Innovation

March 31, 2008

Courageous Leadership

Talent_7

I am currently reading John Maxwell's new book "Talent is Never Enough".  First, I am a big fan of Maxwell's work (my disclaimer).  Second, I am really enjoying this read.  I particularly like his list about courageous leadership (pg 164)...

Courageous Leadership Simply Means I've Developed:

  1. Convictions that are stronger than my fears.
  2. Vision that is clearer than my doubts.
  3. Spiritual sensitivity that is louder than popular opinion.
  4. Self-esteem that is deeper than self protection.
  5. Appreciation for discipline that is greater than my desire for leisure.
  6. Dissatisfaction that is more forceful than the status quo.
  7. Poise that is more unshakable than panic.
  8. Risk taking that is stronger than safety seeking.
  9. Right actions that are more robust than rationalization.
  10. A desire to see potential reached more than to see people appeased.

Powerful.  Courageous.

March 24, 2008

...and speaking of pursuing your passion...

Maxine Clark has a great passion behind Build-a-Bear.  This story in BusinessWeek online is a wonderful little reminder about the joy you can receive (and help others create) by pursuing your passion.

I particularly like her closing comments:

Finally, you should always allow yourself to dream—and dream big—it's only through such thinking that great things happen. Don't limit yourself because you don't think your dream is attainable. You must start by believing you can truly achieve whatever you set your mind to, no matter how big it might seem. Not dreaming big enough is one of the biggest mistakes you can make—if you can't see your dream, how do you expect others to?

I have always been a strong proponent of dreaming big...or making your goals hilarious.

February 11, 2008

Create an Atmosphere of Innovation

In our ongoing series on business innovation, Clay Richardson and I just posted a new column on BP Trends.  In previous columns we explored creating value through customer-centric innovation and creating agility through disciplined, collaborative business process management (BPM).  This month we turn our attention to the human side of innovation and present a conversation about things you can begin doing today to  create an atmosphere of innovation in your organizations.

Read more about 1) stimulating creativity, 2) setting hilarious goals, 3) making your box bigger, and 4) executing faster...

We hope you enjoy the column.  Oh, and feel free to come back here and give us your thoughts.

January 10, 2008

Make Your Goals Hilarious

Here is a wonderful nugget by Mark Fusco at Squint.  He makes a really good point that your dreams and goals should be hilarious.  Live big.  Break the constraints of rational, logic thoughts and ideas.  Stretch.  Grow.  Change.  Innovate.  Transform.

Why wait to dream big...Great things are accomplished by people with hilarious goals.

Thanks Mark!

January 07, 2008

"Change" is meaningless

The "change" word seems to be everywhere.  Barack Obama seems to be making a lot of headway touting "change" (not a political endorsement).  While the word "change" may play well in during the political season, "change" by itself is meaningless in our personal and business lives.

Here is the problem:  Change does not mean improvement. 

Associates in Process Improvement have a simple and straightforward model that I have found useful to frame improvements in my personal life and business life.  The model is based on 3 questions:

  1. What are we trying to accomplish? (Set aims)
  2. How will we know change is an improvement? (Establish measures)
  3. What change can we make that will result in improvement? (Select changes)

It seems so simple...and it is.  But, it is also very powerful.  Powerful enough that the Institute for Healthcare Improvement uses it as their base improvement model in their 5 Million Lives Campaign.

Peter Kim recently posted his resolutions for 2008.  He did a great job of identifying what he wants to accomplish (be more green, lose weight, save more money), identifying key measures to determine if he actually improves, and creating some hypotheses about what he can do to make an improvement.  He is also searching for expert knowledge (see his green resolution) on other ways to make an improvement.  There is no substitute for expert knowledge.

As you move forward into 2008, making resolutions and vows to change something about your life, I encourage you to move beyond the desire to change and take real action to improve.  Use the 3 questions to frame your improvement, then start testing your changes to see what works and does not work.

Remember, improvement requires making changes, but not all changes result in improvement....

Don't just change.  Improve.

November 14, 2007

Key Principles for Business Transformation

I am fortunate enough to attend and speak at the IIR BPM Conference this week.  There has been a tremendous amount of good information exchanged at the conference and I am very happy to see that BPM is making the transition from IT organizations to business organizations.  However, one thing that seems to be missing is the importance of leadership and guiding human change.  The more I learn about the difficulty leaders face to manage and improve their organizations, the more I appreciate the value of Deming's 14 Points as key principles to transform business:

