Author Archives: Mitch Ditkoff

About Mitch Ditkoff

Mitch Ditkoff is the Co-Founder and President of Idea Champions, an innovation consulting and training company, headquartered in Woodstock NY. He is also a big believer in the inspired words of Margaret Mead: “Never doubt that a handful of concerned citizens can change the world. Indeed, that’s all that ever has.” Follow him @mitchditkoff

The Romance of Creativity

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

If you are trying to bring something new into the world, know this:

The creative process is very much like a relationship.

And like most relationships, it usually begins with fascination — that curious state of mind that keeps you spellbound, charmed, and aroused.

Whenever someone gets a new idea, a kind of romance begins.

For many of us, just thinking about a new idea is an aphrodisiac. It turns us on, psyches us up, and otherwise makes it hard to eat, sleep, or obsess about cash flow.

While some people involved in a new relationship are able to sustain this excitement for months, most of us are less fortunate. It’s the rare person who knows how to savor and expand upon this feeling for years.

After the intoxication of the initial encounter wears off, a less-than-incredible reality sets in.

Where once we saw only beauty, now we see blemishes.

To make matters worse, a weird kind performance anxiety enters the picture.

“Will I be good enough to achieve my goal?” we ask. “Do I have what it takes?”

Call it doubt if you like, but any way you slice it, the honeymoon is over.

What follows is a painful period of re-evaluation.

Long-buried fears of being consumed by the “other” surface, driving us into withdrawal. Instead of enjoying the outpouring of creative energy that accompanies a new idea, we study it. We dissect about it. We doubt it. Anything but let go to it.

Before you know it, the approach/avoidance game is upon us. On Monday we’re totally absorbed in our new venture. On Friday, we’re sure it’s a waste of time.

The plot soon thickens.

Instead of maintaining our commitment to our HOT new idea, we begin having flings.

We flirt with other ideas, other possibilities, other new loves. We get into everything and anything — whatever it takes not to sustain our ongoing relationship with our original inspiration.

Is there any hope?

Yes, there is. And something a lot more powerful than hope — awareness.

Simply by being aware of the mind games you play will go a long way towards making magic happen.

To begin with, understand that all romances, no matter how inspiring, are temporary. The trivial ones end. The good ones mature, often growing into committed relationships — even marriages.

If you are serious about your current hot idea, be willing to get closer to it. Be willing to go from the romance stage to an intimate relationship.

Understand what the creative process is — an impossible-to-deny encounter with yourself — your fears, your power, your vision, and what drives you to play the game of life.

Know that you will have your falling out periods and your disagreements. Know that you will sometimes feel like a fraud. And know that the fuel for many creative breakthroughs has not only been passion, purpose, and power, but confusion, conflict, and collapse.

It’s normal. It’s human. It’s part of the process.

Above all, do whatever it takes to put the elation back into your relationship to creativity.

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World Innovation Forum 2010

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

I just returned from the World Innovation Forum in NYC.

My big insight? Thought leaders will soon be a thing of the past.

In their place? Feeling leaders — business savants who have made the journey from head to heart and aren’t afraid to let the rest of us know what they’ve learned along the way.

I’m not talking warm and fuzzy. Nor am I diminishing the thoughtfulness of WIF presenters. They were. Thoughtful, that is. Very.

But it wasn’t so much their thinking that moved me — as it was the feeling behind their thinking.

No matter what business you’re in, the engine of innovation is really about being moved. That’s what movements are made of — the heartfelt, intrinsically motivated effort to get off of dead center and accomplish something meaningful.

This is the crossroads all of us are standing at these days — the intersection between this and that. What the newspaper industry is going through. And the music industry. And the television industry — just to name a few.

My heroes, these days, are the people who don’t just stand at the crossroads, but dance — inspired individuals who find great delight in the paradoxes, get juiced by the challenges, and realize that “innovation” is not a program, initiative, or model, but a way of life.

That’s the main reason why I enjoyed the World Innovation Forum so much.

Because that was precisely the mindset of the presenters — and the people who attended — no matter what industry, pedigree, or astrological sign.

As I watched the 13 WIF presenters do their conference thang, I got some unexpected insights into the art and science of delivering a memorable presentation to a global audience of innovation-hungry patrons.

So, for all of you conference keynote wannabees out there, take note. Here’s part 1 of your tutorial.

  1. Be in tune with your purpose: If you’re going to hold an audience’s attention for more than 10 minutes, you’ve got to begin by holding firm to your purpose… your calling… what gets you out of bed in the morning. If it’s missing, all you could ever hope to deliver is a speech — which is NOT what people want to hear.

    If your purpose is clear, you’re home free and won’t need a single note card.

    Mark Twain said it best: “If you speak the truth, you don’t need to remember a thing.”
  2. Be passionate: Realize you are on the stage to let it rip. Completely. People are sitting in the audience because they want an experience, not just information. They want to feel something, not just hear something.

