Innovation, at least for innovation’s sake, is useless. Despite the protests that “innovation is key”, it really, really is useless. It won’t make your business, it won’t keep it afloat, it won’t save it and it won’t grow it.

I had been reading the article over at FastCompany on Friday. Then I saw it again this morning via Oliver.

Few people will deny Apple is innovative. I won’t, ever, give them credit for the mouse, colour screen or GUI, but I’ll give them credit for hundreds of other innovations large and small. Especially in recent years as they have truly “found themselves”, so to speak.

But, in spite of many innovations, including iTunes, the iPod, whole new suites of software including iDVD and iLife… Well, sales are flat, profits are flat, market share is flat.

Each new innovation is met with the proclamation that this will change the industry, but the fact of the matter seems to be that either these new products aren’t luring any new users… Or they are luring just enough to cover for the ones leaving for other platforms.

Should you innovate? Maybe. You should definitely find a reason for being, a reason for people to find you and for sure you should be differentiating… But whether you should innovate is something else entirely.

Innovation is expensive. Time consuming. Risky. And, apparently, it may not even be worth it.