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CEOWORLD magazine - Latest - CEO Spotlight - Jack Truong Says Companies Need To Do This for a Profitable, Sustainable Business

CEO Spotlight

Jack Truong Says Companies Need To Do This for a Profitable, Sustainable Business

Jack G. Truong
Jack G. Truong

Innovation is the driving force that fuels the profitable growth engine of commerce. Harnessing this most valuable resource by means of strategic application is the key to streamlining a business for lean, efficient, long-term success — even in the most challenging conditions. However, Jack Truong, a self-described “transforming CEO” with more than 20 years of successful corporate leadership experience, believes that rather than trying to find novel solutions to fulfill unmet consumer needs, many businesses fall into the trap of trying to improve on an old wheel that’s no longer in sync with the current market cycle.  

“As technology advances and consumer demand evolves, companies and products quickly can be left behind,” Truong said on his website. “Too many organizations are focused on developing, launching and loading new technologies and features to existing products while ignoring the possibility of new solutions that actually make life easy for consumers and equally important, more affordable.”   

Truong maintains for a business to remain relevant and profitable, its leadership must be willing to expand its horizons. “It doesn’t matter what the economic condition is, it doesn’t matter what type of business it is, whether it’s a stagnant or growing business, it can be transformed into a profitable growth business,” Truong told CEO Magazine.   

Jack Truong: Understanding the Difference Between Creativity and Innovation  

According to Truong, one major stumbling block to progress many firms find themselves up against is when leadership confuses innovation with creativity. While both are essential to growth and sustainability, without innovation, creativity alone often proves fruitless. “Innovation is the source of critical differentiation in competitive markets. Unfortunately, innovation has become a buzzword for something that looks more like creativity in practice — or worse, incremental improvements,” Truong revealed in a Sept. 11, 2023, feature for entrepreneur.com. “This conflation has had an undeniable detrimental effect on companies and consumers alike.” 

 For example, a creative mind might imagine exploiting the world’s natural resources using methodology already tried and true. Conversely, the innovative mind seeks to turn creative inspirations into practical applications by utilizing scientific precedent, R&D, and emerging technology with the goal of providing novel, tangible benefits to the target customers who will eventually consume new goods and services, as well as the stakeholders and business owners who invest in their production.  

 “Creativity is the generation of new ideas. While valuable, these concepts cannot always be marketed or commercialized. Instead of addressing true consumers’ met or unmet needs, they were generated based on technical know-how. Even when they can be commercialized, they don’t often drive revenue or profit growth as expected,” Truong explained.  

To use an analogy, understanding a creative mind versus an innovative mind is like comparing the works of novelist Jules Verne to the contributions of oceanographer Jacques Cousteau. Where Verne conjured a fantastic undersea world in the classic novel 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, where lawless Capt. Nemo helmed his fabulous submarine, Nautilus, on a mad quest for chaos and destruction, Cousteau, co-inventor of the first self-contained underwater breathing apparatus (known today simply by the acronym scuba) as well as numerous other cutting-edge submersible vehicle innovations, actually helped make underwater exploration both a practical and profitable reality.  

“Ultimately, innovation is the differentiator influencing consumer behavior, creating new revenue, and increasing profit,” Truong said. “Innovation is about transformation: achieving more with less, finding new ways of doing things and identifying ways to create new consumer demand. Especially in uncertain times, how do you significantly alter the playing field to your benefit?” 

Jack Truong’s History of Innovation and ‘Truongsformation’ Begins at 3M 

Jack Truong — who holds a doctorate in chemical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and has 11 U.S. patents to his credit — is no stranger to innovative thinking. By parlaying his scientific background with an innate sense what the consumers really need along with being business savvy, Truong has left an indelible mark on the corporate world.  

Truong enjoyed a profitable 22-year tenure at the 3M corporation. Ph.D. in hand, he launched his career fresh out of grad school, starting in 3M’s R&D sector. In the early 2000s, Truong’s research revealed a marked consumer shift from traditional office stationery products and cameras to phones and laptops for note-taking and quick memos. By leveraging his multifaceted insights, Truong strategically realigned the company’s trajectory to best take advantage of a landscape rife with technological disruption.  

“We found people still wanted to be able to leave messages, but not always on paper. Sometimes, they wanted to stick a note to a computer screen, to a chair or a cubicle wall,” Truong told CEO. 

Thanks to his expertise in both R&D and consumer trends, Truong was able to reinvent the dancing-on-the-edge-of-extinction, yellow Post-it note as a rising phoenix of kaleidoscopic fluorescent colors — with a new to the world adhesive strip that enabled notes to stick to multiple varieties of surface materials, not just paper — that took wing and saw the company’s profits soar. While at 3M, he also invented a little thing called Scotch-Brite microfiber cloth. 

Responding to Evolving Demands Leads to Business Growth 

Under Truong’s leadership, Electrolux’s revenue jumped from $4.2 billion to $5.1 billion in just three years, with return on net assets increasing from 4% in 2011 to a whopping 34% in 2014.  

 For Jack Truong, the First Word Is Also the Last Word: Innovation 

In his current role as a mentor and elite executive adviser, Jack Truong says he can’t emphasize strongly enough the importance of making innovation a top priority for any company that hopes to survive and thrive in the days ahead. 

“To prepare for the future, businesses must provide their workforce with the skills and knowledge required to adapt to changing consumer behaviors,” Truong said in a Jan. 2, 2024, Entrepreneur feature. “Given the turbulence of the economy and the momentum of modern businesses, leaders must face the threat of industrial Darwinism: Evolve or go extinct.” 


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CEOWORLD magazine - Latest - CEO Spotlight - Jack Truong Says Companies Need To Do This for a Profitable, Sustainable Business
Lila Jones
Senior News Editor at CEOWORLD Magazine. I'm a veteran correspondent for the CEOWORLD Magazine. During my career, I've been based in New York, Washington, DC, Brussels and London. Over the years I've written about everything from the debt crisis to Brexit and the rise of populism in Europe. I did a stint in London as the CEOWORLD Magazine's Europe News Editor and Deputy World News Editor. In my current post I try to capture life in a changing banking to finance landscape.