“The Innovation Formula: The 14 Science-Based Keys for Creating a Culture Where Innovation Thrives” by Amantha Imber (John Wiley & Sons, $21).The “Innovation Culture Audit” that begins the book divides innovation’s perspective into four interrelated levels — individual, team, leader and organization. Here’s a look at the levels:Individual deals with challenge and talent utilization. When […]
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“The Innovation Formula: The 14 Science-Based Keys for Creating a Culture Where Innovation Thrives” by Amantha Imber (John Wiley & Sons, $21).
The “Innovation Culture Audit” that begins the book divides innovation's perspective into four interrelated levels — individual, team, leader and organization. Here's a look at the levels:
Individual deals with challenge and talent utilization. When jobs are set up so people can complete tasks without much thought, the same old, same old minimizes creativity and productivity. Routine marginalizes everyone's ability to use their talent.
Autonomy and recognition play roles, too. When people are always told how things are to be done, they believe that suggesting changes will fall on deaf ears, and stay quiet. Those who don't are viewed negatively as boat rockers and wave makers. Given an opportunity to explore and pursue ideas, employees will develop “new and improved” and solve problems created by situations that aren't part of the routine.
Team involves the appreciation of the perspectives of others. Without diverse viewpoints, it's difficult to determine the cause(s) of a problem. In such situations, the silo-dwellers often fight their win-lose turf wars. This leads to a solution that treats symptoms not causes, and often creates more problems (i.e. unintended consequences) — and builds higher silos, not longer bridges.
When people openly express their ideas/perspectives and discuss them, they see a bigger picture. They see their connection. They realize that divergent (rather than “what's in it for me” or convergent) thinking provides the path to finding the causes of problems, developing and analyzing alternatives and making decisions. Collaboration rules.
Leader creates goal clarity for individuals and the team. In its narrowest sense, goal clarity states “just do your job.” Imber sees clarity as defining challenges and expected outcomes and then allowing the individuals and teams latitude in figuring out how to achieve the goals. Developing their “how” involves creating a path to progress — a series of small goals and milestones that help people identify achievement clearly. She stresses the need for a constant flow of two-way communication about “how.” This allows for celebration of small wins and timely identification of obstacles and their workarounds. Management and employees stay engaged throughout the process.
This formal “clarity” structure lays the foundation for “unstructured time (UT),” which allows employees to explore their own ideas. On the surface, allowing UT can be a difficult choice when management and employees see overloaded inboxes and shifting priorities. Below the surface, UT provides employees with some control over what they do; they make sure they do their jobs and make time for UT. Employees inform supervision on their UT initiatives and management helps them connect dots to others with similar interests. Big fish like Intuit (10 percent UT), Google and 3M (20 percent UT) found that UT yields ongoing achievement in process improvement, customer service and individual skill development.
Organization embraces risk-taking from the top down. The firm sees failure as “failure for success.” Fear of failure always limits options. With limited options, you can't optimize results. Accepting failure without stigmatizing it pushes people to do things they didn't know they could do. When it comes to success, failure is an option.
Wieden-Kennedy advertising has a “Fail Harder” program; Pfizer and The Tata Group have “Dare to Try” programs. FailCon (thefailcon.com) presents one-day conferences for technology entrepreneurs, investors, developers and designers “to study their own and others' failures and prepare for success.”
Takeaway: Before reading the book, share the “Innovation Culture Audit” with the team and the higher-ups. The results create a 360-degree evaluation of innovation's place in the priorities of the firm, and identify the levels on which to focus your attention.
Jim Pawlak is a nationally syndicated book reviewer.