Organizational Innovation

Innovation vs. Leadership

Published date: August 11, 2022 в 1:32 pm

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Category: Innovation,Organizational Innovation

Which is easier to learn: innovation or leadership?  That is one of my favorite questions to ask during keynotes and workshops, especially to groups of accomplished leaders. What amazes me is the answer I get back: overwhelmingly, groups of executives say that leadership is easier to learn than innovation.

I could not disagree more. I’ve experienced some of the best leadership training in the world starting with the U.S. Air Force Academy and all the way through to Johnson & Johnson’s many leadership training programs. These programs were complex, psychologically-based, and multi-dimensional. Leadership training is big business. The demand is high, and the task is tall. Executives flood to these programs to learn new insights and nuances of this highly people-based activity. It is tough to learn leadership.

I learned innovation in a matter of minutes. The process is clear, rules-based, and rigorous.  Anyone can do it. When facilitated appropriately, you cannot NOT innovate. The process forces original, novel, and highly creative ideas to come out of your head.

So why do executives feel that leadership is easier to learn than innovation? My sense is that many have not been exposed to a bona fide innovation method. These executives want organic innovation more than anything to drive growth. Yet many are missing a simple insight what it takes…to invest themselves in learning innovation. Once executives feel what it’s like to innovate on demand, they get it. They start thinking about execution, scalability, culture aspects, resources needs, measurement, accountability, strategy, alignment….all the traditional things leaders think about…to move an initiative forward.

GE is perhaps the best example of a company that invests in innovation as much as it does leadership with its Imagination at Work program. For GE, the question of which is easier to train…innovation or leadership…is moot. They avoid the “leadership bias,” and they invest appropriately in core innovation skills to drive growth.

Diversity: A Driver of Innovation

Published date: July 21, 2022 в 12:26 pm

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Category: Organizational Innovation,Strategy

Take a look at the people around you at work. What do you notice? Well, we all differ from one another. But appearances aren’t the only way we differ, it’s the unique views and backgrounds that we bring that can help you boost your creativity at work. Diversity is a driver of creativity. When you invite a group of colleagues to an ideation session, it’s important that you have diversity in your team. And you want diversity in these three ways. First, you want functional diversity. Next, you want gender diversity. And finally, cultural diversity.

When you invite people to a team ideation session, try to get people from at least these three departments. First, you need commercial marketing people. The marketers are the ones that it can help you figure out if an idea has commercial potential. They’ll filter out any idea that won’t make it into the marketplace. You also need technical people. They’re the ones that understand how your products and services work. And they’re going to help you identify those ideas that just aren’t viable. They may be great ideas but technically they can’t be made. And finally, you need people who are customer centric. These are the people that deal with your customers every day. People like your sales people or people in your call center. They’re the ones that advocate for your customers, and they’re the ones that, that will help you identify those ideas that will resonate the most with them. Taken together, these three perspectives help you answer the questions, will our customers want it? Can we make it? And how do we commercialize it?

You also want gender diversity on your team. Research suggests that men tend to generate ideas that are more risky, while women tend to create ideas that are more practical. When they work together, these biases tend to average out and you end up with ideas that are both interesting and practical.

You also want to make sure your team has good cultural diversity. People with different backgrounds will help you create ideas that are applicable in many different global regions. Without cultural diversity, you end up creating ideas that are perhaps only appropriate for a certain region of the world.

Diversity is a driver of creativity. Diverse teams see new possibilities, they hold each other accountable to bring their best thinking. And it helps you boost your creativity at work.

Ideating by Breaking Silos: 6 Common Bugs and their Fixes

Published date: July 13, 2022 в 4:11 pm

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Category: Innovation,Organizational Innovation,Strategy

Companies are all too aware of “silos” and the difficulty of sharing and collaborating among departments or units. They therefore embark on joint ideation exercises, that often end with disappointingly meager results. Why?

