Archive for the 'innovation' Category

Embedding Innovation

I’ve been thinking about the opportunity for more organisations to:

a) encourage people to think “out of the box”

b) provide the right tools and process

c) apply innovative thinking to everyday work (not just specific projects)

Although there may be times where teams are set up and dedicate themselves to specific research or projects, there is a wonderful opportunity for organisations to tap into ideas - globally - using web2.0 collaboration tools and techniques. In addition, employees could be better encouraged to see themselves as innovative workers and apply creative thinking to everyday problems.

wisdom of the crowd in lego form
Image courtesy of Alice Bartlett

Irving Wladawsky-Berger summed it up nicely in a post on Innovation Teams 2.0 this week.

“In today’s fiercely competitive, global world, how can you afford to take your best people out of their jobs for a chunk of time to work on innovation, no matter how important that might be? Many line managers will be against such a program. They need their best people doing their jobs, running operations, dealing with clients, developing products. They cannot afford to let them go for weeks at a time. They may even argue that if they let their people participate in such programs for the good of the company, it could seriously jeopardize their ability to make the quarter.

I think that we can address these valid concerns in a kind of Team Challenge 2.0. I have become convinced that most highly talented people, - especially those destined for high management and technical positions, - are essentially ambidextrous when it comes to their work. They are able to do their day jobs with flying colors, while simultaneously participating in innovation activities, as part of virtual teams working with their equally talented colleagues across the business and around the world on complex, strategic company problems.

In general, the teams only need to meet physically two or three times for a few days - when the project is first formed, when presenting the final recommendations to top management, and perhaps once in between, - but the rest of the time they are collaborating over the Web, while continuing to do their normal job.

Where will overworked employees, already straining to keep some semblance of work-life balance, find the time for these additional innovation activities? This is another valid concern, but in fact, most talented people are already involved in multiple work related activities. They somehow make the time to participate in professional organizations, go to conferences, give speeches, and make a name for themselves in their industry and discipline, while continuing to be top performers in their day jobs. It is a big part of why they are on executive and technical resources tracks. It is why they get noticed, both within their own company as well as by competitors that will undoubtedly try to hire them.

Talented people are full of innovative ideas anyway. That is what makes them so good at their jobs. The key question is whether their companies will be smart enough to provide the right environment to help harvest all this creative energy. Will the company capture and take advantage of all this innovation by providing the right technologies, tools and platforms, as well as a disciplined, well organized innovation process, along the lines of X-Teams or Team Challenge?”

I was also reading about an interview with AG Lafley of Procter & Gamble in the New York Times (hat tip to Rick Singer)

Q. And yet only half of your product innovations succeed. Why isn’t the rate higher?
A. I don’t really want it to be. Human nature is such that, if we push our people to drive the batting average up, they’ll try to hit more safely, take a shorter swing, go for the singles instead of home runs. But we try to set milestones that innovations must meet at every step along the development process. As soon as they miss one, we allocate the resources to another product moving through the funnel. That’s another difference from the old days, when P.& G. let bad ideas go too far.

Do you think innovation should be part of everything we do? Should we always be considering (risky?) new approaches, techniques for improvement and even radical changes to existing solutions?

Transforming Design

A short while back, a colleague in the US blogged (on the intranet) about an innovative product design that needed particular feedback, so I spent a few moments replying. I thought this issue deserved some more publicity and input, so I spontaneously used our internal social networking site Beehive to set up a call to action; calling upon a number of people I have “friended” on Beehive to help with more ideas.

Within 24 hours people from all over the globe, from different parts of the business contributed their bright and shiny ideas, which helped my colleague move his project forward. His team now has so many things to consider adding to the design, that he’s almost not sure where to begin!

Social networks rock. I do enjoy being part of a solution and seeing ideas come together, don’t you?

a group on the moon
bright and shiny ideas in a social network
image courtesy of Boston Bill

Saul Bass

Like many others, I have always been impressed and inspired by the visual style of the talented graphic designer Saul Bass (1920-1996.)


Vertigo title sequence


Walk on the Wild Side title sequence


Casino title sequence

His obituary in the New York times celebrated him as “the minimalist auteur who put a jagged arm in motion in 1955 and created an entire film genre…and elevated it into an art.”

Find your talent. Be creative. Try something new. Keep it simple. Give it context. And put your own stamp on it.

Thank you, Saul Bass.

Similar Posts: Hoban’s Door 

Serving Purpose

One of my mentors Luis Suarez recently chatted with me about motivation, purposeful living and innovation in the world of web2.0. He nudged me to blog and continue the conversation. Served up: Wonderwebby by special request.

A comment by Luis prompted me to share my motivation to enjoy what I do, collaborate with some great individuals around the world who inspire me, serve them and the company I work for (by my attitude and output) and sharpen my skills so that I have the potential to contribute to some amazing projects in my world. I even have a specific purpose statement scrawled down in a notebook. Not an ambitious career statement about work. A simple purpose statement about my life so I can make the moments count.

It’s different to carving out an ambitious career based on goals, success and awards. Those types of careers are meshed out on a canvas of ego. Okay, I admit I have moments of ego, for instance when my obscure Technorachy ranking goes up etc. But if that becomes my focus, I am looking in the wrong direction.

If we aim to enjoy what we do and who we work with, we might even enjoy the journey. When you have a reason, a purpose, well then you have something to keep you motivated when the going gets tough or things don’t turn out as you planned. Being happy in what you do might help at times - but it doesn’t sustain, no matter what tools you use for collaboration, how buzzy the creative community is or how many “friends” you have. Purpose goes beyond ambition and is a key to innovation. Purposeful living creates individuals who thrive in every moment and impact the world around them, whether at home or at work.

