leader of a Chinese family-based enterprise
(Qian Hu) in Singapore with reference to innovation
governance. The term corporate innovation
governance refers to a systematic approach to align
Innovation Governance in Chinese Family Business: A Case Study
163
goals, allocate resources and assign decision-making
authority for innovation, across the company and
with external parties (March, 1991; Waldman et al.,
1991; Deschamps, 2008). Key capabilities include
Kenny Yap’s visionary and values-based innovation
leadership cum strategic innovation approach as
exemplified by the emphasis on family continuity,
value creation through R&D and product
innovations beyond existing ones such as the Lumi-
Q fish tank. Qian Hu’s innovation governance
approach can be described as both explorative and
exploitative. ‘Yap family values’ serve as guidance
system for managing both people and partners while
business processes are optimised through IT and
strategic L&D approaches with a view towards
achieving greater business results. Table 1
summarizes key components of Qian Hu’s
innovation governance capabilities.
Table 1: Features of Qian Hu’s Innovation Management
Capabilities.
Leading with Vision
and Integrity
Values-based leadership with a focus
on quality, innovation, technology
and productivity improvements
combined with bottom-up staff
participation (e.g. based on the
‘creating value from mistakes’
approach)
Creating Value for
Customers
Value creation through quality
products and processes
Improved customer satisfaction index
Fas
t
(er) on-time delivery
Strategy as Driver of
Innovation and
Productivity
5-year product and process innovation
plan
Technology and business model
innovation
Valuing People and
Partners
Staff dialogues, open channels,
project teams, career development
Increasing support for innovation
learning
Improved staff innovation index and
length of service
Managing Processes
with Agility
Harvesting creative ideas and
implementing them to create value for
the organization
Use of patented HydroPure
technology to provide optimum
healthy water conditions for the fish
Leveraging IT to increase process
efficiency, e.g. zero error in
shipments
e-shop (e-commerce)
Knowledge and
Learning
KM system and strategic human
capital developmen
t
Sustaining
Outstanding Results
Improved sales turnover for
innovative, patented accessories,
trademarks, R&D investments vs.
sales, operational improvements (e.g.
lobster quarantine), patents
Not surprising perhaps if one scans the literature
on Chinese family firms and innovation (e.g. Roed,
2016), the study revealed that the innovation
governance at Qian Hu corporation is driven by the
Executive Chairman himself (rather than other
people appointed by him or the Board). ‘Family
involvement’ in Qian Hu’s board seems to
strengthen the relationship between R&D investment
and the firm’s innovation performance. The role of
Qian Hu’s Board in innovation governance turned
out to be skewed towards providing expertise that
the firm needs (again, that seems to be directed by
‘the boss’ as well) while Kenny himself stands out
as the company’s ‘Innovation Czar’. Decisions about
major innovation investments are mainly made by
Kenny himself while smaller ones are delegated to
those managers who are responsible for the business
units. As a result, innovation governance in this
dynamic Chinese family firm is arguably very
different compared with large, non-family owned
organisations (Hendry and Kiel, 2004) and the
premises of the Anglo-American corporate
governance model.
Besides this key hypothesis, the interview data
point to a couple of other important components
such as proactive innovation leadership with a clear
vision towards innovation and productivity
improvements, a robust organisational culture and
inclusive family values beyond the immediate
family as drivers of intra-organizational innovation
efforts as well as disdain for a codified (rigid)
innovation strategy. The entire management
approach at Qian Hu comes across as being organic
and contingent rather than inorganic-mechanistic
which arguably is well aligned with the current
VUCA environment.
Challenges ahead include the search for novel
business model components beyond ornamental fish,
accessories, plastics and e-retail (in a bearish
operating environment) as well as continuous
technology innovation in order to create and capture
new value.
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