5 Sure-Fire Ways To Kill Your Company’s Innovation
Steven Blue of Miller Ingenuity Talks about Way You can Kill Your Company's Innovation
by Steven L. Blue
Innovation is difficult to come by. It is a fleeting concept that eludes most companies. In fact, the odds of a new product idea reaching full commercialization are less than 4%. And that is the best case. But, there are 5 sure-fire ways you can make certain innovation never sees the light of day at your company:
Many CEO’s want innovation but only after “the real work” gets done. Here is a new flash: if you want to survive you better make innovation “the real work”. Make it a top priority for everyone in the company, not just the engineering department. How do you do that? By writing it into every job description. By rewarding and recognizing people who innovate. And yes, by asking people to leave if they don’t.
When you make everyone responsible for innovation, it can be very scary. People will be afraid they aren’t up to the job because they are “not creative”. Studies have debunked the myth that you are either born an Einstein or you’re not. The truth is everyone can be creative if they are trained in the principles of creativity. So, your job is to train every single employee. I hired the previous chief creativity officer of the QVC network to teach my entire workforce how to generate new and novel ideas. He rode shotgun with us for the better part of a year and now creativity is in our DNA.


Not so with an innovation space, as it constantly renews itself. Other critics have said building such a space only gives employees the excuse to goof off there. To that I say, you have the wrong employees. So, get the right ones.
Without risk, there can be no innovation. The world of innovation is murky and uncertain. You must give people your permission to fail. Otherwise, they won’t even try. I tell CEO’s all the time, don’t take risks-take big risks. Little risks have puny returns. Little risks don’t motivate people to do extraordinary things. I am not telling you to take “bet the company risks”. You should never do that. Always validate risk as best you can with the information and market intelligence you can gather. And keep validating your assumptions along the way.
Bottom line, get comfortable being uncomfortable. Take the big risks and encourage your employees to do the same.
What should you do if they take a risk and fail? Celebrate! Reinforce the “risk is a good thing” philosophy because that is the only way that innovation can happen.
What should you do if they take a risk and fail? Celebrate! Reinforce the “risk is a good thing” philosophy because that is the only way that innovation can happen.
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