Archives for February 2024

Leading Innovation: Instill an Innovation Mindset (week 13)

A dolphin swims along with a goldfish in a fishbowl on its nose

To deal with accelerating change, effective leaders are modifying the ways they inspire innovation and transformation. This week we look at instilling an innovation mindset.

 

Week 13: Instill an Innovation Mindset

Traditional leadership:

Traditional leadership has approached the task of innovation as something restricted to certain individuals, such as innovation experts, creative people, or senior management. Or they have focused on specific areas, such as a special task force or an R&D department.

This approach no longer works.

 

A fresh approach:

In the new era, innovation is viewed as a part of everyone’s job. The challenge is to help their ideas get heard and applied.

 

Bring it to life:

    • Adopt a broad definition of innovation.
    • Recognize and celebrate incremental innovations, not just breakthroughs.
    • Dispel the myth that innovation = technology. Instead, adopt the definition that innovation is “anything new + useful.”
    • Encourage a climate of curiosity.

Next Week: Generate a marketplace of ideas

Take your organization to the next level with our Culture and Innovation Assessments and our Innovation Leadership Coaching

Leading innovation: Think holistically (week 12)

innovation leadership culture think holisticallyTo deal with accelerating change, effective leaders are modifying the ways they inspire innovation and transformation. This week we look at innovation and creating a culture that thinks holistically.

Week 12: Think holistically

Traditional leadership:

Traditional leadership traditionally has focused on the individual business unit you lead for framing problems, building a vision, and setting and implementing strategy.

A fresh approach:

In the new era, innovation requires leaders to move thinking from the unit to the “big picture” or enterprise perspective. This means that innovation leadership must ask all members of a group to consider the whole problem rather than focusing on or trying to optimize one part.This requires framing the problem from multiple stakeholder points of view. If you don’t do this, you risk missing possible solutions that at first may seem mutually exclusive. That’s because the best innovation solution is often one that combines disparate approaches which can only be uncovered by framing a problem through a multi-faceted lens.

Bring this approach to life:

  • Think of the whole. Instill a deep sense of purpose and shared values in the work of the enterprise that cascades throughout all units. This helps develop a sense of responsibility and accountability for the success of the enterprise.
  • Think cross-functional. Help your teams become enterprise-minded by reassigning employees to a variety of posts spanning boundaries, units, and functions, with stretch assignments that will expand their worldview and know-how into an integrated organizational capability. The earlier in one’s career the better.
    • Encourage people across disciplines and areas to work together on solving problems as a way to uncover dependencies and/or to mitigate risk or increase success.
  • Customer Focus. Recognize that your customers want integrated solutions not just products, so encourage your teams to share resources and collaborate efficiently across functions, geographies, and other boundaries leading to great customer solutions that bolster the enterprise.
  • Work in Groups. Help build a strong sense of community by developing peer-learning opportunities that take on business challenges as a group and formal leadership training on topics such as influencing without authority and managing global matrices.
  • Search for Patterns. Look for patterns and connections across organizations, industries, and sectors, and encourage others to do so.
  • Consider Impacts. Encourage evaluation of how key decisions or practices will reverberate throughout the organization and who will be impacted in what ways.

Next week:  Instill an innovation mindset

Take your organization to the next level with our Culture and Innovation Assessments and our Innovation Leadership Coaching

Leading innovation: Be data-Informed – (week 11)

innovative leadership culture data informed

Using data to inform your choices is key to leading innovation.

This is our 11th installment in the Leading Innovation series. See the rest of the series here.

Traditional leadership:

Fresh Leadership For A New Age: A Series On The Art And Practice Of Leading Innovation The award-winning book Collective Genius by our founding partners Dr. Linda Hill and team reveals the strategies behind some of the world’s most innovative organizations. Their research makes it clear that a fresh approach to leadership is critical for organizations needing to sustain innovation or create transformative change. This 22-week series features tips on when and how you can bring this new leadership style to life in your organization. - image shows a lightbulb made of fresh fruit

A conventional approach to problem-solving has been to focus on who is right and to provide data to support the direction they want to take. The conventional view of innovation attaches far too much importance to the initial idea, the flash of insight, as though answers appear fully formed and perfect.

A fresh approach:

In the new era, innovation requires discovery-driven learning, a process of trial and error, which can truly occur only in an environment of respect for results and data. The focus needs to be on what is right and to look to the data for insights to fuel new thinking. Innovation is evidence-based, even if the community doesn’t like what the data is telling them.

Bring it to life:

  • Expect and ask to see evidence when people advocate for a point of view. Passion and intuition are not substitutes for hard data.
  • Seek to provide evidence when explaining your own ideas or decisions.
  • Routinely use data to plan future actions.
  • Welcome all sources of data, including negative feedback.
  • Create platforms for collecting and leveraging data.
  • Use data to take calculated risks.

Next week: Think holistically

Innovation solutions from Paradox Strategies

Our Collective Genius simulation and learning journey is designed to help leaders inspire action, nourish creativity, and build a culture of innovation. We also offer keynotes and our proprietary innovation diagnostic assessments re:Mind™ and re:Route™ as first steps in developing the mindset, culture, and capabilities of innovative organizations. Contact us via the form below if you would like to know how to bring these great tools to your organization.

Leading innovation: Question everything (week 10)

 

question everything leadership innovation culture

Leading Innovation: Question Everything (week 10)

To lead innovation by questioning everything, agree on ground rules, and foster curiosity.

This is our 10th installment in the Leading Innovation series. See the rest of the series here.

Fresh Leadership For A New Age: A Series On The Art And Practice Of Leading Innovation The award-winning book Collective Genius by our founding partners Dr. Linda Hill and team reveals the strategies behind some of the world’s most innovative organizations. Their research makes it clear that a fresh approach to leadership is critical for organizations needing to sustain innovation or create transformative change. This 22-week series features tips on when and how you can bring this new leadership style to life in your organization. - image shows a lightbulb made of fresh fruit

Traditional leadership:

A conventional approach to problem-solving has been to study solutions by tackling predetermined questions or questions with known answers.

A fresh approach: 

In the new era, innovation is critical, and new rules of engagement are needed for thinking differently. Your team needs to agree on basic ground rules for how it will go about solving problems, otherwise members will argue not only about possible solutions, but also about how to proceed. Specifically, how to identify and evaluate alternatives and then select a solution.

Giving your team permission to question everything will attract the most talented people-those who are willing to approach challenges like eager explorers venturing into unknown territory. You want your team to challenge the status quo, solicit questions broadly, and be open to new ways at looking at things.

Bring it to life: 

  • Be receptive and don’t get defensive when asked challenging questions
  • Create an ethos of “no subject is off limits” and probe your staff with “what if” and “what about” questions
  • Model and routinely encourage your people to question the status quo
  • Don’t expect people to do things the way they have always been done
  • Regularly consider potential improvements, even when things are going well.

Next week: Be Data-Informed.

Innovation solutions from Paradox Strategies

Our Collective Genius simulation and learning journey is designed to help leaders inspire action, nourish creativity, and build a culture of innovation. We also offer keynotes and our proprietary innovation diagnostic assessments re:Mind™ and re:Route™ as first steps in developing the mindset, culture, and capabilities of innovative organizations. Contact us via the form below if you would like to know how to bring these great tools to your organization.