1. Sharing starts in meeting

An effective encounter of teams, be they warring tribes or (more difficult still) adjacent units in a corporation, requires meticulous preparation. Just throwing together people from different cultures doesn’t bring out the best in them. Minimum preparation includes defining what they would like to achieve in the meeting and what they are willing to contribute to its success, and (as detailed in #4 below) a sincere mapping of potential conflicts of interest.

2. Inter-unit meetings often start with mutual presentations of achievements

But listeners can usually put into practice very little of what they hear, due to limits to one’s capacity to absorb when passively listening, especially when the subject matter is, by definition here, not yours.

Facilitated properly, the session should consist of alternating presentations and interactive exercises. Presentations should be broken up into chunks, each followed by questions from the audience and the facilitator. Listeners should be encouraged to both interact with the presenter and take notes for use later when ideating.

3. Incentives and motivations to collaborate are not analyzed and aligned

Yes, we are all in this together, yes, we all know “it’s important to collaborate”, but what are the actual incentives to do so? Most chances are that if you present something of use to another of the participating units: a) they may end up doing better than your unit, b) they may use up even more of your time later, coming back with questions and additional requests, c) your boss will be unhappy with both (a) and (b).

While planning the silo-busting session ask yourself (and answer): apart from overall benefits for the organization as a whole, how can these specific units and participants be incentivized to share and collaborate? Can you keep score of “assists”? Celebrate those who share most? Formalize the accounting of knowledge-transfer between units?

4. Hidden agenda stays… hidden

I’ve often been asked to facilitate an encounter of two teams called upon to collaborate, in which all are aware that success for team A would entail damage to team B and/or vice-versa. Example: a successful product launch of A would cannibalize and therefore decrease sales of a B product. Common practice in these cases is to avoid conflict, going through “creativity exercises” pretending that no conflict exists. We recommend the opposite approach: put the elephant on the table at the outset and discuss potential ways of overcoming, or at least moderating risks to one of the parties or both.

5. A-priori blinders

Imagine an organization in which business unit A targets, say, women (or the elderly) and BU B targets men (or youth). A (commendable) silo-breaking approach leads management to throw together a mixed team of A and B, so they can invent by learning from each other. But participants will tend to listen with their professional blinders on, and therefore, even if fully motivated to collaborate, they will find it difficult to imagine how a feature designed for the other team’s women can inspire novelty for their men, or how an insight about teenagers can spark an innovation for the over-80’s. This phenomenon will limit not only the listeners, but also the presenters who will tend to limit themselves to what they a priori consider to be relevant to the other team.

The solution is to engage the team – from the outset – in some preliminary exercises of fixedness-breaking, opening their consciousness to their current limitations, whet their appetites with examples of crossover ideas that have been successful, and then, throughout the sharing presentations, challenge them to force-fit some of what they hear to their reality, even if the exercise initially feels contrived and useless. It never is.

6.

Sharing processes typically end when the silo-breaking session ends. But these exercises, even in when most productive, are only the initial step. If participants run out from the session only to shut themselves back into their respective silos, the chances of translating budding insights into development projects are slim.

The optimal solution to this phenomenon is to build into the plan, from the outset, mechanisms for continuing collaboration efforts beyond the initial attempt. This is easy to agree upon in principle, but is very rarely implemented in practice, for a variety of reasons, mostly related to the incentives of the players involved. The BUs will return from an offsite, especially if it lasts several days and/or requires travel, to find their desks and calendars even more cluttered than when they left, and most chances are that initial ideas that were sparked by sharing with colleagues from other silos will be low on their de facto priorities. Meanwhile, the corporate organizers of the multi-unit event will have spent considerable amounts of time and energy on preparing and running it and will now either lick their corporate wounds or hopefully bask in the glory of their successful event for a brief moment as they dive back to their regular responsibilities. No one, therefore, including all those who absolutely promised to do so once the event has ended, will have the time or disposition to follow up properly. Unless it has been firmly embedded into the program from the start.

