Innovation Facilitation

Why people don’t like innovation sessions – 7 things you can do to fix it

Published date: September 23, 2023 в 3:10 pm

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Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation

I find that when you invite your coworkers to an innovation session you generally receive one of these responses:

  1. Amazing! Can’t wait to have a day to meet with passionate like-minded people and really crack this topic.
  2. If you can’t find anyone else…
  3. Can’t make it.
  4. (Radio silence).

The WSJ recently posted an article citing research that giving workers alone time could yield more innovation than getting everyone in a room.

For companies who really pride themselves on innovation (don’t we all?), why is there so much negativity to attend these sessions?

I think it boils down to what  happens inside the session room, what happens before people enter the room, and what happens after people leave the room. When a session is prepared, executed and packaged properly, I fully believe that two heads are still better than one.

And so, here are seven tips on how to make your sessions worth people’s while, where they feel they can truly contribute to be agents of change:

  1. Define a clear goal and scope of the challenge, and make it clear to yourself, stakeholders and participants. If it’s too broad or large a topic, break it down into manageable nuggets otherwise people will be highly doubtful that anything can be accomplished in the timeframe (and annoyed if they were right).  If the topic is smaller scale, maybe you don’t need to bring in the cavalry just yet and you can grab 3-4 folks to think it out with you.
  2. Plan and pick your time wisely and well: How much time do you really need for your session? Make sure your goals and deliverables match the time you have. If you have a full day, plan for it in a way that’s productive, and not dragged out. Everyone will always be happy to finish early. (In fact, I know an L&D professional who always plans innovation days to end an hour before the regular work day as a perk.) If you only have two hours, assess how your topic can be covered in this timeframe, and if not modify accordingly. Extra time you don’t need will make people feel resentful. Too little time on a big topic will make people feel like they haven’t scratched the surface and whatever time they did put in was for nought. Lastly, give some thought to the day of the week the session falls out on. A Thursday or Friday session could have people worrying about finishing other deadlines they have before the weekend, making them less than thrilled to participate.
  3. Make your innovation session walk the talk: An innovation session by name and definition is different from a regular business status  meeting. The danger that lies in these sessions is when in an effort to stimulate creativity they become too gimmicky for anyone to take them seriously. Yet, if it is run in the same dry business-like manner as regular team meetings, it might not be terribly conducive to thinking in new unexplored directions. It’s a fine line to find the right methodologies that will give you the results you need, without making people in the room feel ridiculous, bored, or that they are oranges that need to be squeezed. Ask yourself – would I want to be doing this activity?
  4. Have the right (and the right amount of) people in the room: People are your number one resource. You need their knowledge, expertise, experience, and gumption. But how do you choose who should participate? First, build a heterogenous team that is familiar with the topic from different angles so ideas can be initially evaluated on the spot (without having to keep marking them “ask the guys from engineering” or “ask John” and everyone  is frustrated why John isn’t here).  This will help keep you on target with what can and cannot be done. Second, be realistic about the number of people and personalities you need for this topic and that you can handle. Too few, you may not get a rounded picture; too many can overwhelm the room and no one gets a word in if not managed properly.  And last, mind the balance of the seniority level in the room. You don’t want people to be afraid of voicing their opinions in front of others and things are left unsaid.
  5. Menu: It is well known that I would do anything for a donut. Get your people fed! At the end of the day it’s these little things that we look forward to and make us feel appreciated. It’s also hard to think straight if you’re hungry, so set people up for success.
  6. Follow up and communicate – Set yourself a monthly reminder to update the participants how the project is doing. This will keep you accountable, all while showing your gratitude to the people who took time to participate. (You don’t want someone greeting you by the water cooler with  whatever happened…?) When the project is implemented you can celebrate it. Should it get shelved, you can provide an explanation and what you’ve learned from it. People will appreciate hearing directly from you and not  through the grapevine.
  7. Do some internal reflection: After the session, give yourself feedback on how it went. What went according to plan and what went less well than expected. Were you happy with the participants? Was the timeline realistic? What would you do the same in the future and what would you change?

 Innovation sessions have so much riding on them to begin with. If you can get a group of fresh, eager, positive faces to participate, you’re halfway there already.

Nurturing Dialog: 5 Techniques for Creating Productive and Inclusive Discussions

Published date: August 17, 2023 в 10:34 am

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Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation,Methodology

How do you get people to speak up? Not just to share their opinions, but to share true thoughts, pleasant or otherwise?

During a training session, my mentor, Idit Biton, raised a problem with the team and asked for solutions. This was met with awkward silence and nervous glances all around. Idit gave me a look that said – “watch this”: She divided the group into pairs and gave them seven minutes to discuss and suggest a solution. On her go, the room was abuzz.

Hello?? Clearly people had what to say. So what makes someone who has an idea, suggestion, or helpful criticism clam up?

  1. Fear of public speaking – To quote Jerry Seinfeld – “According to most studies, people’s number one fear is public speaking” (and if you’ve never seen that bit of his, you’re in for a treat).
  2. Uneasiness from people in the room (either their teammates, subordinates, or supervisors. Even walls have ears.)
  3. Worried that what they are about to say will sound dumb/haughty/baseless
  4. Just plain shy. Some people turn red when all eyes are on them and they want to avoid that if they can.