    So play full out. Pull the rip cord. Jump!
  3. Connect with the audience: You may know a lot of stuff. You may have a double Ph.D, but unless you know how to connect with the audience, your knowledge ain’t worth squat.

    If you were a tree falling in a conference room, no one would hear it.

    So tune in! Establish rapport! Connect! And that begins by respecting your audience and realizing you are there to serve, not preach.
  4. Tell stories: That’s how great teachers have communicated since the beginning of time. Storytelling is the most effective way to disarm the skeptic and deliver meaning in a memorable way.

    “The world is not made of atoms,” explained poet, Muriel Rukyser. “It’s made of stories.”

    No bull. Parable!
  5. Have a sense of humor: There’s a reason why HAHA and AHA are almost spelled the same. Both are about the experience of breakthrough. And both are sparked when the known is replaced by the unknown, when continuity is replaced by discontinuity.

    Hey, admit it. At the end of the day, if you can’t find the humor in business, you’re screwed. So, why wait for the end of the day. Find the humor now.
  6. Get visual: It’s become a corporate sport to make fun of power point, but power point can be a thrill if done right. A picture really is worth a thousand words.

    If you want to spark people’s imagination, use images more than words. The root of the word imagination is image.
  7. Have confidence: Do you know what the root of the word “confidence” is? It comes from the Latin “con-fide” — meaning “to have faith.” Have faith in what? Yourself.

    That’s not ego. It’s the natural expression of a human being coming from the place of being called.

    So, if you’re about to walk out on stage and are feeling the impostor syndrome coming on, stop and get in touch with what is calling you.

    Let that guy/gal speak.
  8. Trim the Fat: When Michelangelo was asked how he made the David, he said it was simple — that he merely took away “everything that wasn’t.”

    The same holds for you, oh aspiring-keynote-presenter-at-some-future high-profile-conference (or, at the very least, pep-talk-giver to your kid’s Junior High School soccer team).

    Keep it simple. Or, as Patti LaBarre, the delightful MC at the World Innovation Forum put it, “Minimize your jargon footprint.”
  9. Celebrate what works: If you want to raise healthy kids, reinforce their positive behaviors — don’t obsess on the negative. The same holds true for conference keynotes.

    If you want to raise a healthy audience, give them examples of what’s working out there in the marketplace. Feature the “bright spots,” as Chip Heath likes to say. Share victories, best practices, and lessons learned.

    Save the bitching and moaning for your therapist.
  10. Walk the Talk: Good presenters are genuinely moved. Being genuinely moved, it’s natural for them come out from behind the podium and actually move around the stage — as in, walking the talk.

Big thanks to Michael Porter, Michael Howe, Jeff Kindler, Chip Heath, Andreas Weigend, Biz Stone, Seth Godin, Brian Shawn Cohen, Wendy Kopp, Ursula Burns, Joel Makower, Jeffrey Hollender and Robert Brunner for their presentations at the World Innovation Forum.

Special thanks to Seth Godin for his bold effort to remind people that “there is no map, not even a fictional map” — and that all he could do was point the way there. Lucid. (Start walking, people!)

And last, but not least, a big thank you to Patricia Meier, Santiago Muro, George Levy, Becky Gee, Sebastian Mackinlay, Kelsey Woods, and the entire HSM team for all their hard work, good cheer, and vision to make this year’s WIF such a delight.

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100 Awesome Quotes on What It Takes To Innovate