Conducting a poorly planned or badly executed silo-breaking session is usually worse than not holding one in the first place. And the difference, as is often the case, is in the details. Remember:

  • Preparations
  • Interactive
  • Incentives
  • Conflicts
  • Agendas
  • Follow up

Enjoy!

WFH, WFO, or Hybrid – The Guide to Finding Your Sweet Spot

Published date: June 16, 2022 в 3:44 pm

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Category: Organizational Innovation,Strategy

Are you team WFH or WFO?

 

I worked from home long before it was considered fashionable, much to the jealousy of my friends and family. Little did they realize that they would join me quickly and abruptly. In just two years the pandemic has expedited WFH, with 70% of the U.S. workforce working remotely in mid-2020, compared to only 2% prior. Everyone remembers stories of corporate CEOs packing up their desks as they paved the way to a new era, without any plan in place. It was a sudden cold turkey move, with the reality and regulations of the time leading the decision making. As time progressed and everyone caught their bearings, new working models, technologies, and support systems evolved. The benefits of these new working models were quickly noted, and included a combination of expected and unexpected advantages. Now, even with the lifting of all social distancing and Covid regulations, companies are not quick to rustle their troops back into the office and are now adapting to find the model that works best for them.

The concept of WFH is being promoted top down and bottom up in organizations. On the one hand companies are noting a reduction in overhead due to releasing office space, and on the other hand employees needs and motivations around work have changed, and they are demanding continued flexibility post-pandemic. According to Accenture’s Future of Work Study 2021, 83% of employees prefer a hybrid work model. And as companies want to attract and retain the best talent, the WFH policies are now becoming part of the competitive job market.

 

While there used to be two clear camps – WFO or WFH, a new player has entered: Hybrid. So first thing first – let’s make some order amongst the different types of working models. Like you can’t walk into a Starbucks and just ask for coffee, saying hybrid nowadays isn’t clear enough with all the options. The Pumble blog has identified different types of working models, that run the gamut from full WFO to full WFH:

  • Fully in office – Everyone is in the office full time, no remote option.
  • Office-first (remote-friendly) hybrid model – Employees come to the office most of the time and with an option to work remotely a fraction of their working time (usually 1-2 days).
  • Partly remote hybrid model – Some teams are fully remote (e.g. content team), whereas others are office-bound (e.g. the HR department).
  • Flexible hybrid model –  Employees have the flexibility to choose when they want to work from the office and when from home or elsewhere.
  • Choose-your-own-adventure hybrid model – The company provides multiple work models and employees decide on one of the offered work arrangement options and stick to it.
  • Remote-first hybrid model – Remote work is the default, yet the company still maintains some office space so that people can occasionally go to the office. (All operations and policies are in alignment with remote work)
  • Fully remote model – The organization doesn’t have any office spaces or headquarters and everyone works remotely.

 

Believe me, there’s for sure even more sub-models. So with so many options, what’s the best way to choose what’s right for your company?

 

I suggest considering four factors:

  1. Employer preference: What management style do you have in your company and what type of working model can it support?  What do you feel would contribute more to the productivity and culture of your company? Is one model more cost effective for the company? Where are your employees located geographically and does one model support them better than another
  2. Employee preference: How do people feel they work better and more efficiently? Is there a consensus amongst employees’ desires? Remember, people who live in closer proximity to the company location may feel differently than people with a larger commute. People who live alone may prefer the quiet set up of their homes, whereas people with large families or roommates may favor the solitude provided at the office.
  3. Types of projects: Think of the types of projects people work on in your company. Do they require equipment that can only be found in the office or can it be available at home? Do they require collaboration in real-time and space or not? (And if so, can technology help overcome?) Are there different roles/projects that have different requirements?
  4. Flexibility: Are you looking for a one size fits all model? Or are you willing to offer flexibility on choosing a model based on a personal or department level? Do managers have any leeway in making their own decisions for their team?