If it’s your role to get input – whether as team leader, problem owner, or facilitator – you need to help get the voices out in the open. Not all who participate in your meeting or session is a natural public speaker.

Here are 5 techniques guaranteed to get people talking and sharing:

1. Dividing into pairs/trios/groups: As I shared in my story above, the talking started to flow as soon as people were divided into pairs.

Benefits:

  • You can try out your ideas and suggestions on one person which is much less intimidating than the whole group;
  • You get immediate feedback from your partners (thumbs up, thumbs down, or areas that should be polished);
  • There’s more confidence when presenting since the suggestion was liked by all partners who now stand behind the idea;
  • Only one person actually has to present;
  • Can weed out the so-so ideas and comments by having teams present their favorite, and saves time since only need to present once if both partners share the same sentiments.

2. Writing ideas and thoughts down on a piece of paper/notepad/document.

Benefits:

  • Everyone has time to gather their thoughts independently;
  • Writing things down gives people the opportunity to see how it will sound outside their head, helping word it in a way that makes sense to others;
  •  No need to actually present as they can be collected – whether placed around the room for people to peruse or just for the eyes of the person running the meeting;
  • It can be anonymous if need be. (Yes, sometimes you really need to know who said what, but that’s your future problem. First get people to spill.)

3. Using a template/model for people to arrange and share their thoughts. For example – one of my favorite models is Edward De Bono’s PMI – Plus Minus Interesting, which is used to generate discussions around the positives, negatives, and interesting parts of an idea or strategy.

Benefits:

  • Not everyone knows where to begin. A template helps guide thoughts productively;
  • Not everyone feels comfortable sharing criticism – depending who’s in the room or to be thought of as a team player. Having everyone use the same language puts everyone on the same page and provide insights from different angles;
  • Helps steer the conversation -A friend confided in me that during meetings she feels she either says nothing or talks forever. A template keeps people on point.

4. Give info in advance – make sure everyone knows what the meeting is about and what their role is in it.

Benefits:

  • People aren’t put on the spot and have adequate time to prepare;
  • If it’s not a forum they feel comfortable with they can discuss alternatives or opt out.

5. Speak to people in private – With some folks, no matter what you do, you know they won’t say everything in a public forum. If their opinion matters to you then it’s time to go one-on-one.

Benefits:

  • They can feel comfortable to share the good, the bad, and the ugly;
  • They will feel valued that you sought them out to hear what they have to say, and respect their comfort level.

These techniques can be used individually or together. You know your people, and if not – time to learn your audience. Mix and match away so that you get the valuable input you desire.

WALK, DREAM -> CREATE

Published date: July 6, 2023 в 5:12 pm

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Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation

My colleague Hila Pelles wrote an intriguing internal post for our SIT team, citing two thought-provoking articles.

The first is from INC.:

Research Suggests We’re All Getting Less Creative and Scientists Think They Know Why, by Jessica Stillman

The gist:

  • Scores on the Torrance Test, considered by many to be a reliable indicator of creativity, have been steadily declining since the 90’s.
  • The reason, scientists claim (the article claims), is that we are all spending too much time on digital screens instead of acting in the world or engaging in leisurely thoughts.
  • The solution: dedicate time to thinking, go on long walks, limit screen time and vary your routine.

The second article, published on LIT HUB (excerpted from: First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human) expands on one of the first article’s recommendations:

On the Link Between Great Thinking and Obsessive Walking, by Jeremy DeSilva

I am doing a dis-service to this article by summarizing it, since it is more literary in spirit, but, using examples from Charles Darwin to Virginia Woolf, it convincingly makes the case for walking as a stimulus for creative thinking, supported by several experiments that found superior results and stronger brain connectivity in subjects who walked versus couch potatoes.

My pragmatic take on these articles, in two parts:

1) Caveat reader

a. In 25 years of experience working with diverse publics in dozens of countries I haven’t noticed any signs of decline in creativity. In fact, I believe there are many signs of a widespread increase in creativity and productive thinking – not always for the good of humankind, not even correlated with individuals’ happiness or wellbeing, but that is another issue. Instead, I believe that what the findings may be showing is the decreased relevance of the Torrance test itself, whose relevance I suspect was always less than its PR.

b. Although I resent the time my daughters spend on screens lately, I don’t think the blame for declining creativity, if real, should be placed on digital activities. Bertrand Russell famously wrote in praise of idleness in his homonymous book and article (“The idea that the poor should have leisure has always been shocking to the rich.”), showing that lack of idleness is not a new affliction and that it can equally affect both sides of the digital divide.

2) Practical facilitation tips:

a. In f2f sessions, move people around every now and again, sometimes ask them to stretch, and when possible – even to dance to music. Much more difficult in remote sessions, but very much worth the effort.

b. 2-3 times an hour, give participants the chance to chat with their neighbor(s) for 3-4 minutes on a task that doesn’t require too much concentration.

My 20-second summary, so you can go ramble: move around, take it easy, and you’ll be more creative (or, if not, I suspect, at least a bit happier).

Innovation communities of practice – Part 1

Published date: May 31, 2023 в 12:34 pm

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Category: Innovation Facilitation,Organizational Innovation

Innovation Coaches in action

This one is for all our worldwide Innovation Coaches community of practice, their supporting managers, and everyone interested in launching an organizational innovation program.