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

  1. “I want to put a ding in the universe.” – Steve Jobs
  2. “Ideas won’t keep. Something must be done about them.” – Alfred North Whitehead
  3. “Intuition will tell the thinking mind where to look next.” – Jonas Salk
  4. “If you have always done it that way, it is probably wrong.” – Charles Kettering
  5. “If you can dream it, you can do it.” – Walt Disney
  6. “Security is mostly a superstition. Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.” – Helen Keller
  7. “You can’t solve a problem on the same level that it was created. You have to rise above it to the next level.” – Albert Einstein
  8. “Do not fear mistakes. There are none.” – Miles Davis
  9. “The creation of something new is not accomplished by the intellect, but by the play instinct arising from inner necessity. The creative mind plays with the object it loves.” – Carl Jung
  10. “There is only one thing stronger than all the armies of the world: and that is an idea whose time has come.” – Victor Hugo
  11. “If you lose the power to laugh, you lose the power to think.” – Clarence Darrow
  12. “Ideas are like rabbits. You get a couple and learn how to handle them, and pretty soon you have a dozen.” – John Steinbeck
  13. “To accomplish great things we must dream as well as act.” – Anatole France
  14. “It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas.” – Charles Peguy
  15. “There’s no good idea that cannot be improved on.” – Michael Eisner
  16. “We don’t see things as they are, we see things as we are.” – Anais Nin
  17. “We don’t know a millionth of one percent about anything.” – Thomas Edison
  18. “The best vision is insight.” – Malcolm Forbes
  19. “Genius is infinite painstaking.” – Michelangelo
  20. “Nothing will change the fact that I cannot produce the least thing without absolute solitude.” – Goethe
  21. “Neither a lofty degree of intelligence, nor imagination, nor both together, go to the making of genius. Love, Love, Love. That is the soul of genius.” – Mozart
  22. “Swipe from the best, then adapt.” – Tom Peters
  23. “Give me the young man who has brains enough to make a fool of himself.” – Robert Louis Stevenson
  24. “You can expect no influence if you are not susceptible to influence.” – Carl Jung
  25. “Whether or not you can observe a thing depends upon the theory you use. It is the theory which decides what can be observed.” – Albert Einstein
  26. “Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.” – Goethe
  27. “Sit, walk, or run, but don’t wobble.” – Zen proverb
  28. “The greater the contrast, the greater the potential. Great energy only comes from a correspondingly great tension of opposites.” – Carl Jung
  29. “We don’t know who discovered water, but we’re certain it wasn’t a fish.” – John Culkin
  30. “I will act as if what I do will make a difference.” – William James
  31. “There is no such thing as a long piece of work, except one that you dare not start.” – Charles Baudelaire
  32. “What is now proved was once only imagined.” – William Blake
  33. “Remember, a dead fish can float down a stream, but it takes a live one to swim upstream.” – W.C. Fields
  34. “99 percent of success is built on failure.” – Charles Kettering
  35. “If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.” – Abraham Maslow
  36. “Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts.” – Albert Einstein
  37. “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.” – F. Scott Fitzgerald
  38. “The ultimate creative thinking technique is to think like God. If you’re an atheist, pretend how God would do it.” – Frank Lloyd Wright
  39. “I start where the last man left off.” – Thomas Edison
  40. “Never confuse motion with action.” – Ernest Hemingway
  41. “The greatest invention in the world is the mind of a child.” – Thomas Edison
  42. “No matter how well you perform, there’s always somebody of intelligent opinion who thinks it’s lousy.” – Sir Laurence Olivier
  43. “You must do the thing you think you cannot do.” – Eleanor Roosevelt
  44. “I’ll play it first and tell you what it is later.” – Miles Davis
  45. “The way to get good ideas is to get lots of ideas and throw the bad ones away.” – Linus Pauling
  46. “Discovery is seeing what everybody else has seen, and thinking what nobody else has thought.” – Albert Szent-Gyorgi
  47. “A pile of rocks ceases to be a rock pile when somebody contemplates it with the idea of a cathedral in mind.”- Antoine Saint-Exupery
  48. “Without a deadline, baby, I wouldn’t do nothing.” – Duke Ellington
  49. “You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.” – Wayne Gretzky
  50. “In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities; in the expert’s mind there are few.” – Shunryu Suzuki
  51. “Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.” – General George Patton
  52. “The man with a new idea is a crank – until the idea succeeds.” – Mark Twain
  53. “A problem well stated is a problem half solved.” – Charles Kettering
  54. “The best thinking has been done in solitude. The worst has been done in turmoil.” – Thomas Edison
  55. “Don’t be afraid to take a big step when one is indicated. You can’t cross a chasm in two small jumps.” – David Lloyd George
  56. “The silly question is the first intimation of some totally new development.” – Alfred North Whitehead
  57. “A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labor and there is an invisible labor.” – Victor Hugo
  58. “Money never starts an idea; it is the idea that starts the money.” – William J. Cameron
  59. “Systems die; instincts remain.” – Oliver Wendell Holmes
  60. “You will never find the time for anything. If you want time, you must make it.” – Charles Burton
  61. “Whenever anything is being accomplished, it is being done, I have learned, by a monomaniac with a mission.” – Peter Drucker
  62. “One of the illusions of life is that the present hour is not the critical, decisive one.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
  63. “The lightning spark of thought generated in the solitary mind awakens its likeness in another mind.” – Thomas Carlyle
  64. “I failed my way to success.” – Thomas Edison
  65. “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” – Margaret Mead
  66. “The way to succeed is to double your failure rate.” – Thomas Watson, (Founder of IBM)
  67. “Innovation opportunities do not come with the tempest but with the rustling of the breeze.” – Peter Drucker
  68. “The enterprise that does not innovate ages and declines. And in a period of rapid change such as the present, the decline will be fast.” – Peter Drucker
  69. “You can only be as good as you dare to be bad.” – John Barrymore
  70. “No idea is so outlandish that it should not be considered.” – Winston Churchill
  71. “Conclusions arrived at through reasoning have very little or no influence in altering the course of our lives.” – Carlos Casteneda
  72. “After years of telling corporate citizens to ‘trust the system,’ many companies must relearn instead to trust their people – and encourage their people to use neglected creative capacities in order to tap the most potent economic stimulus of all: idea power.” – Rosabeth Moss Kanter
  73. “If the creator has a purpose in equipping us with a neck, he surely would have meant for us to stick it out.” – Arthur Koestler
  74. “If you do not express your own original ideas, if you do not listen to your own being, you will have betrayed yourself.” – Rollo May
  75. “Nothing is more dangerous than an idea when it is the only one you have.” – Emile Chartier
  76. “There’s always an element of chance and you must be willing to live with that element. If you insist on certainty, you will paralyze yourself.” – J.P. Getty
  77. “Almost all really new ideas have a certain aspect of foolishness when they are just produced.” – A.N. Whitehead
  78. “Our best ideas come from clerks and stockboys.” – Sam Walton
  79. “The gift of fantasy has meant more to me than my talent for absorbing positive knowledge.” – Albert Einstein
  80. “Every act of creation is, first of all, an act of destruction.” – Pablo Picasso
  81. “Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.” – Groucho Marx
  82. “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” – Albert Einstein
  83. “Genius, in truth, means little more than the faculty of perceiving in an unhabitual way.” – William James
  84. “Vision is the art of seeing things invisible.” – Jonathan Swift
  85. “The best way to predict the future is to create it.” – Alan Kay
  86. “If you go to your grave without painting your masterpiece, it will not get painted. No one else can paint it.” – Gordon MacKenzie
  87. “Taking a new step, uttering a new word, is what people fear most.” – Fyodor Dostoevsky
  88. “There is a vitality, a life force, that is translated to you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium, and will be lost.” – Martha Graham
  89. “We have approximately 60,000 thoughts in a day. Unfortunately, 95% of them are thoughts we had the day before.” – Deepak Chopra
  90. “Confusion is a word we have invented for an order that is not yet understood.” – Henry Miller
  91. “I refuse to be intimidated by reality anymore. What is reality? Nothing but a collective hunch.” – Lily Tomlin
  92. “Now that we have met with paradox we have some hope of making progress.” – Niels Bohr
  93. “Microsoft is always two years away from failure.” – Bill Gates
  94. “We’ve reached the end of incrementalism. Only those companies that are capable of creating industry revolutions will prosper in the new economy. – Gary Hamel
  95. “If I have a thousand ideas and only one turns out to be good, I am satisfied.” – Alfred Noble
  96. “I’ve been doing a lot of abstract painting lately, extremely abstract. No brush, no paint, no canvas, I just think about it.” – Steven Wright
  97. “You can’t just ask customers what they want and then try to give that to them. By the time you get it built, they’ll want something new.” – Steve Jobs
  98. “I am looking for a lot of people who have an infinite capacity to not know what can’t be done.” – Henry Ford
  99. “You can have brilliant ideas, but if you can’t get them across, your ideas won’t get you anywhere.” – Lee Iacocca
  100. “I can’t understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I’m frightened of the old ones.” – John Cage