 

Once you’ve worked out the model for your company, remember to treat this as you would any “startup” in your company. Create an official policy so everyone will be aligned, and KPIs to monitor and measure the model’s success. There will probably be a need to pivot from time to time as you learn. But if this pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that things can change in an instant.

 

HOW DARE YOU?

Published date: June 9, 2022 в 4:37 pm

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Category: Innovation,Organizational Innovation

The AUTHORITY to LEAD a TEAM to INNOVATE

7 Questions You Have to Ask

Some 20+ years ago, I was brought in to facilitate an innovation project for the BBC – television. Early into the session, one of the participants, who I had noticed to be seething with anger, finally burst out in response to a comment I made: “That’s not the way you do TV! We’ve been doing the best TV in the world for dozens of years, who are you to tell us we should be doing it differently?”. Good question, I thought to myself. What DOES give me this authority? It got me thinking about the sources of authority that we, and others in the innovation-facilitator role, exercise in sessions and projects we facilitate.

First point to clarify was, that I was not there to TELL THEM what to do, but to enable them to discover novel ways of going about their activities, making use of their professional knowledge and skills. But still, what makes one worthy of their trust? When I pooled my colleagues for their answers to what gives them the sense of authority to facilitate an innovation process, I received a wide range of replies, all the way to “my baritone voice” (which, unfortunately, I do not at all share). We noticed that there was a difference between what was PERCEIVED as bestowing authority (voice, looks, title) and what facilitators felt actually gave them real authority. But, since authority describes a relationship between (at least) two parties, what is seen as subjective can play as important a role as what one deems to be objective.

When you are tasked with leading a team to innovate, be they clients or teammates, ask yourself what you are basing your authority on. And when you engage someone else to do the job, ask yourself why you are willing to entrust this challenge in her or his hands. This short list can help you decide.

1) Is it my my job/role to be in front of you?

2) Do I have expert knowledge of innovation processes? Have I been trained in a method for this task?

3) Do I believe it can be done? Am I (reasonably) fearless facing participants and task?

4) Have I done it before, repeatedly? (Experience!);

a. done it in your field, in others;

b. done it with people like you? With others?

5) Am I able, and do I have the patience, to listen to you carefully and respectfully?

6) Do I myself have a certain ability to innovate?

7)Do I CARE? (About you, task, results, their impact?)

 

No one scores perfectly on all parameters, nor does one need to. My advice:

1) When selecting someone to lead you, test them according to these factors, decide, and once positive – trust them and go for it.

2) When assuming the task – review your sources of authority, strengthen where you can, emphasize those you shine on, don’t pretend where you don’t and make the most of the former while leaning on others to overcome the latter.

Enjoy!

Nurturing the (Potential/Jaded/Allstar) Innovators in Your Company

Published date: June 2, 2022 в 4:32 pm

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Category: Organizational Innovation,Strategy

I adore a good scent. Give me hand creams, candles, soaps, lotions smelling of sandalwood or citrus and I am hooked. Therefore, you can imagine my excitement when buying a new plug-in for my guest bathroom. The excitement lessened when I realized that the safety cover protecting the outlet from moisture prevented me from plugging it in properly. Too lazy to go downstairs and rummage in the toolbox for the right screwdriver, I took the discarded cap from when I opened the plug-in and shoved it on top to hold the safety protector up so the scent could flow freely. Frankly, I didn’t think much of it until my guests happened upon it and they were enthralled, to say the least. “That’s such a great idea!”, they exclaimed over my contraption, “We have one too and couldn’t figure out how to keep it up!”

I found their reaction rather peculiar. Was it really that creative or innovative?

