万度视频

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Long-term innovation: the path to customer happiness

09/03/21

Chief Technical Adviser to the CEO Zaki Ali and Senior Scientist Kevin Kidnie share what R&D means at 万度视频, why it matters, and how listening to 鈥 and even pre-empting 鈥 customers鈥 needs is key to staying ahead of the curve.

Cutting a new course isn鈥檛 something that happens overnight. Take transforming flexo. Twelve years ago, our scientists invented a technology platform that set new standards for flexo printing. Since then they have continued to define the direction of future innovation.

Unlike many technology companies, 万度视频鈥檚 R&D approach focuses on major developments rather than small, incremental gains. Why do you feel that鈥檚 a better way to work?

ZAKI ALI: At 万度视频, we know true innovation lies in addressing fundamental challenges, not quick fixes. We鈥檙e not interested in making 鈥榤e too鈥 products. We want to be providing the products that our customers need and our competitors can鈥檛 provide. Making lots of small improvements impacts efficiency, and often ends up causing problems which you then have to go back and fix. That鈥檚 just not an efficient way to work.

KEVIN KIDNIE: What we’ve found is that once a product is on the market, making constant tweaks is inefficient 鈥 not only for us, but for our customers too. We prefer to bring out finished products that we know can do the job. We work really hard to involve the customer throughout the R&D process, but we also involve other teams like marketing, manufacturing and the tech application group to determine what areas we should be working on.

鈥淲e want to be providing the products that our customers need and our competitors can鈥檛 provide. Making lots of small improvements impacts efficiency, and ends up causing problems which you have to go back and fix. That鈥檚 just not an efficient way to work.鈥

There must be many technologies and products which show promise. How do you identify which areas to focus on?

ZAKI ALI: In R&D, it starts with making sure our research is aligned with the company鈥檚 goals, which all hinge around transforming flexo. Assets and resources are valuable, so we need to focus on the ideas that have the most promise 鈥 both for the company and our customers.

The next step is assessing the opportunities. There are all kinds of factors we use for that: market potential, development time, how it fits in with our other core technologies, the overall complexity of the project. Many parts of the company are involved in those decisions 鈥 not just R&D, but everyone from manufacturing to marketing.

KEVIN KIDNIE: Sometimes it鈥檚 about solving a problem. Other times it鈥檚 simply because you see potential in something. I spend most of my time working in a lab at quite a small scale, and sometimes I see something that looks different or interesting, and start to wonder what could we do with that?

This is actually what led to the launch of the KODAK FLEXCEL NX System. We鈥檇 already been working with Thermal Imaging Layer (TIL) technology for some time when we realised we could use that technology to bring much greater accuracy to the flexo process. KODAK SQUARESPOT Imaging Technology enabled us to use TIL to translate high quality imaging onto the plate itself with 1:1 reproduction, which overcame one of the main limitations of conventional digital plate design. We already had this capability, but we found a new way to use it. Ultimately the KODAK FLEXCEL NX System聽 came out of that. The result was a quantum leap in flexo print capability and the start of a step change in the industry.

How do you incorporate market/customer needs into the R&D process?

ZAKI ALI: Thinking about customers鈥 needs is an integral part of product development, but sometimes we鈥檙e working on technologies that customers aren鈥檛 even aware they need yet. As Kevin says, the FLEXCEL NX plate is a great example of that: customers didn鈥檛 even know they needed a 鈥渘on-LAMS鈥 product until they saw the FLEXCEL NX plates in action and realised their potential. It enabled us to optimize ink control for all applications. We could have developed a range of LAMS plates with different ink transfer characteristics for different applications, but we didn鈥檛, because it would have added too much complexity for the customer. That鈥檚 a good example of how we鈥檙e always thinking about customers鈥 needs, and how our products will work out in a real world production environment.

Fundamentally, our approach is proactive, not reactive. We have a roadmap of products and new developments we鈥檙e working on, and we work closely with other teams to bring them to market at the best time and in the most effective way.

In your experience, what are the key ingredients in building a successful R&D team?

ZAKI ALI: That鈥檚 a difficult question to answer. For a small to medium-sized company like ours, participating in a semi-mature but growing market, it鈥檚 important to have a critical mass of our R&D employees located in one place, so they can work collaboratively on the product portfolio. You need the right mix of skills and expertise: we develop fully integrated solutions, so we need a full range of disciplines; chemists, polymer chemists, physicists, engineers, software architects. Everyone needs to be dedicated to their work and have a shared desire to move the company forward. But you also need a few creative thinkers who can challenge the status quo. Importantly, you also need a leader who can guide the team by example, not just by authority.