Nowadays, the term “coach” is widely used for almost any role that has to do with helping others attain or practice new skills, overcome a barrier, or generally improve. Given that innovation has a crucial function in business, strategy, and organizational change processes, it is no surprise that SIT has worked for many years to develop and advance Innovation Networks in which Innovation Coaches take an active role.

Over the last years I’ve spent most of my working hours designing, managing, and leading innovation networks and training programs. With the sustainable innovation approach becoming more and more common, I am often asked under what circumstances an organization should develop inhouse innovation related capabilities. Two recent – very different in scope and style – training cohorts, led me to think about all the innovation coaches I’ve trained, their inspiring success stories, and diverse challenges.

So, in case you never had a chance to collaborate with an iCoach – I hope to convince you that you should; and if you are an active iCoach – this is the moment where you get to kick back, recall how amazing and important the work you do is, and then – share with your friends and colleagues. I am confident that many people in your organization will be happy to learn more about your innovation training, knowledge and activities, and how you can help promote innovation and business impact.

Making room for your innovation community

Innovation coaches help others to innovate in what they do, primarily by driving small-scale innovation activities aimed to generate new ideas, solutions, collaborations, and inspiration which in turn drive business impact. Most organizations we (SIT) advise have adopted our role definition and refer to someone as an innovation coach (iCoach) upon completing our onboarding training and practice. These initial programs make them valued members in the organizational community, as well as part of SIT’s global innovation community of practice.

The idea of defining a new – innovation based – role to individuals is key to designing and rolling out a fruitful organizational innovation strategy. Setting such a mechanism is key to the organization’s ability to nurture and scale innovation efforts alongside its core activities. Strong innovation communities can also enhance additional organizational efforts such as promoting new concepts, ideas, tools, and insights – which many organizations find challenging to implement when merged into their day-to-day tasks.

A community of active innovation coaches is at the core of a meaningful, impactful innovation framework. It is where the top-down and bottom-up strategies come together in the form of ongoing activities providing additional value. Community size will vary based on organization’s size and structure and innovation objectives – from 10 to +1000.

 

What does an innovation coach do?

Innovation coaches are trained to initiate, plan, and moderate internal innovation activities to generate new ideas and solutions in the context of a specific business topic. When designing the coaches training program, we define and adjust the role to reflect the organization and its innovation strategy and capabilities so that in time (and practice) they will be able to meet Return on Innovation (ROI) goals.

SIT’s Innovation Coaches are trained in conducting Mini-Sessions using a structured and systematic method. These sessions in which one or two coaches collaborate with a small group of colleagues to generate new ideas, solutions, and insights to benefit a specific business topic across the innovation process and framework. Active and impactful innovation coaches will usually run around 10 Mini-Sessions a year (and participate and lead additional innovation activities – alone and with their fellow coaches).

 

Who should become an innovation coach?

This is one of the questions I am most frequently asked. Anyone in the organization can innovate and contribute through innovation. Yet iCoaches hold a unique function and therefore their nomination is important on the individual, team, and the organization levels.

 

Here are three useful tips to consider when nominating iCoaches:

  1. Having an active interest and motivation in innovation is a strong indicator to one’s success and activity level over time. The importance of being passionate or interested is true for most endeavors, and it is more so for tasks that require taking initiative, challenging existing practices and mindset, and engaging others.
  2. Active and impactful iCoaches are usually the ones who are “going places” within the organization. They bring in their organizational experience and knowhow to achieve goals yet are not so senior that won’t have the time to take on additional responsibilities.
  3. Having a group of motivated and experienced nominated individuals in your iCoach team is great, but not enough. An effective iCoach team is aligned to the organization’s business functions and echoes its structure and strategy. This way, as a group can form an active, interactive community of practice.

Building your dream team of iCoaches is kind of a combination between science and art. If you are currently engaged in this process, here is my (maybe surprising) advice: look for those people that everyone would like to have in their team, those who are busy yet somehow always take on another interesting and challenging task (or two).

An active innovation coach requires training, mentoring and management support.

In our next post we will share insights about the life of an iCoach. Meanwhile, we invite all our active iCoaches to share their thoughts via email, DM, or comment below.

We know you are here 😊.

Innovating with nothing but water around you

Published date: April 28, 2023 в 2:48 pm

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Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation

I love movies and I love innovation. But even I was shocked when I learned that someone who shares my feelings was willing to pay USD 85,000 for a unique volleyball that appeared on the big screen.

A few weeks ago, Wilson, an off-white leather ball which is best known for co-starring alongside Tom Hanks in “Cast Away” was sold for that sum.

In the film, FedEx trouble shooter Chuck Noland, played by Hanks, is forced by extreme conditions to survive on a deserted island for 4 years, relying only on the limited resources found around him.

Wilson, in the movie context, is not just a ball. Chuck needs to find a solution to his solitude, sense of aloneness. Almost accidently, he “creates” a companion out of a simple blood-stained volleyball, by adding a face to it. This seemingly casual action changed the ball’s essence.

No alt text provided for this image

Wilson the volleyball from “Cast Away”

Source:

Why is this scene relevant for us? And what can we learn from it? I will use this Hollywood story to explain two principles of innovation that you can implement in your business, even if you are not completely surrounded by water.

How do we usually innovate?

