April 03, 2024

Innovation Adoption for All: Scaling across Department of Defense

This article was originally published in War on the Rocks.

Across the Department of Defense, today’s watchword is innovation. In 2018, Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google and the first chairman of the Pentagon’s Defense Innovation Board, aptly declared that “the [Department of Defense] does not have an innovation problem; it has an innovation adoption problem.” Unlike the fundamental technologies behind nuclear-powered submarines, intercontinental ballistic missiles, and stealth aircraft, an increasing percentage of the technological breakthroughs that provide a real combat edge for U.S. warfighters are coming from commercial firms outside the traditional defense industrial base. Through the endeavors of organizations like the Defense Innovation Unit, AFWERX, and Army Futures Command, myriad opportunities exist to build prototypes to solve military problems.

The Department of Defense does act quickly when properly motivated and catalyzed by effective leadership.

Leaders from the secretary of defense on down argue that the department must move faster when it comes to delivering capabilities to warfighters that can offset increasingly urgent and sophisticated threats. The challenge is not incubating innovation, it is moving it from laboratories and testing grounds to the field. We believe that six factors — built on a foundation of talent and not requiring any new authorities — can scale innovation adoption across the Department of Defense. These factors include a clear problem definition, an empowered program team, an identified transition partner, a contracting vehicle, steady funding, and senior-leader support. These cannot be achieved in a piecemeal fashion. To work, they should become business-as-usual for the department rather than six consecutive miracles of defense innovation and acquisition.

Read the full article from War on the Rocks.

  • Commentary
    • Breaking Defense
    • October 28, 2024
    To Focus on China, U.S. Needs to Wean off Europe and Middle East Missions

    If the United States cannot rebalance its military focus toward the Indo-Pacific it risks expediting Chinese aggression in the region and furthering the decline of the US-led ...

    By Carlton Haelig

  • Reports
    • September 25, 2024
    Integration for Innovation

    Executive Summary In August 2023, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks made a clear case that the Department of Defense (DoD) must do better in “creat[ing] and exploit[i...

    By Michael Brown, Ellen Lord, Andrew Metrick & Robert O. Work

  • Commentary
    • War on the Rocks
    • September 10, 2024
    How the Space Force Can Better Tell Its Story

    Space Force guardians should use the spotlight from real world events — like this story — to educate the public and advocate for resources....

    By Hannah Dennis

  • Commentary
    • Breaking Defense
    • May 29, 2024
    Differentiating Innovation: From Performance Art to Production Scale

    The Department of Defense has an innovation problem, and it’s not the one you are probably thinking about. Certainly, the Department needs to improve its ability to move with ...

    By Andrew Metrick

View All Reports View All Articles & Multimedia