![]() Commentary by Praveen Gupta |
October 20, 2007
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Leadership for Innovation |
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Everyone is talking about innovation in the corporate world. Books, conferences, courses, and presentations abound. Corporate executives are surveyed, and results publicized. Corporations are becoming more innovative just by availability of more information, and networked environment in the flat world. The question remains how does a CEO make his or her company more innovative? What should a leader do? I have been thinking a lot. I sometimes give answers but the question remains the same…how to lead the innovation initiative? An organization can become innovative in two ways:
In case of a dedicated team of few brightest people working together in isolation appears to be a paradigm of the last century where one has to get away from the noise of the factory, or smoke off fighting fires. Today, people have flexible hours, think 24/7 due to globalization; gain new experiences through Internet; and exchange new ideas continually. The world has become a community that can not be separated or isolated. The process of creating a culture of thinking employees innovating continually appeals to me more as a leadership initiative. I can imagine in an organization of 100, 500, 1000, or even more than 100,000 employees there will be tons of innovative ideas. You are right when you think that ideas are dime a dozen. But once employees can think freely, the leadership can play the role of exploiting employee ideas into breakthrough solutions. Filtering ideas can be a process based on market requirements, feasibility criteria, and return on investment analysis. Breakthrough solutions will comprise multiple innovative ideas. New products or services will have to be developed fast through the new product development (NPD) process. Thus, the NPD process must be streamlined. Innovations with optimal designs perfected through operations and synchronized with customers’ love to have requirements tend to have high ROI. Given the product life cycle, from cradle to grave, is shrinking, we would need many breakthrough solutions every year. We simply would not be able to live with one new product every nth year. We actually need “n” innovative products every year! What should then leadership do? Liberate employees from shackles of ‘it is not your job’ ‘we do not have time’ ‘we already have so many ideas’ or ‘we don’t have resources.’ Instead invest some resources in streamlining and speeding the NPD process, and synchronize the Idea Management process with the market demand. Make new products or solutions a priority, culture of creativity the corporate DNA, and management processes efficient. Instead of explaining why not to do something new, encourage why not try it out. Give employees time and freedom to come up with crazy, stupid, or funny ideas. They will go through the feasibility and ROI filters and come up with breakthrough innovations. Do not be afraid to have too many ideas. We have learned that crazy, stupid and funny ideas take more time to think, and are more innovative to begin with. Commercializing the right idea is the leadership challenge. I am sure we would love to hear more opinions about this topic. Challenge and speak up! |
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Comments [8] | Permalink |
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| Categories: General | |
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| posted by Praveen Gupta [ http://accelper.com ] | October 27, 2007 at 9:33 am |
Hi Bowah, It sounds very practical, and a good way to incorporate innovative thinking to Six Sigma projects. However, corporations need innovation in everything, i.e., process designs, new products or services, or HR processes. What would you suggest for practicing innovation beyond Six Sigma projects. Thanks for your input. Praveen |
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| posted by Navneet Bhushan [ http://innovationcrafting.blogspot.com ] | October 30, 2007 at 10:25 pm |
Hi Praveen I think the leadership challenge is to balance the predominant Analogical thinking in the enterprises with following three different thinking dimensions - Systems Thinking, Design or Inventive Thinking and Lean Thinking. Giving these three more thinking dimesnions to employees requires a bigger Jolt in the organization. Further, it is not the employees alone, Leadership need to involve all minds working with the enterprise - collaborators, employees, suppliers, clients and even competitors to ideate for the enterprise. This requires a holistic ideation and fructification system - so one needs to have tinkering at all levels and RED teams to disrupt the existing markets within the enterprise. |
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| posted by Praveen Gupta [ http://accelper.com ] | October 30, 2007 at 11:01 pm |
Hello Navneet, Good to hear from you again. I agree that systems and inventive thinking are necessary for innovation. But I am not sure about the lean thinking for innovation unless you are equating it to convergence of ideas. I also agree that leadership must foster environment for holistic approach to innovation, including the ideation stage. Best, Praveen |
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| posted by navneet Bhushan [ http://innovationcrafting.blogspot.com ] | October 31, 2007 at 8:01 am |
I am referring to the Lean Product development thinking along with the waste reduction thinking. The typical way in which Toyota develops products is by what is called the Set Based Concurrent Engineering (SBCE). My paper in TRIZCON 2007 illustrates how TRIZ and SBCE can be combined in new product development scenarios. One can download the paper from Altshuller institute site http://www.aitriz.org/ai/index.php?page=InsideTRIZ/insidetriz&article=0607 I am now working for Hexaware Technologies (http://www.hexaware.com). In fact I head the Hexaware Innovation Labs. You can email me @ navneetb@hexaware.com |
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| posted by Praveen Gupta [ http://accelper.com ] | November 1, 2007 at 3:21 pm |
Hi Navneet, What happens in the Hexaware Innovation Labs. Could you share with us the environment, team members, and performance of the innovation lab? Praveen |
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| posted by Navneet Bhushan [ http://innovationcrafting.blogspot.com ] | January 8, 2008 at 10:57 pm |
What happens at the Hexaware Innovation Labs (we call it HILS) - you can have a look at the following links in the new issue of Hexaware Innovation Labs 1. An Interview 2. We are in the business of designing Innovative Learning Enterprises through the following mantra "Empowering Ideas Together" - have a look at the following article |
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| posted by Praveen Gupta [ http://accelper.com ] | January 20, 2008 at 9:47 am |
Hi Navneet, Thanks for links about Hexaware. I will explore. Praveen |
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