Nearly 80% of Companies Worldwide Rank Innovation as a Top-Three Priority for 2023, Finds BCG

  • According to a new report, 79% of companies worldwide see innovation as a top priority for this year and 66% plan to increase spending—42% by more than 10%.

  • This is in stark contrast to the last downturn in 2009, when fewer than two-thirds of companies ranked innovation as a top priority, and only 58% planned to increase spending.

  • The connection between innovation, growth, and advantage is stronger than ever. Companies that prioritize innovation and make sure that they are ready to act will continue to widen their lead and deliver outsized returns.

Justin Manly, a BCG managing director and partner

Despite global economic uncertainty, innovation rose as a top corporate priority for 2023. According to a new report released today by Boston Consulting Group (BCG), 79% of companies around the world see innovation as a top-three priority for this year and 66% plan to increase spending—42% by more than 10%. This is in stark contrast to the last downturn in 2009 when fewer than two-thirds of companies ranked innovation as a top-three priority and only 58% planned to increase spending.

For its 17th Most Innovative Companies report titled, Reaching New Heights in Uncertain Times, BCG examines how leading companies are raising their commitment to innovation, and how innovation is building their resilience to economic uncertainty. The report draws on the firm’s annual survey of more than 1,000 global executives on innovation trends and its global innovation performance database of more than 1,000 companies.

“The connection between innovation, growth, and advantage is stronger than ever,” said Justin Manly, a BCG managing director and partner and a coauthor of the report. “The companies that both prioritize innovation and make sure that they are ready to act will continue to widen their lead and deliver outsized returns.”

Michael Ringel, a BCG managing director and senior partner

The 50 Most Innovative Companies of 2023

Despite the market headwinds that they experienced in 2022, tech companies continue to dominate the top 50, including five of the top ten slots. For the third consecutive year, Apple holds the top spot on the list. Tesla climbs three positions to second place, and Amazon remains at third. Nine new companies join the top 50. In addition, international energy companies hold five spots, possibly reflecting survey respondents’ concerns over climate change and the fact that they’re looking to the energy industry to be a creative part of the solution.

The 50 most innovative companies for 2023 are a geographically diverse group, roughly evenly split between North America and the rest of the world. Europe and Asia are well represented, and the Middle East joins the list for the first time.

BCG’s report also underscores the role innovation plays in driving performance. Since 2005, BCG’s portfolio of the 50 most innovative companies has outpaced the broader market in shareholder returns by a significant margin—an average of 3.3 percentage points per year.

Companies Are Investing in AI More Than Any Other Technology

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly expanding innovation possibilities, and companies’ investment priorities reflect this: 61% of companies are investing in AI and machine learning this year. This is 15 percentage points higher than robotics and process automation, which survey respondents selected as the second most attractive technology for investment.

However, while 83% of these firms have systematically implemented AI to support innovation in one or more use cases, only 45% have managed to translate this into business impact.

Those select companies that ultimately realize impact from AI become idea-generation powerhouses. They generate more than five times as many ideas than others and incubate more than twice as many minimum viable products.

“The best innovators develop a self-reinforcing, virtuous cycle. AI is a great example of this—more ideas means greater likelihood of finding the best use cases for AI, and implementing AI helps generate more ideas,” said Michael Ringel, a BCG managing director and senior partner and a coauthor of the report. “Once the innovation cycle starts, it creates its own momentum and produces transformative competitive advantage.”

For more information, please visit www.BCG.com.