The Innovative Mindset calls the accepted definition of innovation into question, urging you to consider how innovation might function as a behavior that you perpetuate, rather than an inflexible theory or corporate-defined initiative. By asking yourself what it takes to be innovativeâand by being honest with yourself about the answerâyou can incorporate innovation into your life much in the same way that you would a behavior to help you lose weight, increase your strength, learn to play the piano, or improve your relationships. This groundbreaking text helps you identify what you need to do in order to become more innovative and less fearful, and assists in creating a regimen that transforms how you act.
Innovation has become one of the most popular buzz words of the Digital Age, and there is no better time to reevaluate the true meaning of a concept than when it is being touted by individuals and companies around the world. A fresh, practical understanding of innovation can revolutionize the way you think about work.
Master innovation by reexamining what it means and how you can implement it as a behavior
Explore the transformative power of the Mindset of Discovery in poignant, up-to-date case studies and improvisation-based tenets
Spark innovation, maximize productivity, and increase profitability as a result of implementing the Big Five behaviors
Boost performance as you foster and leverage your new approach towards innovation
The Innovative Mindset reevaluates the nature of innovation and shows how a change in perspective can lead to more dynamic, more successful endeavors.
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Chapter 1 Behavioral Innovation: Remembering the Human
When people approach our organizationâBrave New Workshop Creative Outreachâto work with them on their innovation programs, the first step is always to simply set up a call to get to know them and their situation. For more than 15 years I have started with the same question: âCan you tell me a little bit about your current innovation program?â
Although I have posed that question more than one thousand times to thousands of different people in hundreds of different industries and organizations whose programs varied in their degree of development, the answers seem to have much in common and are startlingly consistent. Let's see if I can paraphrase what I've heard:
Recently the leader of our organization decided that innovation is absolutely the most important part of our [insert principles, values, directives, mission, values statement, strategy, or beliefs]. The whole company knows that innovation is important because last quarter our leader gave a presentation and the third slide in the 161-slide presentation stated that innovation is the key to our success. She even represented how important it was by illustrating it with a [insert pillar, pyramid, photo of a light bulb with a question mark in it, or quote from Steve Jobs]. In response, we have built our innovation program.
So far we have hired a chief innovation officer from outside of our industry; he seems to have worked at several companies in the last decade and we've decided that's a good thing. His job isn't that well defined because innovative people really don't like to be shackled by things like job descriptions. We are really excited to have him.
We hired an outside consulting firm to define the word innovation for our organization, our leader explained, because our culture, company, industry, and customers are so different from those of any other company. The outside firm charged us a ton of money after claiming to spend a lot of time in âresearch modeâ in order to come up with a definition particular to us. As a joke a guy down the hall Googled our innovation definition and we were all a bit surprised that it was only two words different from 16 other organizations' definitions of innovation. Ironically, all of those companies had hired the same third-party consultant that we did.
Once we had our definition we had to get top-down buy-in, so we asked senior executives to volunteer some of their time to head up what we like to refer to as the Innovation Vetting Panel, or IVP. The members gather quarterly to discuss innovative strategies and they decide what ideas and innovations should receive moderate funding to go to the next step. Once I heard a guy in the cafeteria ask if the IVPs wear robes at their meetings and if they have some sort of secret headquarters or sanctum. I chuckled and said I wasn't really sure. But they probably do.
In an organization of our size we clearly couldn't put much pressure on a small number of execs, as their bandwidth is already quite low. So we created an enterprise-wide team of innovation advocates. We named that group of innovation leaders the I Team, so everyone would understand who they are and what they do. The I in I Team stand for innovationâand that move alone is awfully innovative.
We had our third-party consultant hire a third-party firm to develop an ideation receptacle portalâwe call it an IRPâwhich is a place where people can deposit fresh ideas. What's really cool is that people can also go there and vote on which ideas they like. The third-party firm that our third-party consultant hired came up with a supercool way to rank the ideas: We use a series of red, yellow, and green buttons to allow the user to weigh in on the idea. We really feel that our IRP is state-of-the-art. So far we only have 7 percent participation, and many people have said that it seems as if it's simply a website in a survey we sent out, but our third-party consultant's third-party firm assured us that it was much more than that.
After taking all of this in, I ask, âSo what are some of the results your innovation program has achieved?â Once again, I tend to get a consistent response:
It's funny you ask. Our chief financial officer had a quite similar question. You see, we are in a period of expense efficiency, or as we like to say, operation transformation, and the CFO is interested in identifying tangible and results-based return on investment from our innovation program. That question seemed to really irritate our chief innovation officer.
