The World's 50 Most Innovative Companies

According to Fast Company (@fastcompany), Apple, Twitter, Facebook, Nissan, Groupon, Google, Dawning Information Industry, Netflix, Zynga, and Epocrates comprise the top 10 companies that can be singled out for their mastery of creative contribution to their consumers.

An artificial heart and its lightweight power drive. A better airline for Brazil. Chocolate from Madagascar and a soccer shirt made of plastic water bottles. A fashion leader escaping its pattern, a smelter, and that little coupon startup in Chicago that's suddenly worth billions. All this from one simple word: innovation.

The 50 companies on our 2011 list have chosen a unique path. Today's business landscape is littered with heritage companies whose CEOs battle their industry's broken model with inertia, layoffs, lawsuits -- anything that squeezes pennies and delays the inevitable. How many of these companies will be dominant in 2025? Few.

That world will be ruled by the kinds of companies on this list. They're nondogmatic, willing to scrap conventional ideas. (A mere 30-second TV ad? Let's do 200 online videos in two days, say the creatives at Wieden+Kennedy.) They're willing to fail. (Google's search team runs up to 200 experiments at any one time.) They know what they stand for. (By making home-viewing as easy as possible, Netflix walloped Blockbuster, which thought its business had something to do with stores.)

Read the article in full.

What do these brands know that others (yours?) don’t? What lessons can we learn from them to adapt to innovating in the fast-changing world of publishing?

1 response
That's truly an amazing list of companies, and just as amazing is that, when you consider Apple's incredible ability to make other companies play me-too and catch-up, and the lightning-fast emergence of Facebook and Twitter and Groupon, and Netflix's outmaneuvering of Blockbuster by taking a completely new and original tack—so many other companies are still so reluctant to move in truly new and innovative ways. Those that don't will, like Blockbuster, simply be left behind.
Sad-but-true tale: One of our local Blockbuster stores is going out of business, and I dropped by to buy a few Blu-Ray disks out of the inventory they're closing out. The clerk offered to give me one of them for free if I would "just take a few minutes to let us enter your information in our computer for our new online video-rental-by-mail business."
Too little too late--why do I need TWO online video rental accounts?