All around us we can spot and specify needs and problems. We can usually identify and articulate our pains:  What do we lack? What action do we want to perform, or do we wish to be performed? Then, we tend to look for a tool, a product or a person that best suits our needs.

What if there is not even one object around that supports these needs? In such cases we may try to build or invent one.

We usually move from a perceived function to the object that can perform it. We practice this standard way of thinking not only in our private lives, but also as a part of organizational and business routines. We define “A job to be done” and look for the right tool to do the job!

The term “Form Follows Function”, which encapsulates this way of thinking, was coined by the architect Louis Sullivan at the end of the 19th century. Sullivan was known as the “Father of Modernism”, influencing generations of architects and designers. He referred to the fact that a building or an object should primarily relate to its intended function or purpose, even at the expense of its aesthetics…

A deserted island is actually a Closed World

But survivors on lost islands do not experience regular conditions. You can ask Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, the most famous fictional castaway who spent 28 years on a remote tropical island. Your resources are scarce, and you must make the best of what can be found in your immediate surroundings, your Closed World. This is the first principle of innovation to be learned from this story.

In the 2000 drama film Cast Away, Chuck Noland is on his way to Malaysia when his cargo plane gets caught in a violent storm and crashes into the Pacific Ocean. Noland is the only survivor of the crash, and he washes up on an uninhabited island.

In his new home Noland finds his standard way of thinking useless. He carefully examines the objects around him – the content of some FedEx packages washed up on the shore – only to find out that their original function is no longer needed. After all, what good can skating shoes bring when you’re the only resident of your wild sandy hot kingdom?

Think differently, embrace your constraints

 If you find yourself on such a deserted island, the first things you will probably look for are food, water, and shelter. Chuck Noland did just that, utilizing everything he could lay his hands on.

He began improvising. Not only did he find new functions for the objects he found on the island, but these new functions seem much more innovative than what he originally imagined.

For us it comes as no surprise since we believe in SIT that Constraints Foster Creativity. Nothing like a remote island to illustrate constraints. Noland learned this second principle of innovation quickly.

Got some dry branches? Great! Rubbing them can help start a fire. That’s easy.

How about the skating shoes blades? Looks like the perfect knife.

Some video cassettes that seemed of no value were the source of a strong rope, weaved from the tape inside them.

The plastic walls of portable toilets? They were turned into a sail and a shield for the raft Noland built.

And Wilson!

At first glance, the volleyball seemed redundant and was thrown aside. Only later a latent need was discovered. Noland, desperate to talk to someone, personified the volleyball, making him his closest friend. He drew a face on the bloodstained ball, enabling it to become much more than a sport appliance for years to come.

This innovative way of thinking might sound strange or even childish, but that is just the point. Most people use the standard way of innovating that I described before; Nevertheless, I would like to suggest a different approach: start with the form of the object, then look for new functionalities it may support.

This phenomenon was discovered by a group of psychologists led by Ronald Finke, and it spurred a new thinking approach.

In SIT terms, this is called Function Follows Form or FFF for short. This counterintuitive yet powerful process allows us to discover new benefits that we might miss by following our usual path of thinking.

We like improvising, creating new ideas out of imagined situations or objects, so why wait until we find ourselves on an island?

Come back next week to see how you can recognize outcomes of the FFF framework in surprising places.

And Now, Finally: THE Right Answer

Published date: June 22, 2022 в 5:31 pm

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Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation

I recently read an interesting article about presentation tips. The author, a “cognitive neuroscientist and chief science officer”, opens her article thus:

Which is the odd one out?

14

40

68

96

A paragraph later, she writes:

If you think about the mental calculations required to reach the right answer in the above exercise (as you probably discovered, it’s “40”)…

I felt a bit stupid, since I had not “discovered” that the answer was 40. In fact, even after giving it some thought, I’m not sure why it is obvious that “the right answer” is 40.

Before continuing, pause – do you have a good explanation why 40 is the right answer? Do you have another suggestion for a right answer?

Lacking a convincing argument in favor of 40, or any of the other numbers, I jotted down candidates for answers that came to mind:

1)     Sixty eight – only one with two “t”s

2)     14 –only one with a “1”; 40 –only one with a “0”; 68 – only one with a “6”; 96 – only one with a “9”

3)     14 – only one not divisible by 4

4)     96 – from 14 to 40 there is a gap of 26, from 40 to 68 the gap is 28, so the next number should be 68+30, therefore 98, but it’s 96, so that’s the odd one out

5)     40 – only round number, only one that has no units, only tens

6)     40 – all other numbers are composed of either only straight lines (1,4) or curves (6,8,9) and only 40 has both linear (1) and curvy (0) numerals.

7)     40 – only one that doesn’t have an “o” when written in Spanish, only one that can be written as a single word in Hebrew

8)     68 – only one that has a factor which is greater than 10 (17)

9)     96 – only one that stays the same when you turn the page on its head

10)  69 – only adjacent pair of numerals (vertical or horizontal) that creates an odd two-digit number

How, then, can one speak of “the right answer” in this case? What kind of minds are we creating in our children (and grownups) when we pose these questions and program them to seek a single “right answer”?

This reminded me of a small puzzle we often use in our workshops.

Which is the odd one out?

1)     15

2)     17

3)     19

An arithmetically correct answer is “15” – the only one which isn’t prime.