  1. Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and service, with the aim to become competitive and to stay in business, and to provide jobs.
  2. Adopt the new philosophy. We are in a new economic age. Western management must awaken to the challenge, must learn their responsibilities, and take on leadership for change.
  3. Cease dependence on inspection to achieve quality. Eliminate the need for inspection on a mass basis by building quality into the product in the first place.
  4. End the practice of awarding business on the basis of price tag. Instead, minimize total cost. Move toward a single supplier for any one item, on a long-term relationship of loyalty and trust.
  5. Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus constantly decrease costs.
  6. Institute training on the job.
  7. Institute leadership The aim of supervision should be to help people and machines and gadgets to do a better job. Supervision of management is in need of overhaul as well as supervision of production workers.
  8. Drive out fear, so that everyone may work effectively for the company.
  9. Break down barriers between departments. People in research, design, sales, and production must work as a team, to foresee problems of production and in use that may be encountered with the product or service.
  10. Eliminate slogans, exhortations, and targets for the work force asking for zero defects and new levels of productivity. Such exhortations only create adversarial relationships, as the bulk of the causes of low quality and low productivity belong to the system and thus lie beyond the power of the work force.
  11. a) Eliminate work standards (quotas) on the factory floor. Substitute leadership. b) Eliminate management by objective. Eliminate management by numbers, numerical goals. Substitute leadership.
  12. a) Remove barriers that rob the hourly worker of his right to joy of workmanship. The responsibility of supervisors must be changed from sheer numbers to quality. b) Remove barriers that rob people in management and in engineering of their right to joy of workmanship. This means abolishment of the annual merit rating and of management by objective.
  13. Institute a vigorous program of education and self-improvement.
  14. Put everybody in the company to work to accomplish the transformation. The transformation is everybody's job.

No, the 14 Points are not prescriptive.  They don't give you the how to guide for business transformation.  There is not a formula.  But they do give great guiding principles so you can make transformation real for your own organization.

October 29, 2007

Rethink all the rules

I have been working on this post for several weeks.  Writing, rewriting, re-rewriting.  I still don't think I have my thoughts centered, or really getting my point across, but decided to move my "thoughts in process" to my blog and let nature take its course.  Fair warning before continuing:  these are my tragically uncool, but authentic thoughts...

The "bug in my shorts" is that there is way too much data and information available today to be consumed by the typical person...for that matter, even by the extraordinary person.  Everywhere you turn, there is data on the web, new information on wikipedia, a new blog, new business books.  There is good information.  There is bad information.  What is the basis for discerning the two apart?  Experience?  Knowledge?  How do I get information that is relevant to me and helps me solve problems, develop knowledge, and gain wisdom?

Is the answer technology?  I have 10GB of information in the knowledge base on my laptop.  Google Desktop helped me organized.  But it is still too much.  Technology is too linear.  Seth recently touched on a couple software breakthroughs that are closer than the horizon:  1) programs live on the web instead of your desktop and 2) desktop software that is truly web aware.  The data exists and is getting more rich everyday.  Our current bottleneck is the software.  However, as the software evolves it will stress and break the all the boundaries and rules by which we operate today.  We are moving at an exponential pace from a linear model with foundational business rules and delayed local connectedness to an nth-dimensional euclidean model with instantaneous global connectedness, where the rules are created, broken, and rewritten - not by us, but by the machines that have learned from us.  We can no longer feed at the trough of data overload.  The machines become us, constantly learning and choosing the data we are fed.  Technology has been linear.  Life is not linear.  As technology embeds more into our lives, it will need to become more like our lives.  Less linear.

Or, is the answer in simply turning the channels off?  Quietly disconnect to reconnect.  Focus.  Have you ever sat quietly, reflectively, with no disturbances for an hour?  For 30 minutes?  10 minutes?  Clarity.  Peace.  Depth. Understanding.

The Truth remains constant.  Everything else changes.

Postlog on technology:  Michael Wesch does an astounding job showing the evolution and impact of technology. A quick "hat tip" to my cousin Bryan Davidson for turning me on to this video.

October 12, 2007

Quality is Essential

McKinsey recently posted an interview (registration required) with Armand V. Feigenbaum, noted quality guru.  There are some good nuggets of knowledge in this short interview that marketing leaders should listen to as they consider implementing process improvement methods (especially Six Sigma) in marketing.

Some of his specific comments that are particularly important to marketers include:

"Improvements in quality lead to improvements throughout the organization.  Above all, quality must be understood as a management style, and an infrastructure has to exist that supports both the work quality of the individual and teamwork between departments."

"Some companies have an outdated idea of quality and how to improve it.  Managers think of quality as minimizing defects...This aspect has long been an entry-level requirement in competition, but is no longer enough from a customer perspective."

"Many companies don't understand that new market conditions require extensive changes in management methods."

Generally, here is my interpretation of these comments:

Screenshot017 There is consistency with with W. Edwards Deming's Chain Reaction that shows how improvements in quality lead ultimately lead to staying in business and providing more jobs.  Building quality has a flow through effect throughout the organization.  Quality is not necessarily a function or something that a "highly trained Six Sigma Black Belt" can do.  Quality is something that must be a part of the fabric of management, part of the company's DNA.  If you are establishing a quality program or effort in addition to your existing work (or creating special categories of leaders to review and approve projects), you are creating "shadow work structure" that is unsustainable and will ultimately collapse under it own weight.  Quality must be a part of everyone's job.  Not a special function.  If you are waiting for a Six Sigma Black Belt to come fix your processes, quit waiting.  Take ownership and start improving.  If you need a guide to get you going, check out The Improvement Guide.