KEVIN KIDNIE: I agree with that. You need that mix of skills. For example, the manufacturing guys are engineers, so they think in really practical terms, but you really need the ideas people too. The R&D department is like a family. We work closely together, and the problems we鈥檙e working on are often way too big for us to handle on our own. A lot of people say you should 鈥榯ell it like it is鈥, but in R&D, I like to think you need to 鈥榯ell it like it isn鈥檛鈥: in other words, that you can think of things beyond the now, and imagine how things could be.

That鈥檚 a key thing for the R&D group. Having that vision, imagination and exploration is what keeps us going. We have to work within the constraints that we have, but we like to push the boundaries as much as possible.

“A lot of people say you should 鈥榯ell it like it is鈥, but in R&D, I like to think you need to 鈥榯ell it like it isn鈥檛鈥. In other words, that you can think of things beyond the now.”

Can you describe the process of getting a project from theory to reality?

Kevin Kidnie: Like many R&D departments, we use what鈥檚 called a Gate System for staging all out products. Ours runs from Gate Zero to Gate Six. At Gate Zero you just have an initial idea and maybe a few preliminary experiments; by Gate Six, you鈥檝e basically got a robust, finished product ready for launch.

The great thing about the Gate system is that it allows you to evaluate your progress at multiple stages and keep checking on where you are compared to where you expected to be. It鈥檚 a rigorous process and can be adapted for projects that take as little as six months, or for more complex, fully integrated solutions that can take two or three years.

In your experience, what are the key ingredients in building a successful R&D team?

ZAKI ALI: That鈥檚 a difficult question to answer. For a small to medium-sized company like ours, participating in a semi-mature but growing market, it鈥檚 important to have a critical mass of our R&D employees located in one place, so they can work collaboratively on the product portfolio. You need the right mix of skills and expertise: we develop fully integrated solutions, so we need a full range of disciplines; chemists, polymer chemists, physicists, engineers, software architects. Everyone needs to be dedicated to their work and have a shared desire to move the company forward. But you also need a few creative thinkers who can challenge the status quo. Importantly, you also need a leader who can guide the team by example, not just by authority.

KEVIN KIDNIE: I agree with that. You need that mix of skills. For example, the manufacturing guys are engineers, so they think in really practical terms, but you really need the ideas people too. The R&D department is like a family. We work closely together, and the problems we鈥檙e working on are often way too big for us to handle on our own. A lot of people say you should 鈥榯ell it like it is鈥, but in R&D, I like to think you need to 鈥榯ell it like it isn鈥檛鈥: in other words, that you can think of things beyond the now, and imagine how things could be.

That鈥檚 a key thing for the R&D group. Having that vision, imagination and exploration is what keeps us going. We have to work within the constraints that we have, but we like to push the boundaries as much as possible.

“A lot of people say you should 鈥榯ell it like it is鈥, but in R&D, I like to think you need to 鈥榯ell it like it isn鈥檛鈥. In other words, that you can think of things beyond the now.”

What鈥檚 the best part for you about working in R&D?

KEVIN KIDNIE: For me, it鈥檚 seeing an idea that goes from lab scale to manufacturing scale and ultimately a product that鈥檚 out there on the market being used by customers 鈥 to grow their own businesses and make money. That鈥檚 definitely the most rewarding part.

ZAKI ALI: Yes. It鈥檚 developing unique products and solutions which solve fundamental challenges and enable our customers to work faster, more efficiently and with results that meet the ever increasing needs of their brand clients.

What are the technologies that we should be looking out for in the next few years?

KEVIN KIDNIE: Printing efficiency is going to be a big focus for us 鈥 products that are robust and with a wide operating latitude but don鈥檛 compromise on the quality bar we鈥檝e set. Sustainability is another big area: It鈥檚 important to have sustainably-focused solutions while also improving efficiency and cost-effectiveness. There鈥檚 a lot that can be done to help printers reduce waste and improve their overall sustainability footprint. Products like the FLEXCEL NX Ultra solution for water-based platemaking are also where we鈥檙e looking to continue to innovate.

ZAKI ALI: We are on an innovation journey with our customers. All our innovations build on the prior one, so customers can be confident that we won鈥檛 send them off in a different direction. It鈥檚 a strategy that ultimately enables them to get the greatest return on their investments 鈥 and that鈥檚 important to us. We鈥檒l continue innovating to help them meet, and hopefully exceed, their goals.