Another potential answer is “2”. This is the innovation facilitator’s favorite answer, highlighting the cognitive fixednesses that prevent one from recognizing this possibility. The answer “2” may, to some, feel inferior to “15”, an obviously correct reply. Others prefer “2”, as it requires a shift from the regular/intuitive/standard way of perceiving the problem. But, beware, for this strong preference often leads facilitators to now refer to “2” as “THE answer”. Why? Because just as the math teacher uses the question to check her students’ understanding of prime numbers, so do workshop facilitators want to drive home their anti-fixedness message. Both err in inculcating in their listeners the mindset that questions tend to have one single correct answer. Most don’t.

The T-Puzzle

Published date: April 27, 2022 в 4:51 pm

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Category: Innovation Facilitation,Problem Solving

This is a puzzle that occurred to me about 30 years ago, inspired by reading Douglas Hofstadter’s collection of essays “Metamagical Themas” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamagical_Themas.

My colleagues and I have used it sporadically but extensively in innovation workshops throughout the years. We call it The T-Puzzle. I believe that it raises some interesting questions and thoughts, some more philosophical, others directly related to problem solving and innovation.

But, before discussing meanings and interpretations, would you first take a stab at solving the puzzle?

Have you tried? This is what happens:

Once you realize that the number is 21, you write “twenty one”, but, as you are instructed to count the t’s in the word you fill in as well, the number of t’s now grows to 23. OK, you say to yourself, and write “twenty three”, BUT this brings the count to 24 t’s. Annoying, but still manageable, you think, as you fill in what is now the correct reply “twenty four”. But here it starts getting weird, because NOW the right answer goes back to 23, and you know where writing THAT answer will lead you. So, basically, there is no way (that I’m aware of) to break this wicked loop and write down the correct answer.

UNLESS, that is, you start breaking some IMPLICIT assumptions about the requirements from the solution, while strictly complying with the EXPLICIT instructions themselves. Here are some possible solutions suggested by the public, on LinkedIn and in our workshops:

  1. Seven plus seven plus seven
  2. wenny-one or _wen_y one
  3. fifteen-plus-seven, or other arithmetical combinations
  4. “several”/”many” or “more than twenty-one”
  5. “Blackjack winning number”
  6. Einundzwanzig, עשרים ואחד and the like

Some practical learnings about innovative problem solving:

  1. Useful problem solving is usually not about breaking rules, but about finding novel solutions WITHIN the constraints, INSIDE THE BOX.
  2. Once you break the FIXEDNESS, or the mental model of how the solution should supposedly look, a floodgate opens for alternative possibilities.
  3. Solutions tend to come in “families” that share common PATTERNS. Once you recognize these patterns, you can follow each one to create variations (arithmetic, languages, slang, estimates, metaphors, etc.)
  4. One can be SYSTEMATIC about solution-searching. For “arithmetic” solutions, say, there aren’t many t-less numbers in the English language: one, four, five, six, seven, nine, zero are the only ones in the first 100 natural numbers (!), still enough to create quite a few combinations equaling 21, and combining them with t-including numbers you can reach other sums without falling into the wicked t-loop.
  5. Easy to CREATE ALGORITHMS churning out solutions for some patterns (arithmetic, languages), less easy for others (metaphors and slang) but probably not impossible.

Additional, more philosophical musings will be supplied on demand. Meanwhile, happy to hear your thoughts.

Let’s Rethink Our Relations: How to Break Relational Fixedness in the Digital World

Published date: March 24, 2022 в 4:35 pm

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Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation,Strategy

Reruns of “Seinfeld” on Netflix are a glimpse into a 30-year-old time capsule that allows one to dig up innovative ideas that, for some reason, have never been implemented. One of the hidden potential startups is Elaine’s brilliant suggestion, when Jerry, George and she impatiently wait in line at a Chinese restaurant:

“You know, it’s not fair that people are seated first come – first serve. It should be based on who’s hungriest”

Credit: Seinfeld on Twitter

Silly idea? Or wonderful? It probably depends on whether you are hungry when you first hear it. One thing is sure, though – it is too seldom that one rethinks the nature of the connection between the various components of a system, product, or service, and thus, many an opportunity for real innovation is forever lost.

Imagine an external training program offered by your company to a limited number of employees. Since it is too expensive to send everyone who wishes to go, the company selects based on professional knowledge or experience.

At first thought this sounds like a logical and proper consideration, which ensures that the level of trainees is uniform, and participants can process new material based on their knowledge and experience.

But one can look at this situation from another angle. Those selected for training will probably be employees who already master the field, while employees with no background (but with high potential) will have a slim chance of joining. Paradoxically, this means that the cumulative value that the company’s employees have gained from this external training is lower than that of a similar training with participants with no previous knowledge.

The decision to use prior knowledge as a selection criterion for the training is an example of Relational Fixedness, one of the barriers that can interfere with innovation processes.

Relational Fixedness is the tendency to perceive connections and dependencies between variables of a system in one certain way, without being able to imagine different relations.

All types of fixedness are cognitive mechanisms that enable quick understanding of objects and situations, allowing us to take immediate action. Such mechanisms are beneficial and even crucial at both the personal and organizational levels. At the same time, they can be a significant barrier to innovation, as they make it difficult for us to identify new opportunities.