System Be a Systems Thinker.  Too many people and companies try to work according to the organization chart.  This is not how work gets done.  Silos.  Barriers.  Frustration.  Politics.  Understand the white space.  Understand the processes.  Throw away the org chart and look at how work actually gets done in your company.  Look across business unit and function boundaries.  As marketers, we need to clearly understand the value chain so we can optimize how we go to market. 

Understand your company through the lens of your customers.  Quality of products is not enough.  Customers expect quality products.  What about their experiences?  How are you bringing customer knowledge back into your company?  How is it used?  How does it shape marketing?  Design customer experiences that expand their expectations.  How do you do it?  Quality.

Finally, as marketers, managers, and leaders in companies, we must always learn, grow, and improve our management methods.  Over the years, I have interacted with a variety of leaders that woke up one day and found their organizations being leap frogged in the market, backsliding, or stuck in a quagmire of operational ineffectiveness.  "We have always done it that way"..."We do it like this because we a different"..."our market is unique and we can't change it"..."we tried changing it once, but it did not work, so we went back to our old way"..."our industry is just too complicated for us to change"..."that would create too much pain in our company"...all words that lead to organization destruction and death.  Be willing to step out, test new ideas, try new concepts, reinvent some old ones.  Sitting still is sliding backwards.

October 09, 2007

Accelerating Business Innovation

Clay Richardson and I just posted a new column on BP Trends about "Accelerating Business Innovation".  If you missed our first column, "Business Innovation - Creating New Value with Ease and Grace", we are writing this column to explore both the business (Victor) and technical (Clay) sides of innovation.  Our aim is to motivate business and technology leaders to develop knowledge about business innovation and take action to guide innovation processes in their organizations.

In this month's column, we discuss how BPM has emerged as a business discipline and technology platform that allows companies to reduce innovation cycle time and "get to market" quickly.  Specifically, we explore the following five traits that enable this acceleration:

  1. Shared development between business and technical teams
  2. Flexibility to accommodate changes to requirements and customer demands
  3. Reuse of existing business services
  4. Rapid prototyping and stakeholder buy-in
  5. Streamlined testing and deployment

We hope you enjoy the column.  Oh, and feel free to come back here and give us your thoughts.

August 30, 2007

How big is your box?

Boxes_4 I've been there.  You've been there.  There are people there right now.  The always hyped, sometimes glamorous workshop designed to create breakthrough ideas to solve an important business problem.  A room full of flip-charts, Post-It notes, markers, and whiteboards.  A witty facilitator kicks off the meeting with a few logistics for the day, and then turns it over to the sponsor who uses a variety of business cliches to rouse the participants into a frenzied froth of innovative energy. 

"Today more than ever, we are at a critical juncture in the life of our company.  We need to become a leading provider of {your product or service here}.  Our competition..blah, blah, blah....The future of our existence hangs in the balance.  We need to have a paradigm shift, use best practices, and grab the low-hanging fruit...Let's gain some synergy, maximize our leverage and, at the end of the day, be innovative to push the envelope for seamless integration across the enterprise.  Going forward, think win-win.  Focus on the 80% we can impact...." (create your own cliched speech)

Then comes the dreaded phrase, "Let's all think outside the box".  Blank stares.

The problem with "thinking outside the box" is that everyone has a box and each person has a box for a reason.  Each individual's box is the cumulative effect of experiences over a lifetime.  It is individual perspective.  It is the lens through which each person views life, work and the world.  Thinking outside the box is an extremely difficult, daunting, and painful task for most people.

So, what do you do?  Instead of thinking outside the box, work to "make boxes bigger".

How do you make a box bigger?  In the long-term, it is straightforward...more and varied experiences.  From reading different types of books to work assignments in different cultures to employee swaps among strategic partners, the more varied your experiences, the bigger your box will become.  Be a student of the world, soak in the unusual, stimulate your curiosity, and search for new ideas off the beaten path.

In the near-term (e.g. for a workshop or meeting) it is more difficult, but not impossible to expand boxes.  First, you will need to redirect minds away from solving the presenting problem and towards observing the world around them.  Staring at the problem too long will blind people to creative alternatives.  Next, get people to "overlap" their boxes through collective interaction and building on ideas.  Collective action and building on ideas creates a much larger footprint for alternatives.  The best answer is rarely a new idea created from scratch.  More often, it is maturity of an idea that has been built upon by many people and made relevant in ways that are truly valued by those we serve.

How big is your box?  What are 3 things you can do today to start making your box bigger?  What can you do to help others make their box bigger?

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