By SCOTT BELLOWS
Kipchirchir formed a payment solutions company in
2010 based in Mombasa. He excitedly told clients about Mombasa as an
idyllic place to locate a corporate headquarters, with its ancient
history, mix of cultures and beautiful beaches, all visible from his
office window.
In a few years, he expanded the business to serve markets in East Africa to South America and Southeast Asia.
As Kipchirchir grew his product offering, he
decided to set up a satellite product development office to incorporate
innovative new staff from a new region. He narrowed down his choices to
Hyderabad in India, Silicon Valley in the US and Shanghai in China.
Each area offered positives and negatives. However,
Kipchirchir’s main criteria entailed the creativity and innovation of
the region.
In his research, he found out that the Global
Innovation Index ranked China 29th in the world. India featured a dismal
81st in the ranking, only a few spaces ahead of Kenya’s 92nd place
finish. All but one of the top 10 most innovative countries hailed from
Europe and North America, with the US at fifth place.
Kipchirchir wondered why the manufacturing hub of
the world and the programming capital of the globe featured so poorly in
the ranking.
When Bloomberg compiled its own innovation index,
it layered in education systems and amounts spent on research and
development.
The different type of indicators resulted in South
Korea and Japan in the top slots, with North American and European
nations taking most of the next 20 places. Even Bloomberg ranked China
poorly at 22nd and India did not even feature.
Kipchirchir contemplated the discrepancies among
the economic powerhouses of the world. While Japan and the US
historically generated more than 200,000 patents each year according to
the World Bank, China had grown to more than 700,000 annually filed
patents. The world’s second largest country, India, only filed under
11,000 patents each year.
So Kipchirchir eliminated India from consideration
due to the lack of patents for such a large nation. Comparatively,
Kenyans file around 120 patents each year. However, how could experts
not consider China innovative?
Kipchirchir preferred Shanghai due to lower set-up costs for a branch office.
Friends in the high-tech industry pointed
Kipchirchir towards research that originated out of the University of
Michigan and that has been extensively tested and expanded by USIU.
Some cultures naturally support creativity and
celebrate innovation, while others value the status quo, harmony and not
rocking the boat.
Kipchirchir was stunned by the cultural influences on innovation and pulled the research to delved deeper.
Take an anecdotal snippet from the major Western
versus Eastern religions. Christianity mainly spread during the time of
the apostles due to the curiosity of Roman citizens throughout the
Mediterranean.
Roman culture developed from Greek cultural
underpinnings. Greek traditions valued the pursuit of knowledge,
questioning one’s surroundings and one’s own existence and debating with
one’s neighbours.
Paul in particular
used Greek traditions to enter a city and speak and debate with
residents.
Usually only when the influence began to threaten
the perceived political order city officials would clamp down and impede
Paul. Christianity initially spread overtly all over the Roman world
until later covertly due to intense political persecution or
scapegoating.
A religion could not have spread throughout the
ancient Chinese Kingdoms in such a manner. Taoism and Confucianism
developed as the dominant religions of ancient China.
Taoism places enormous emphasis in harmony and
balance. The concept of the Yin and Yang, with good and evil coexisting
in equilibrium, has featured prominently on the South Korean flag and
comes from Taoism.
Confucianism taught an attitude of respect,
especially for one’s parents, teachers, and elders. Ancient Chinese
Kings prized Confucianism and Taoism because the harmony encouraged
citizens to accept the realities of life and focus on inward peace and
oneness with one’s surroundings.
Rulers felt that such principles would quell any temptations to dissent and threaten the political structures of the time.
The concepts became even more important as
socio-political wisdom. So dynasties themselves spread the religions as a
means of keeping order.
Researcher Richard Nisbett uncovered that a culture’s innovation orientation largely stems from its ancient economic activity.
Researcher Richard Nisbett uncovered that a culture’s innovation orientation largely stems from its ancient economic activity.
Societies traditionally involved in fishing
developed more truth-obsessed and curious cultures while agrarian
farming-founded societies valued harmony and balance.
The fishing societies did not need their
neighbours’ assistance to conduct their activities, while farming
societies required help during planting, harvest, drought, insect
infestations, among other eventualities.
So Greece with its fishing economy encouraged
debate while the Chinese kingdoms with their farming economies fostered
accord and balance.
Innovation
Through centuries of migration and cultural export,
European, North American, secular Middle Eastern and Australasian
nations value innovation, challenging status quos and creativity in
their education systems, workplaces and families.
East Asian and Southeast Asian countries, on the other hand, incorporate respect, harmony, decency and togetherness.
New technologies historically originate more in the former but become copied or perfected and enhanced in the latter.
Business leaders must consider a culture’s orientation
towards different desirable attributes when determining satellite
expansion and new growth markets instead of merely looking into
statistics.
Read about Kenya’s cultural business orientation
at:
http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/How-tribal-culture-influences-business/-/539444/1799714/-/yutiei/-/index.html
Prof Scott is the director of the New Economy
Venture Accelerator at USIU’s Chandaria School of Business,
www.ScottProfessor.com, and may be reached on: info@scottprofessor.com
or follow on Twitter: @ScottProfessor
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