There are other ways to connect the dots

What does it mean to consider different relations between the variables of a system’s components? Let’s look at one of the important variables in any business: the price of the product.

Seemingly, there should be no connection between the price of a consumer product, such as a pair of glasses, and the characteristics of other parameters of the business, such as the location of the store or the day of the year. In practice, many business models display different pricing for the same product depending on these exact characteristics, as evidenced in holiday discounts or outlet stores. These models are examples of breaking Relational Fixedness.

 

 

And what do you think about this campaign by a major optical retailer in Israel? The number of percentage points discounted from a customer’s price is exactly the age of that customer. If the customer is 62 years old, he or she will receive a 62% discount.

 

 

 

 

But how do you produce such unconventional ideas, and how do you make sure they are more than a gimmick? We believe that the way to do this is through systematic thinking and the use of thinking tools that force the would-be innovator to perceive the components that are already available, but through a different lens.

The thinking tool that can lead to the generation of, for example, an age-dependent discount is called in SIT “Attribute Dependency”. The process of using this tool consists of listing the components of the product or system, specifying their characteristics, and then modifying the existing relations (or dependencies) between those characteristics (or creating new ones if none exist).

In the next section we will explain and demonstrate how this can be applied in the context of digital and data-based products.

Relational Fixedness in a data-driven world

What about the digital data-laden world we live in today – is Relational Fixedness prevalent there, as in the world of tangible products? Definitely!

Fixedness is not a feature of computers or databases, but a characteristic of human thinking, including those humans who make the design, marketing, and operational decisions in cutting-edge technology companies.

The information available thanks to digital tools can point to surprising new opportunities, which can easily be missed because they seem “illogical” or because fixedness prevents one from noticing them in the first place.

Despite the fixedness, the abundance of data that can be monitored, processed, and presented to customers has in recent years led to a wealth of new and fascinating models, and to the creation of connections that did not exist in the past between variables of product components.

Here are three reasons why companies choose to break Relational Fixedness in their digital products and offerings, and a few examples for each reason:

I. Make the most of the value embodied in the technology.

  1. In most smartphones, “low battery” mode automatically turns on when the battery runs low. In such cases, display will be dimmed, since screen brightness is a big battery drain. In Attribute Dependency lingo, a new connection has been created between the energy level of the battery and the level of illumination of the screen.
  2. Many digital services and apps are affected by the speed of the internet connection. App providers often operate multiple data centers around the world, and use smart traffic routing to the nearest one, according to user’s IP addresses. The location of the server from which the users receive service depends on the location of the users themselves, a dependency that was not possible in the past.

II. Improve conversion rates and sales

  1. Determining users’ location is beneficial not only to improve the service they get, but also to maximize the probability that they purchase additional products. Location-based services (based on cellular data, WiFi, etc.) demonstrate sophisticated relations between users’ whereabouts and advertising content presented to them.
  2. The scope and resolution of data held by digital stores allow for dynamic pricing strategies, based on a huge number of variables. Some companies even choose to implement differential pricing of the same product, based on the type of cellphone used while shopping online.

III. Design considerations and improving the user experience

  1. The abundance of accessible data and variables for each product and customer makes it possible to fine-tune the users’ experience. Why should all Waze users be represented by the same avatar, when new users can appear, say, as baby-Wazers, and “senior” users as grown-ups? Why should the Google logo always look the same, when it can vary on different days of the year or appear differently in each country?
  2. To ensure a fast and smooth onboarding process, many applications offer an increasing number of features as the user’s level rises. New users will be offered a limited set of capabilities, and as they continue to gain experience, additional features will be revealed to them. A gradual onboarding prevents unnecessary confusion and allows for effective learning of each feature.

It can be clearly seen that data-driven companies know how to make good use of valuable information to create new connections between variables of the application or product components. In fact, we have become accustomed to smarter and more personalized applications, making the most of every characteristic of users’ behavior, their surroundings and even the application mode itself.

 How to leverage what we have learned from these examples

How can such new proposals be systematically generated? And how can one change or unlink existing dependencies, in a way that is not intended to meet a particular need, but to open new horizons for surprising opportunities?

Applying the “Attribute Dependency” thinking tool can be just the answer. In addition to conventional thinking, which emerges from analyzing needs, this tool makes it possible to systematically explore additional possibilities. Here are the operating instructions for a simple version of the tool:

     1. Prepare a list of variables:

  • 5-8 internal variables of the product you are working on (internal variables, i.e., those that the manufacturer has control over: volume, screen size, price of the product or service, color…).
  • 5-8 variables in the product’s immediate proximity (external variables, i.e., those that are relevant to the product, but the manufacturer has no control over: weather, age of user, location in the world).

2. Randomly select a pair of variables: one internal and one external.

3. Identify whether there is a relationship between the selected variables. If it exists – consider the possibility of changing or canceling it; If it does not exist – consider options for creating a relationship or dependency between the two.