Judging by the looks on their faces, this actually was a very BIG deal. Certainly to them, where it was plain that they had been grappling with this issue for some time. And there I went and solved it in less than two seconds. What they wanted to know was – what made me think of it? The fact is, having been involved in innovation consulting for almost two decades, modes of thinking like this have become second nature, without my brain announcing what it’s doing. Nonetheless, I took the opportunity to share with them the Closed World Principle, which could explain the rationale behind my MacGyver-like solution. (I’m happy to explain more about this to those who are interested, but as this is not the topic of this article, we’ll be moving on now.)

Minds were blown. And I have to say I found their enthusiasm refreshing. Where so many people view innovation as a buzzword, standing before me were highly intellectual professionals who just went through an eye-opening experience and wanted to learn more.

What would you estimate is the percentage of these wide-eyed, eager to learn-and-apply people in an organization? High or low? I recently came across an article in the HBR that stated that although innovation is still one of the top agendas for companies, and innovation skills are ranked high in employee reviews, most employees hate innovation to the point of eye-rolling (or worse). But, given the fact that there are about 70,000 books on innovation, as well as other gripping statistics regarding the amount of websites and methodologies, we can conclude that there are still people like me and you (presumably because you’re reading this) that find innovation fascinating, exciting and constantly evolving.

So we see that in every organization we have three types of people: The Untouched, The Uninspired, and the Unfaltering. Here’s a breakdown of each group, what characterizes them, and what they need to be successful:

  • The Untouched – These are people that have somehow fallen through the cracks. Whether because they are new to the organization, their roles don’t directly align with the company’s innovation goals, or their direct manager doesn’t engage them. If innovation is part of your company agenda, these people are part of your target audience. Perhaps they are not directly developing a new product, but you still want them to learn skills to solve their own “plug-in problem” with efficiency. They need skills. An enthusiastic thinker can offer a fresh perspective even if the topic doesn’t pertain to them per se.
  • The Uninspired – These are people who are already involved in innovation processes to some degree. They may have received minor or intense training. However, the spark has gone out, due quite possibly to the overuse and generalization of the term innovation (I’ll try not to count how many times I’ve written it myself in these paragraphs). Or perhaps due to many initiatives not seeing the light of day. And of course, there’s the risk aspect – with already full plates, why would anyone want to take a chance on an extra-credit project that might fail? These are all issues that can and should be addressed. We need to reignite the passion. Whether it’s by letting go of the term innovation and breaking it into clearer goals, introducing new methodologies and tools, and most importantly – crafting your organization’s answer to the question of “What’s in it for me?”
  • The Unfaltering – These are your black belts. These are the people that drive innovation processes forward. They understand the potential that is waiting to be uncovered, and they are excited to be a part. They know it works and that it will work, no matter the topic, no matter the challenge. The danger is if these people switch to the “Uninspired” group. What this group needs are resources – time, budget, and people. They need continuous recognition for themselves and their efforts.

How would you estimate the breakdown of these groups in your company? Which group is the largest? The size of each group determines the level of enthusiasm for innovation in a company overall. As time evolves, the numbers can shift. Each group can become larger or smaller. Once you leave the “Untouched” group you never go back, yet it’s possible to travel back and forth between “Uninspired” and “Unfaltering”. Having this division in mind can help you discern the steps you need to take to make innovation bigger than a buzzword.

WORK – LIFE TRADEOFF

Published date: May 26, 2022 в 4:36 pm

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Category: Organizational Innovation,Uncategorized

I hit the jackpot. A good friend had a four-day company retreat at an ocean side resort and invited me to be her plus one! Calendars were blocked, plans were fashioned, daydreaming of sun and poolside drinks were kicked up a notch or ten.

And then, horror of horrors – we didn’t get a room. We missed the sign-up. We weren’t going. (Apparently those in the know wait for weeks anticipating the retreat and click refresh to not miss a spot.)

