33 Ways to develop an Innovative Culture in your org.
Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation
Many organisations strive for a competitive edge, an advantage over their competitors to help ensure their sustainability. Innovation is one such way, but for too long many organisations have concentrated on developing product and ignored the possibilities of innovation as a culture. Having an innovative friendly culture can harness the innovative and creative capacities of the entire workforce (and your customers and suppliers) to your advantage. But it is a difficult and for some a scary step.
Below are some of the activities that you may need to undertake on your journey to increasing the innovative capacity of your organisation
- Great sources of new ideas are new starters to the company. Use them wisely and creatively
- Always question longstanding beliefs
- Ask questions about everything. After asking questions, ask different questions. After asking different questions, ask them in a different way
- Avoid analysis paralysis
- Change – change teams, project members and responsibilities
- Communicate – open communication about anything and everything – make it easy to do
- Communicate, communicate, communicate and communicate again. Ensure that every important message is repeated more than five times
- Concentrate on the process of being effective at taking an idea from initial thought to application or market.
- Embrace and celebrate failure. Success comes from volume not just quality
- Encourage interaction between parts of the organisation that traditionally don’t communicate or usually collaborate together
- Encourage people to meet informally, one-on-one, and in small groups, not just in functional teams
- Ensure that everyone knows that reducing costs as a core strategy solves nothing. High costs are usually a sign of deeper or systematic problems
- Have fun. If you’re not having fun (or at least enjoying the process) something is off
- Imagine what you can make happen rather than dwelling on what might
- Involve your customers as partners in the innovation process, while understanding that they are usually limited to wanting incremental innovations
- Learn to see things differently
- Learn to tolerate and enjoy ambiguity in data, and methods
- Make decisions quickly at the lowest level possible
- Make innovation the responsibility of all employees with appropriate objectives for each and every functional area
- Make many new mistakes
- Making innovation process rigid and core will stop spontaneous innovation efforts
- No fixed rules or formula’s, only guiding principles
- Notice change and innovation attempts and reward them
- Provide time for your people to explore ideas and concepts through trust
- Remove all organisational barriers which are stopping people communicating BHAG – Bold, Hairy Audacious Goals to senior management/ decision makers
- Remove fear from the culture and management style
- Reward collective, as well as individual successes, maintaining individual accountabilities, keeping innovation “heroes” visible
- Seek a wide range of viewpoints. A diversity of views sparks more than conflict, it sparks innovation
- Seek ways to learn from experience and find new and effective methods of sharing learning with your people
- Use stories to support the transfer of learning
- Spark interest – add images, photos and colour to your environment
- Take a “go-slow now to go-fast later” approach, get many people involved at the beginning
- Think of “self-organising” innovation, rather than “command and control” innovation
- Think in the long term. Short term-ism has been proven not to work!
Using powerful organisational tools like the Creatrix can help to identify where the strengths of innovation lie in your organisation and provide a benchmarking took for measuring progress as you move towards being increasingly innovative – for innovation is a journey not a destination.
Byrd & Brown in their book provide a useful tool “the innovation Equation” where:
Innovation=creativity * risk-taking
In providing this equation the authors provide us – the change agents with a powerful methodology
**Article based upon an origional piece by Mitch Ditkoff and Val Vadeboncoeurby
RapidBI is an organizational effectiveness consultancy based in the UK but working internationally.
© RapidBI & Mike Morrison 2011 - this article/ page is free to copy and use on the condition that an active link back and reference is made to this site and page. Thank you for your understanding and co-operation.
Related posts that may be of interest to you:
- innovation culture fresh perspective
- Innovation – Creating an organizational wide culture of executive innovation
- Six ways to develop adults to mature learners
- Innovative Business Culture – a fresh perspective
- Becoming an Innovative leader – the eight faces of innovation
- Innovation, the first step – dare, change, take a risk
19 Responses to “33 Ways to develop an Innovative Culture in your org.”
Comment from Sharon Gaskin
Time December 16, 2009 at 12:35
RT @rapidbi: New blog article on #innovation & culture change
Comment from Fazz Rahman
Time December 16, 2009 at 13:08
RT @surveyemployees 33 Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation in your org.
Comment from innovate malaysia
Time December 16, 2009 at 13:09
RT @surveyemployees 33 Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation in your org.
Comment from JaneDedekUK
Time December 16, 2009 at 13:19
Nicely put. Develop a culture of innovation.
Comment from Humannova
Time December 16, 2009 at 14:05
Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation Innovation & culture change
Comment from Gary Gorman
Time December 16, 2009 at 15:06
RT@rapidbi 33 Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation in your org.: Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation Many or…
Comment from Duncan Brodie
Time December 16, 2009 at 15:21
RT @garygorman: RT@rapidbi 33 Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation in your org.: …
Comment from Cathy Dean
Time December 16, 2009 at 15:28
RT @SharonGaskin: RT @rapidbi: New blog article on #innovation & culture change
Comment from Mitch Ditkoff
Time December 17, 2009 at 05:09
Mike and/or Rapid BI Team:
Strange. In your blog you say “if you wish to use any text you are free to do so, however please credit us and link to our site.” And yet… your “33 Ways to Develop a Culture of Innovation in Your Organization” posting has been lifted from my “50 Ways to Foster a Culture of Innovation” with absolutely no mention of the source. I’m assuming this is an oversight. Yes?
Mitch Ditkoff
IDEA CHAMPIONS
Comment from Geoff Canavan
Time December 17, 2009 at 12:45
Great article! RT @rapidbi Top read post on our blog this week 33 Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation
Comment from Geoffrey J Canavan
Time December 17, 2009 at 12:45
Great article! RT @rapidbi Top read post on our blog this week 33 Ways to develop a Culture of Innovation http://bit.ly/7sqfF7
Comment from rapidbi
Time December 17, 2009 at 20:59
Hi Mitch
Yes the last line had dropped off from our submission tool – appologies.
FYI the post has not been lifted but extensively re-worked. A check on copyscape will confirm the fact that the piece is considerably different. However your article was certainly used as the inspiration for the piece.
Comment from Aida Opoku-Mensah
Time August 10, 2011 at 11:59
innovation hit list:
Comment from Kevin Carter
Time August 10, 2011 at 12:01
innovation hit list:
Comment from Vincent Carbone
Time August 10, 2011 at 12:23
RT @AidaOpokuMensah: RT @openinnovation3: innovation hit list: (@Creatrix <– these guys have around for years)
Comment from Milorad Jeremic
Time August 10, 2011 at 16:43
33 Ways to develop an Innovative Culture in your org.










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