We've had some attrition in our I Team, as the members sometimes get frustrated that the ideas being generated aren't going to market fast enough. A couple of them have left the company to join small start-ups.
The most successful part of our innovation program seems to be our i'nnovation rally events. They are super well attended, and the energy level is great! We're not sure; however, if we will be able to continue having them, as the survey results showed that the attendees' motivation was tied greatly to the food served at the event.
This is the point in the conversation at which I typically drop the big question. âSo, tell me about what your company is doing to help people behave more innovatively?â On the phone, there is always an awkward silence; in person, there is a bit of eye glazing and a far-off stare. In both cases the reply is usually the same: âWhat do you mean by behavior?â
I then get very complicated and scientific in my response, which is typically, âWhat I mean by behavior is, how do the people in your organization act? How do they treat each other? What does it feel like after people come up with ideas? What happens when an innovation attempt fails? How do people treat each other on conference calls or in brainstorming sessions? Does the vibe in the room ever change when certain individuals walk in? What I mean is: How do people behave?â
When it comes to a big, beautiful, exciting, but somewhat vague term like innovation, it is easy to migrate to the conceptual, high-level thinking at which many leaders operate on a daily basis, especially when the enterprise is concerned. And that is absolutely great and necessary for setting strategy, goals, and systemic approaches to becoming a more innovative organization.
However, we often forget about everyday behavior, because in a way it is so basic that the big thinkersâthe super smart innovation architectsâcan assume that everyday behavior is a given that will automatically change once a great system is in place. The old saying âEverything looks like a nail to a hammerâ can be an appropriate way to think about the manner in which innovation programs are structuredâand often the teams who work on those programs forget a very basic ingredient of a successful innovation effort: the peopleâand all their fears, emotions, and humannessâwho need to fuel it.
Although sometimes Steve Jobs is quoted too frequently, we are fans, and can't help but share the way he put it: âInnovation has nothing to do with how many R&D dollars you have. When Apple came up with the Mac, IBM was spending at least 100 times more on R&D. It's not about money. It's about the people you have, how you're led, and how much you get it.â
Innovation is about people and their assumptions and subconscious thought patterns (a.k.a. their mindset) and their daily actions and habits that stem from that mindset (a.k.a. their behavior). Put all those together, add some procedures, rewards and penalties, social dynamics, unspoken rulesâand a pinch of stressâand you get a wonderfully messy, organic, and complex environment. An environment in which behavior, not lip service (although words are also important), drives the results. If you fail to address that daily behavior, even the greatest strategy and plan to drive innovation are doomed to fail.
If the systems we create aren't rooted in a thorough understanding of the human interaction they are supposed to support they can actually deter the experience we want to create for our customers. Ryan Armbruster, experience lead and cofounder of Harken Health, is a passionate proponent of human-centered designâinnovating with the end user, the patient, at the center of everything he does. Ryan is a pioneer and leader of human-centered service design and innovation in the healthcare industry, whose work includes significant roles at UnitedHealth Group and the Mayo Clinic. In addition, he teaches graduate and executive courses in service design and innovation at the University of Minnesota.
I wanted to bring in Ryan's perspective for a number of reasons. The first is that his innovation motivation starts in his heart. He's simply the type of person who wakes up every morning with an unquenchable yearning to find answers to questions that will help as many people as possible. He innovates for the sake of others, not for the sake of innovation.
He also is innovating in perhaps the most interesting space in American business today: a simple challenge we sometimes refer to as âjust fixing healthcare.â Even those of us who are outside the healthcare industry know that we're at a very critical place in a very cr...
Table of contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Table of Contents
Dedication
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Behavioral Innovation: Remembering the Human
Chapter 2: The Brave New Workshop: A Journey of Fear and Discovery
Chapter 3: The Mindset of Discovery: Improvisational Roots
Chapter 4: The Art of Practice
Chapter 5: The Mindset of Fear
Chapter 6: The Anatomy of the Mindset of Discovery
Chapter 7: Building Your Innovation Fitness Plan
Chapter 8: Listening
Chapter 9: Deferring Judgment
Chapter 10: Declaring
Chapter 11: Reframing
Chapter 12: Jumping In
Chapter 13: The Desire for Change
References
Index
End User License Agreement
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