For most of us, the greatest obstacle in driving and achieving innovation today is finding time for it. Among the business goals, client demands, competitive threats, advancing technologies and need to achieve maximum operational efficiency, making time for innovation work is certainly not easy but it is essential. Innovation, after all, is quickly becoming the great differentiator.
Edward D. Hess wrote, “Technology advancements will make achieving scale and efficiency easier — leaving innovation as a key competitive differentiator.” He points out that technology is leveling the operational and efficiency playing fields. To stand out, businesses must make time and room for innovation and that means innovating at the breakneck speed of business today.
How can it be done when employees feel busier than ever? To create an organization capable of consistently producing high-value innovation, businesses need to build a foundation of ingenuity in three areas:
Every business and its leaders talk about the importance of innovation, but true innovative work requires more than words. The entire organization needs to be guided toward innovation and that guidance starts at the top. Business leaders, from CEOs and CTOs to COOs and CFOs make the rules. They decide if experimental work is rewarded or punished. They choose if failing in the pursuit of innovation is viewed as a gain or loss by the company.
Experimentation is a hallmark of innovative work, but experiments can fail. As one legendary innovator, Einstein, said, “Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” Businesses that want to gain market share and competitive advantage by being the pioneer that “tries something new,” cannot punish those who dare to risk. Employees who fail in their work while pursuing ingenuity and innovation should be a source of inspiration. Too often, however, businesses reward those employees who play it safe and achieve standard, low-risk successes.
To cultivate an innovation mindset across the business, leaders need to be examples of innovative thinking and supporters of innovative approaches, which can include:
Does your workplace and culture stifle or stir experimentation, creativity, and collaboration? Are employees encouraged to work differently to embrace challenges and opportunities? Where amid all the fast-paced deliverables are you giving teams time to create?
Consider how you structure work, teams, schedules and even workplaces to see where innovative thinking might be encouraged. Encouraging employees to take time to work in different spaces and configurations, for example, can be a simple way to change perspectives, input and even who people are collaborating with from day to day.
Work environments that foster movement and change increase opportunities for creative thinking. And this is true for on-site or remote teams. Businesses can help release ingenuity by releasing staff from traditional workspace norms. For example:
Businesses with a strong innovation mindset and environment will produce great ideas quickly and often. With ideas flowing in, a business needs to have a process in place for capturing the best ideas and advancing them with speed and action. Here are a few ideas for structuring a process that takes innovation ideation into potential solutions, products and methodologies that can improve business results:
With the pace of advancement always accelerating, businesses cannot slow down for innovation. They can, however, build it into everyday work, making innovative thinking and creation routine to operations and an opportunity for all.
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