One of the biggest benefits of social media is realised when “the crowd” can go beyond navel-gazing and begin to use the tools to collaborate and explore paths of innovation. How can you begin to contribute to your world?

Thanks Luis for the nudge to post ;)

Cybersquad Worldview

(What) does your cybersquad contribute to your worldview? Wikipedia’s definition of Worldview is “a wide world perception. Additionally, it refers to the framework of ideas and beliefs through which an individual interprets the world and interacts in it.”

When we use social media we are not simply creating dynamic virtual communities of interest and learning. I believe we are also creating frameworks of interaction with the world that in turn impact our ideas and beliefs. When we add a friend on a social network, choose a new blog to follow in our feeds, select somebody to follow on Twitter, read our Facebook newsfeeds, we are choosing to influence our worldview with our cybersquads (;p) to some degree.

Social networking affords a great opportunity for knowledge sharing and community building; you can also broaden your horizons, extend your social networks and spheres of influence. It also means there are people speaking into one another’s lives, whether they realise it or not. As you often read, the people you surround yourself with will implicitly influence and challenge your thoughts and beliefs, no matter how strong your own ideas might be.

Perhaps some might say social networking using new media is too superficial to be quite so pervasive to shape our attitudes, our potential or even our belief systems. The people we interact with in our turbo-charged webby social networks have all kinds of diverse lifestyles, thoughts, unique points of view. Do we ever stop to think that we might influence others with behavioral tweets or blogs with attitude?

I’m a big believer that words can have a tremendous impact. So I’ve decided I might be a little bit picky when I choose to follow somebody. I enjoy the conversation but think I need to rein it in a little.

So beyond social media for knowledge networking, who inspires you? Which blog or podcast challenges you to think and innovate? (What) does your cybersquad contribute to your worldview? Do they draw out your passions, ideas and talents? Or is it a mass of voices in the information vortex drowning out the ability to hear your own?

Agile Minds

I read two interesting articles over the weekend both worth a peep. They got me thinking about a generation growing up in an information vortex and the need to develop a vital frame of reference for agile minds to grow.

The first article in the weekend paper by Maryanne Wolf “Learning to think in a digital age” as far as I can tell originally published 5 September in the Boston Globe.

To Socrates, only the arduous process of probing, analyzing and ultimately internalizing knowledge would enable the young to develop a lifelong approach to thinking that would lead them ultimately to wisdom, virtue and “friendship with [their] god.” To Socrates, only the examined word and the “examined life” were worth pursuing, and literacy short-circuited both.

How many children today are becoming Socrates’ nightmare, decoders of information who have neither the time nor the motivation to think beneath or beyond their googled universes?

Will they become so accustomed to immediate access to escalating on-screen information that they will fail to probe beyond the information given to the deeper layers of insight, imagination and knowledge that have led us to this stage of human thought?

Or, will the new demands of information technologies to multitask, integrate and prioritize vast amounjts of information help to develop equally, if not more valuable, skills that will increase human intellectual capacities, quality of life and collective wisdom as a species?

…there should be a developmental perspective on our transition to a digital culture.

….Children need to have both time to think and the motivation to think for themselves, to develop an expert reading brain, before the digital mode dominates their reading. The immediacy and volume of information should not be confused with true knowledge.

As technological visionary Edward Tenner cautioned, “It would be a shame if the very intellect that produced the digital revolution could be destroyed by it.” Socrates, Proust, and the images of the expert reading brain help us tothink more deliberately about the choices we possess as our next generation moves toward the next great epoch in our intellectual development.

The second published in the Times Online by Michael Parsons about the charms and dangers of exploring virtual worlds

We have created an endlessly proliferating series of virtual spaces to explore. Imagine being a teenage boy today. You can jump into online massively multiplayer games like World of Warcraft, or play online against people around the world on Xbox Live in a game like Gears of War. You can jump into in the endless whirl of social networking sites like Bebo, or MySpace, or Facebook. You can explore the labyrinthine worlds of music, film, and television online, hunting out specialist websites to pursue your particular taste in obscure cultural niches.

The reality is we don’t have a wood between our worlds. We have the World Wide Web, and it’s this web between the worlds which is our jumping off point for all the new spaces that digital culture is enabling.

Like Polly and Digory, we also risk getting lost in this endless series of virtual worlds, and I think we’re naïve if we underestimate the challenge we are setting ourselves as a culture in finding order and meaning amidst so many different opportunities. The wood between the worlds is beautiful, and quite peaceful: nothing ever happens there, and no one really belongs there. I hope we teach our children the skills they will need to keep jumping between worlds safely. Sadly, and unlike the heroine in Frank L. Baum’s Wizard of Oz books, they can’t just click their heels together to find their way back home.

I started to wonder about the hunger for knowledge and meaning in a digital age. I wondered how many adults assume to know more simply because they can access more . “The immediacy and volume of information should not be confused with true knowledge”

If we are to set a precedent for the rising generation transitioning to a digital age, we need to get some fresh perspective ourselves. As we further develop collaborative models of innovation, perhaps we need to maintain a standard that begins with self examination as Wolf highlights. We need to step back from the information vortex at times; not be so overwhelmed with the information and connections that we fail to harness the true potential of web2.0.

Funny, how the minds of children tell us so much about our own. Both authors are considering the next generation, innocent and fresh minds diving into the digital age. It’s a perspective worth considering.


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Disclaimer: the postings on this site are my own and don’t necessarily represent IBM’s positions, strategies or opinions.

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