A well-meaning person suggested that since we already cleared our schedules, we might as well still vacation elsewhere. Um, yeah, right. We both knew that would never happen. The magic was gone. Now it’s not because the original was an all-expense paid vacay. I certainly can pay my own way. So why is it when the dates are set in stone we have one foot out the door, whereas when it’s a “just because” situation we are so reluctant to ask for time off?

Perhaps the voices inside your head sound like this:

I. I don’t really need a vacation.

Denial. And it’s not just the river I almost went swimming in. When we want to book a vacation for no apparent reason other than just to relax, we’re quick to make ourselves feel frivolous for even thinking of such a thing.

II. I have too much to do.

Me? Vacation? I really can’t. There’s so much going on at work. No way could I go now. That would be irresponsible. Unfair to my team. Can’t leave them to pull my weight.

III. It’s better to go at another time.

Vacation now? Why would I go now? We’re in the middle of X/Y/Z. We’re about to launch (fill in). Doesn’t make sense to go now. Might as well go when I’m less busy.

IV. Something will come up.

It’s not worth booking. Something is going to come up (as it inevitably always does) and I will have to cancel. Why bother getting my hopes up when I know it’s just not going to happen. This leads me to the next point —

 V. Easy cancellation policies.

No down payment. Cancel within 24 hours. Redeposit miles. It’s so easy for us to be committed and non-committed at the same time. And everyone knows, we’re always searching for an excuse to back out (and wondering who will back out first).

Yes. These are all excuses. Some realistic, some less. The point is – how do we convince ourselves that we are worthy of saying “taking a break is a good thing” and asking for time off? Not when it’s at the point that we are falling apart and obviously need one. But where we can, legitimately, on a regular Tuesday say: I need time away. Taking a breather and disconnecting will propel me forward.

Once, during a particularly large wave of maternity/paternity leaves, a colleague with grown children commented that he envied having a few months away with total disconnect and then returning with a fresh perspective.

 Adam Grant, Organizational Psychologist at Wharton has said:

“In toxic cultures, being a workaholic is normalized and sacrificing sleep is glorified. The best way to get ahead is burnout. In healthy cultures quality of life is expected and having a life is celebrated. You’re encouraged to put your well-being above your work.”

Starting an Innovation Lab

Published date: May 19, 2022 в 4:32 pm

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Category: Innovation,Organizational Innovation

We keep hearing from companies, organizations and even cities of their wish to establish an “Innovation Lab”. But this has become such a catch-all term for so many different activities, that it is often difficult to even start thinking about the task, harder still to design a reasonable plan of action and rare to the point of being exotic to see one that actually delivers on the typically high expectations of its founders. Several useless versions of innovation labs that you may encounter:

  1. A place in which engineers and developers do what they always did, now with a fancy name and increased budget;
  2. A repurposed room in which nothing particularly innovative happens, except for the excuses why not, and maybe the furniture;
  3. A multidisciplinary team of talented associates who are given a chunk of time and the freedom to brainstorm, resulting in a three-phase process: nervous enthusiasm at the outset, followed by frustrating and frustrated attempts to justify the endeavor and, finally, a desperate effort to avoid shame by eking out some semblance of a result that can plausibly be hyped and presented as a successful outcome.

BUT an Innovation Lab is not necessarily a dead end. Here are 4 key topics worth considering as you go about the task:

  1. Objectives. Make sure you are clear as to why your organization wants an IL. What, exactly, would be considered a success? New products? Startups? Or influencing the organization’s culture? Beware the “all the above” answer to this question.
  2. People. Who will run the lab? A dedicated person/team? Or those who participate in its activities? And as to the participants: will they leave their current jobs to join the lab? If so – for a certain period (8 weeks? A year?), or as their new job?
  3. Enablers. Which resources or tools will be provided to the IL team? Throwing people together, giving them free reign of their time and motivating them are important ingredients, but very far from sufficient to achieve results. Asking them to Brainstorm only makes things worse. The effect of colorful poofs is yet to be researched. Which effective tools, then, are you going to supply them with?
  4. Support. An innovation Lab is often the baby project of a President or CEO who has seen the light. Other members of the leadership team will at times lend only grudging support. The crucial question is: how much patience does the organization’s leaders have as they wait to see concrete results? If they don’t, they won’t.

