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Innovation May 5, 2009, 12:01AM EST

HP's CloudPrint Heads into BlackBerrys

HP Labs' e-mail winner CloudPrint came out of the labs' old ad hoc development process even as R&D chief Prith Banerjee pursues a more disciplined approach

HP (HPQ), like many other big-name tech companies, is bent on wringing more revenue out of its state-of-the-art research-and-development labs—a collection of 500 researchers scattered across seven countries, including China, India, and Russia. Created in 1966, the Palo Alto (Calif.)-based operation was once responsible for such landmark inventions as the pocket calculator and inkjet printing. But its output has disappointed of late, with projects dragging on for years without producing any meaningful discoveries. So last May, HP kicked off an overhaul of the labs (BusinessWeek, 4/17/08 ). One year into that effort, HP Labs provides an illuminating case study of the difficulties companies face in trying to inject discipline and accountability into the innovation process.

To spearhead the transformation of its labs, HP brought in a new director from outside the company. Since taking the reins last May, Prith Banerjee, a former engineering professor and founder of two chip-design companies, has worked to rid HP Labs of some bad old habits, such as funding projects based on personal relationships. He introduced a formal review board that is responsible for greenlighting projects. And while the labs' budget has remained steady at around $150 million a year, Banerjee has slashed the project count from 150 to 22. The ones that made the cut were those that promise big payoffs—either in terms of internal savings or sales. "We are not running a charity here," says Banerjee. "We're looking at an impact of no less than $1 billion [in market opportunity] per big project."

One iniative that survived the shakeout is CloudPrint, an HP technology that lets business travelers print out e-mail attachments on any printer without the hassle of having to fiddle with cables or having to install drivers. On May 4, Research in Motion (RIMM) will announce that it has licensed CloudPrint for use with its BlackBerry devices. The software will be available as a free download for BlackBerry users or via corporate IT departments. Although terms of the deal were not disclosed, it's a good bet that licensing revenues from CloudPrint will fall well short of the $1 billion blockbusters Banerjee is targeting. Nonetheless, the technology has promise and may eventually also find its way to places such as Africa and India, where many more people own cell phones than PCs. "We're trying to remove friction to print," says Patrick Scaglia, chief technology officer at HP's printing group, which generates 21% of HP's revenue, and 36% of operating profits.

Improvised Innovation

CloudPrint is the baby of Bernardo Huberman, one of Hewlett-Packard's top computer scientists and director of its social computing lab. The project, which got under way before Banerjee landed at HP, is a good example of the sort of improvised innovation that was the hallmark of HP Labs. Says Huberman: "We did this almost the way we would do a startup." Huberman's team began work on the project without first getting the approval of a committee or doing lots of market research. And when it came time to show off their results, the crew bypassed HP's technology transfer office, another Banerjee innovation, and went straight to the top brass. Working his connections at headquarters, Huberman secured an audience with Scaglia. It wasn't a very polished presentation, either. Jerry-rigging a printer salvaged from the trash to a laptop surrounded by foam core, Huberman & Co. assembled a printing kiosk modeled after a photo of a Wells Fargo (WFC) ATM that one of the team members had snapped.

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