4. Identify new opportunities that can emerge from the newly created relationship.

Here are some ideas created by using the tool, as a demonstration:

  1. In most applications, the number of features available to the user increases the more expensive the user’s subscription. Can you find an advantage in an app where a more expensive subscription includes fewer options?
  2. The default order of messages in an e-mail box depends on the time they were received. You can also change their order according to other characteristics, such as the subject of the message or its size. Why should the order of the messages not be related, say, to the number of recipients of each message so that bulk messages do not bother one at the top of the mailbox?
  3. Podcasts have become a favorite format for content consumption. You can control the speed of the audio, but would it not be more useful if the speed depended on the complexity of the podcast topic, or even the complexity of each section in it, or the speaker’s velocity?
  4. The position of Google search results depends on their ranking in Google’s algorithm. The advantage of this for Google (and for us) is obvious, but what if we add an option to display the results of the first five pages backwards? Exposure to new and unfamiliar content can expand one’s mind.

Applying Attribute Dependency is not trivial the first few times, because the process is counter-intuitive. In fact, when it comes to data driven digital products, the process may be even less intuitive than when seeking to innovate with a physical product, because of the wealth of “logical” options that can be realized before considering “weird” offers.

Gaining experience in activating this tool improves results dramatically. Since we have already chosen the less intuitive way – we have a good chance of reaching a surprising result that competitors will miss.

Now, back to Elaine’s idea of how to change the queue at the Chinese restaurant – maybe it’s worth adding a “how hungry are you?” question to the digital form used for booking seats in restaurants?

Listen to How you Listen to the Voice of the Customer

Published date: January 27, 2022 в 3:06 pm

Written by:

Category: Innovation Facilitation

By Nurit Shalev, CDEO (Chief Development & Empowerment Officer) and Amnon Levav, CIO (Chief Innovation Officer), in SIT – Systematic Inventive Thinking

This post brings together two very well-known concepts, the first, a key topic in the world of marketing and the second, a technique that originated in the realm of psychology and self-help:

  1. Voice of the Customer
  2. Johari window

When Nurit came to me with the initial draft of this post, the first thing that occurred to me was: great stuff, but this combination must have appeared in dozens of publications already. A couple of Google-hours later I came to the following surprising conclusion, which is our rationale for sharing with you this application of the Johari Window technique to the practice of listening to the VoC:

This is the first time (as far as we’ve seen), that the Johari Window is used not to analyze how customers perceive the company but what the company knows about its customers.

AS we all know, companies very often embark on research designed to glean insights about their current or prospective customers, whether to identify “unmet needs”, drive design of new products or offerings, or better communicate their benefits in order to eventually sell them. Our suggestion (and novelty): Before setting out to ask your customers or observe them, ask yourself and map out what you know about them, using the Johari Window framework.

 

What can the company learn from these quadrants, and how can this be put into practice?

1.The company already knows plenty about its customers, and the first quadrant shows what the company knows that it knows, through a variety of sources: salespeople, customer service, complaints, social media, etc. Very often, the customer also knows that you know, so: a) why waste your energy on re-verifying, and b) why annoy your customers by demonstrating that you need to be told yet again? Unfortunately, we often find our clients exploring this quadrant, mostly because it is easier to cover familiar territory. Make sure you organize this type of existing knowledge well and avoid the practice of setting out to rediscover it.

2. The second quadrant seems enticing: stuff you know that you don’t know about the customer. Tempting because you know what you’re looking for, and you know that once you find it you have expanded your knowledge of your customers. But beware: make sure you figure out why you want to know what you don’t about your customers. First, maybe you don’t know because the customer doesn’t want you to know, maybe it’s not your business to know. Second, will this information be useful, operable? Take care not to spend time nor bother your customers for collecting information that will never be utilized – you will be breaking the informal pact by which your customer agrees to share their data in return for your making good use of it for their benefit. It can, nevertheless, be fruitful to imagine what you could do with data or information that is currently unavailable. Especially when thinking of Digital Transformation, uses for data are often invented or discovered only after the data has been collected. Explore this quadrant, therefore, but handle with care.

3. The third quadrant describes a blind spot with high potential for easy wins – what you don’t know that you know. This is all the data and information that the company has, but is not aware of possessing, usually due to one or several of the following:

  • Data, or even information are strewn around in an unstructured and unorganized fashion;
  • Your own assumptions or cognitive fixedness prevent you from realizing what you know;
  • Lack of communication and silos deny access to data to those who could potentially use it within the organization.

The danger in these cases is, again, disappointment among customers who feel that they have supplied information but have not received anything in return. The potential, on the other hand, is huge. No need to spend time and resources on research, no need to take up more customer’s time, only open your eyes and mind and enjoy the fruits of information that you already possess.

4. The fourth quadrant is the most intriguing. The assumption here is that there exists information out there that will probably not be accessible using your standard procedures. Since you don’t know that you don’t know, not only are you not cognizant of the answers, but you are even ignorant of the questions. You will, therefore, need to be creative. Perhaps you can engage your customers in a process of co-creation, while observing them and listening carefully. Or you can use empathic design or other anthropologically based techniques for observing customers with a clean slate, open to discovering information that you had not set out to look for, and the customer may not have even been aware that existed. Companies would do wisely to develop these kinds of procedures and abilities, for it is in this domain that competitively valuable insights can arise. A caveat is in place, though: there is much information for which you should not rely on your customers. They not only cannot tell you what they will need in the future, they very often are not even aware of what they need or could want now. One of the worst strategies for coming up with novel ideas is asking your customers to supply them.