Additional factors will also determine the success of an Innovation Lab: financing, selection criteria for participants, interface with business units and more. The two main take-aways I recommend from this post are: 1) It is very easy to get an IL wrong; but 2) designed and implemented correctly, an IL can greatly contribute to your organization’s innovation efforts.

Having the Vulnerability to Innovate

Published date: May 4, 2022 в 4:14 pm

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Category: Innovation,Organizational Innovation

“The secret killer of innovation is shame” – Brené Brown

Given my “slight” infatuation with Brené Brown, it’s comical for me to think that I almost didn’t watch the first video of hers that I encountered. She was speaking to teachers. I’m not a teacher and therefore was wary of how it would be relevant to me. But having heard her name floating around I pressed play, only to realize that it was a 20-minute video!! But as they say – in for a penny, in for a pound.

And that’s how I found myself hearing her say these words:

“No vulnerability, no creativity, no innovation”.

Have 20 minutes ever gone by so fast?

In case you’re unfamiliar, Brené Brown, is a Social Researcher in the area of vulnerability and shame. She defines vulnerability as “uncertainty, risk and emotional exposure”. Her research, even without strictly focusing on innovation, sheds so much light on what prevents innovation from thriving in companies.

Think of the innovation processes in your company, and how many stages a person has to go through in which they render themselves vulnerable:

  1. Taking the time to work on an unknown outcome innovation instead of the pile of work on their desk
  2. Taking a leap of faith in getting an idea off the ground
  3. Presenting an idea to management
  4. Answering nay-sayers who doubt you and/or your work
  5. Using budget and resources without a guarantee of ROI
  6. Enlisting the help of others
  7. Accountability (for the project outcomes, for managing the project properly)

The list goes on.

But in order for innovation to happen we have to go through these stages, and therefore need to stick our neck out there.

But really, no one likes to be vulnerable.

 Now why is that? Brené’s answer – shame. “Every time someone holds back on a new idea, fails to give their manager much needed feedback, and is afraid to speak up in front of a client you can be sure shame played a part”. We have a deep fear of being wrong, belittled or feeling less than other people. And this is what stops people from taking risks.

But if innovation is what we’re after, then we got to get people on track: vulnerability -creativity – innovation.

So how can we encourage people to take that first step – vulnerability?

  • The Institutional Yes (Amazon.com) – Usually when someone has a new idea, they must prove to the manager why they think the idea is a good one. The Institutional Yes shifts the responsibility to the manager, by having the default answer of the manager be YES. If the manager wants to say no, they are required to write a two-page thesis on why they think it’s a bad idea. In terms of helping with vulnerability, if the manager can’t prove his poor opinion of the idea, the accountability is now shared for this idea.
  • Kickstart Innovation Workshop (Adobe Systems) – The Kickbox is a small, red cardboard box containing $1,000 in seed money and everything an employee needs to generate and prototype an idea all the way to selling the idea to management. The idea behind the Kickbox is that instead of funding a few big ideas that do get presented, the budget is spread out to potentially find the big ideas that usually go unpresented. Anyone in the company can obtain a Kickbox. Results need to be shared, but there is no deadline when they need to be presented, and more importantly in terms of vulnerability, no judgment if their Kickbox bet doesn’t pay off.

