Continuing our week of discussion on new directions for innovation David Weiss and Claude Legrand discuss the innovation challenge in an extract from their new book. Innovative Intelligence. Why don't leaders truly lead on innovation?
Frequently it is only after the crisis has occurred—after the competition has captured market share, after the market has dried up, after organizations have slashed costs—that organizations react. Then they say they need to "innovate"—as best they can under the pressure of the crisis. Too often, they overreact and confuse systemic innovation with unbridled creativity. This kind of creativity merely produces high-risk ideas with no pragmatic means of applying them and no built-in process to sustain them.
Organizations face three major challenges as they attempt to respond to the innovation gap:
- Lack of a common understanding of what innovation is, how it happens, and what prevents it. Despite many attempts at defining innovation, a lack of consensus on a common definition still exists. Too often, leaders define innovation only in terms of technology or scientific research, yetorganizations require innovation in almost all areas.
- Lack of innovative leaders. Most leaders have never learned how to be innovative and how to lead an organization so that it becomes more innovative. They may understand that they have a key role in innovation, but they do not know how to systematically generate new and better solutions. They also do not know how to reinforce the right innovative skills for their direct reports and teams.
- Lack of enabling organizational practices and cultures to reinforce innovation.
Many organizations inadvertently discourage innovation through their organizational practices (e.g. planning, budgeting, rewards). In addition, many organizations have cultures that drive short-term results and risk avoidance. Without changing some organizational practices and building a culture of innovation, leaders will not close the innovation gap.
Today, innovation is often extolled; however, on closer investigation, far more talk than action occurs. In this context, the old adage "talk is cheap" actually becomes "talk is expensive," because organizations pay a hefty price if they do not practice what they preach. Failure to innovate can be terminal.
The shift from the industrial economy to the knowledge economy has changed the nature of work more in the last 20 years than it changed in the last century. In the industrial economy, an organization could ask a few elite leaders to be innovative and focus everyone else on simply doing the work. When a problem happened, it was escalated to the elite "thinkers," who solved the problem and communicated the "right" decision throughout the organization.
In the knowledge economy, there is a need for all employees to use their intellectual potential because the nature of work is constantly changing and presenting complex challenges at every level of organizations. In this new economy, better solutions can only come from new ways of thinking— innovative thinking—not from conventional linear analytical thinking alone.
We need innovative thinking in our schools and businesses, in our health care and justice systems, and throughout our public institutions, in everything from politics to parenting. Even in manufacturing, the traditional hub of the industrial economy, all employees need to contribute toinnovative thinking.
Unfortunately, in the context of today's collapsed time and increasing work complexity, many complain that there is little time for innovating, and too few people are able to dedicate time to thinking, let alone innovative thinking.
Almost no organization has a culture that allocates thinking time for employees as Google reputedly does—and "lack of time" is the most common obstacle cited by workers when asked why they are not more innovative. Employees who designate office time to think about problems and issues are often assumed to be wasting time—as one bank employee told us: "When I think, I feel guilty because I am not doing." Some employees cannot think at work because they spend so much time in meetings, and they believe more in an "open door policy" (whereby anyone can disturb them at anytime), than in allocating time for dedicated "closed door" thinking.
In addition, the recent proliferation of smart phones has placed an even greater premium on instant reactions and instant solutions, to the detriment of well-thought-out decisions. As a result, some employees sneak away from their offices, just to have a few moments of undisturbed innovative thinking time.
We need to value thinking at work and create a climate where innovative thinking is legitimized and valued in meetings and during dialogue, and where we confront and understand complex issues that we encounter in the work setting.
The first overriding result in almost every research report is that there is a significant gap between innovation expectations and performance. The dynamic is as follows:
- Innovation Expectations: Most executives believe innovation is "very important" or "important" for the future success of their organizations, and it is among the top priorities for their businesses.
- Innovation Results: Most executives are not satisfied with the innovation results their organizations are achieving.
Research validates these findings. The first survey we led targeted senior leaders in 500 large organizations. We found the same dramatic differences between innovation expectations and innovation results. The results of the following two questions illustrate the point:
- "Innovation is important for our future success" _ 88 percent of respondents
- "Our organization is effective at innovation" _ 33 percent
Typically, in innovative organizations all the executives believed innovation was crucial to their future success. It was not enough to have only the CEO formally promote innovation. To succeed, the organization needed to align all the top leaders.
- Most innovative organizations viewed executive teams as good examples of teamwork and as role models of innovation.
- All leaders were directly accountable and responsible for the success or lack of success of innovation in their organizations.
Thanks to David S. Weiss And Claude P. Legrand / InnovationManagement
http://www.innovationmanagement.se/2011/05/27/the-innovation-gap/?utm_source=Subscribers+InnovationManagement.se&utm_campaign=6f4e289fe5-newsletter+may+24%2C+2011&utm_medium=email
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