The following short case study demonstrates how the Johari analysis plays out in this context. As we prepared for a pipeline development project with one of our clients, a credit card company, the VP Marketing asked that as a first step we conduct some consumer research: “Let’s learn from our customers, listen to what they want.” All members of his management team, sitting in the room, fell silent. Their unease was palpable. They needed very little prodding to explain why: “Not another research project!”, “We have so much data already that we’re not using.” “Same questions, same answers, same ppt presentation, report to the board, no action?” Our suggestion was, therefore, to kick-off by mapping out the company’s knowledge situation as explained above. This was the result:

The information collected through this analysis led to a variety of insights, such as:

The customer obviously lived a negative experience when their card was blocked, but this was exacerbated by the presence of others, such as the attendant at the checkout, the customer’s partner, bystanders watching etc. The experience was often described using expressions such as: shame, offense, impotence, anger.

  • Some of the customers turned to the call center in real time, but most reported that response times were inadequate to the situation, failing to resolve the embarrassing situation.
  • Emotional responses to the blocking of one’s card were pretty much universal across customer segments, but reactions differed widely, including the use of social media.
  • In most cases cards were blocked due to the customer’s failure to renew their card or enable its use abroad. In both cases, the customer had received notification of the need to act but had disregarded this communication.
  • Communication overload was the main reason for disregarding these important messages that were lost in the flood of less important ones.

Based on the insights garnered through this analysis, the team went on to ideate solutions, converging to two viable and complementary concepts. At this point the team felt that they needed very little customer validation, as the ideas had been based on a deep and solid analysis of the huge amount of knowledge they had of their customers.

Time and again we find that professionals have much more information about their customers preferences and needs than they are aware of. In these cases what is required is a comprehensive and structured analysis of the existing knowledge leading to a focused search for what is missing.

Remember:

  • Don’t ask about what you already know. The customer knows that you know.
  • Don’t ask about what you don’t need to know.
  • Don’t rely on the customer for what the customer doesn’t know (e.g. ideas, future needs).
  • Trust your professionals, especially those with frontline experience, and their knowledge of their customers. Listen to the VoP (Voice of the Professional), and don’t settle for their initial response.
  • Challenge your people to challenge what they think they know, to uncover what else they know.

Knowing your customer is the basis for the success of any business, hence the crucial importance of listening to the voice of the customer, but much depends on how you listen, what you search for and mostly – your awareness of what you know and what to do with it. Our variant of the Johari Window, applied to analyzing what you know about your customer’s knowledge of you, can be a useful first step.

Managing the “Air-Time to Contribution” Ratio

Published date: December 8, 2021 в 5:14 pm

Written by:

Category: Innovation,Innovation Facilitation

My mother liked to strike up conversations with strangers of all stripes, and it was one of my favorite childhood pastimes to listen in. But sometimes, when they babbled away uncontrollably, she would turn to my sister and me and mumble: “mental constipation, verbal diarrhea”. My professional life provides, alas, many occasions in which I am reminded of this indelicate quip. With a softer approach in mind, I have developed throughout the years a practical tool for managing the contributions of participants in a workshop that I would like to share with you.

First step: Mentally visualize the participants, each placed in one of four quadrants, defined by two axes:

  • Quantity – the amount of air-time they tend to occupy (how often and how much they speak).
  • Quality – your assessment of their potential contribution to achieving the goals of the session.

This segments your public into four groups:

Participants in each quadrant require different treatments. Your second step, therefore, is to interact with each group according to the following guidelines.

A’s (reticent with low contribution potential) – Balance OK, no harm to the dynamics, unless there are too many A’s in the room, which means that something is terribly wrong. But even if there are relatively few A’s, it is worth exploring: Maybe an A shouldn’t have been there in the first place? If so, is it too late to release them from this unnecessary commitment? Maybe they can be highly valuable elsewhere? But maybe all they need is to better understand their role in your workshop and what they could potentially contribute. I remember a Plant Manager in Mexico who was sure that the Marketing Manager and her team should be allowed to lead an enthusiastic discussion about new products without any spoil-sport manufacturing comments from him, until I explained that his professional considerations (provided that they were phrased constructively) were crucial guidelines within which the marketing team, and others, could let their imagination fly. He then transformed into a true partner of the marketing participants, helping them convert their ideas into implementable projects.

B’s (verbose with low potential contribution) – Need controlling, because they are misusing the team’s most valuable asset – time. There are many ways, some more subtle than others, to control a rampant B, and your task is as delicate as it is crucial to the success of the engagement. First, there is high potential for hurt feelings, and second, the possibility always exists that there is, in fact, more value in B’s contribution than initially meets the ear.

C’s (reticent with high potential contribution) – Can be easily mistaken for an A and left alone. Thus, their potential contribution is lost, with unfortunate consequences both for them and for the team. An important task for you as facilitator is to find a moment – probably during a break – to conduct your differential diagnosis: is the introverted engineer from R&D an A who shouldn’t have been invited in the first place, or is he an invaluable trove of coaxable, priceless information?

D’s (verbose with high potential contribution) are a facilitator’s best friends. They contribute. They sustain the energy. They give you the (positive) feedback you need. They will extract you from those uneasy moments of general silence. They are truly your allies. But beware of the trap of allowing them to lead the discussion uni-directionally, squelching other voices that may open the more innovative avenues you would like to explore.

In summary, all participants are potentially your friends and allies. A balanced management of “air-time to contribution”, with differential treatment for each and every one of them will ensure that this exciting potential is realized.

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