These next three examples address vulnerability by embracing outcomes, even if they were not the desired ones:

  • Heroic Failure Award (Procter & Gamble) – This award honors the employee or team with the biggest failure that delivered the greatest insight. As Nelson Mandela would say, this award demonstrates “I never lose. I either win or learn”. After all, crossing off something that didn’t work and understanding why, gives room to then find what needs to be fixed /pivoted to work the next time.
  • Dare to Try Award (Tata Group) – This award is given to ambitious projects that didn’t materialize due to any number of factors – cultural issues, technology, inability to commercialize. Yet, it recognizes that someone allowed themselves to be vulnerable enough to try, and therefore can now teach us what doesn’t work.
  • Wall of Shame (3d signals) -The Wall of Shame, located in a central part of the company, acknowledges employees who were voted in for saying something spectacularly, well, thick. The CEO of the company, Ariel Rosenfeld, says the wall helps people not take themselves too seriously, and realize that we’re all human, and everyone makes mistakes. To date, the company’s CTO holds the record and has just had his 5th saying hung on the wall.

These examples obviously are not intended to just reward failure because they “tried”. Rather it’s to show people that when they are willing to make themselves vulnerable, we’re willing to help them take sensible risks, and that there is just as much that can be learned from success as there is from failure.

 A last piece of advice from Brené for the road – In order to develop manager’s abilities to cultivate an openness to vulnerability in their teams, they need to allow themselves to be vulnerable as well. They would lead by example and demonstrate that the picture of the leader needing to know all the answers is no longer the case. In reality, we’re all in this together.

Four Ways A Common Innovation Language Improves Your Business

Published date: March 16, 2022 в 4:17 pm

Written by:

Category: Innovation,Organizational Innovation

Over the weekend, I was talking to a good friend who has a VERY IMPORTANT job. Big startup, lots of awards – you know the kind. We caught each other up with the goings-on at our respective workplaces. When I shared I was writing about companies having a common innovation language, she responded with “A what?” and a blank look. I realized if this topic was ambiguous even to my friend with the VERY IMPORTANT job, then this was a subject that needed addressing.

The value gained from having a Common Innovation Language (CIL) is because:

  1. You have one
  2. It’s common
  3. It’s for innovation
  4. It’s a language

 Let’s dig deeper:

 HavingHaving a common innovation language means that there is a defined, thought-out framework for how people work and innovate. This provides an overarching structure, what’s in and what’s out. There are a lot of options (method, terms, etc.) when it comes to innovating. If you specifically want people to use one innovation methodology over another, having a CIL reflects that wish. ‘Having’ also reflects on the present – something that is current and updated as needed, therefore making it useful (as opposed to something drafted five years ago with no connection to present company practices).

 Common: A common language is common for two reasons: Everyone shares the same language, and it’s prevalent amongst employees. This helps people work together more efficiently and provides clarity regarding what’s being asked of them. I.e. there are different types of prototypes. Imagine you asked for one and it took 3 months to develop, when you had in mind a simple sketch. Ouch. Or if you say MVP and someone is thinking about last night’s baseball game. Well – you get the picture. So if you have an innovation language in your company, but it’s not common, you’re missing out on all it can deliver. There’s even an emotional aspect – no one likes to be left out of a conversation or think there’s a secret language! A CIL contributes to feelings of camaraderie when working on a shared goal. So if you really expect everyone to innovate, make sure they know the jargon to do so.

Innovation: Companies have common languages, but is innovation one of them? The vast terminologies associated with innovation have made it into a sub-language of its very own. Although there is crossover and borrowing from other fields, they are used differently in the context of innovation (think Agile, Lean, Sprint, etc.). A CIL lets people align around the specific methods, processes, deliverables, roles, and responsibilities that you want people to use.

 Language: People need to have a way to communicate, period. It’s all good to want innovation in your company, but folks need something more than “that thing that we do”. A CIL provides ease of working together and speeds things up. When a term is used, everyone knows what they need to get on, without having to constantly explain the why, what, and how.

Your CIL can keep expanding over time. How you choose to share it can be through ‘word of the day’, during onboarding, or even have a glossary in your knowledge management system. (I’d love to hear your ideas!) The bottom line, the importance of having a CIL is that it shows respect for both the intricate innovation initiatives in your company and the people who make it happen.

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