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Simple Ways to Stimulate Innovation

So, you want to have an organization that demonstrates an eagerness to grow and evolve, with an intense appetite to satisfy any customer’s needs. You want innovation to be “part of the DNA” of the company and are not sure where to start. This is a marathon ambition, but not an unreasonable one, so buckle up for the long haul.

Cultures are the result of the culmination of our shared experiences and values within a working group. High-performing cultures are ones where these values are highly aligned and the experiences are both consistent and positive. Cultures are easy to corrupt or contaminate. Cultures can be wrecked by a disastrous singular event or series of events. Stewarding and cultivating a culture takes both time and intentionality.

Before we begin, I want to caution you that developing sustainable cultural innovation requires organizational commitment and a focus that can only be achieved if the energy of the organization aligns around it. Therefore, innovation isn’t a pursuit to be made in secret or by edict, but rather through thoughtful and deliberate planning that can naturally cascade down the organization. It cannot be forcibly applied or suggested into existence. It should be clearly articulated in your vision and your values and routinely demonstrated by your management team.

I’ve found that there are three main significant contributing factors to making lasting innovation a foundational part of your culture. Each of these factors has an associated mode, mechanism and pipeline for innovation and ideas. Each has a slightly different person at the center of the mode in question. Allow me to explain.

The first avenue of innovation, and likely the most obvious, is the Professional Contributor. This is the person or team within the organization that is expressly paid to innovate; the engineers, the prodigies, or the proverbial whiz kids employed for the express purpose of generating ideas for the organization. However, job description and work ethic alone won’t maximize their innovative output. Intentional cultivation requires more. This is a very small group of people. Consider:

The next, often overlooked avenue to develop is the general worker, which I refer to as the Everyone Contributor. Each individual holds tremendous potential for ideas and problem solving but we often relegate them to their “day job” though they have much more to offer – IF we can only tap into it. This group – the largest group, by the way – is fragile and will usually withdraw from participation if they feel unappreciated, taken for granted, or have had poor experiences in the past with suggestions. These bad experiences might even be attributed to other companies, TV, or their home life experience. Nevertheless, we in leadership have to be the ones to invite their participation and be consistently open and eager to new ideas in order to gradually win them over. Here are some tips for engaging the Everyone Contributors:

There’s one final, and critical group that you can’t afford to neglect when developing innovation capabilities in your organization; Volunteer Contributors. These individuals are simply intrinsically innovative. Their day jobs could be in the engineering camp, the general workforce, or even support areas that normally get forgotten, like HR, IT, or maintenance. You can’t afford to forget about these people. They breathe the entrepreneurial air and are naturally wired to learn, try new things, grow, and adapt. I’ve seen some great mechanisms over the years to try and engage with this valuable resource. Here are a few things to consider:

I have seen the competitive advantage that comes with leveraging a holistically innovative workforce. It fundamentally changes the trajectory of an organization, impacting both the culture and the capabilities. But it can’t be done without first harnessing the potential of all three creative resource types. How will you move closer to your vision of an innovation dynamo?

Lean in, and Lean on.