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Listen to Your Subconscious Mind

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

If you study the lives of people who have had Eureka moments, you’ll discover that their breakthroughs almost always came after extended periods of intense, conscious effort.

They worked, they noodled, they struggled. They abandoned all hope, they recommitted — and then the breakthrough came. And often at the most unexpected of moments.

They weren’t buying lottery tickets at their local deli, hoping to win a breakthrough fortune. They were digging for treasure in their own back yard.

Rene Descartes (Mr. “I-Think-Therefore-I-Am”) got the Scientific Method revealed to him in a dream. Elias Howe arrived at the final design for the lock stitch sewing machine in a dream. Richard Wagner got the idea his uber work, Das Rhinegold, while stepping onto a bus after long months of creative despair.

In other words, the conscious mind works overtime in an attempt to solve a problem or achieve a goal. Unable to come up with the solution, the challenge gets outsourced to the subconscious mind, which then proceeds to figure things out in its own, sweet time.

Of course, all of this assumes we are listening to that still small voice of wisdom within us.

Well then, what’s a not-so-still, left-brained, bottom-line-watching business person to do if he wants to increase the odds of tapping into his inner Einstein.

Here’s a start:

This week, keep a log of your most inspired ideas, intuitions, and dreams. When something pops for you (an inspired thought, an inkling, a sudden insight) write it down — even if it doesn’t make sense. Then, at the end of the week, read your log.

Look for clues. Notice patterns. Make new connections. See what insights come to mind — and if they do, let us know.

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Rethinking the Role of a Manager

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

The root of the word “manager” comes from the same root as the words “manipulate” and “maneuver”, meaning to “adapt or change something to suit one’s purpose”.

Although these words may carry a pejorative meaning, there is nothing inherently wrong with them. Indeed, into each life a little manipulation and maneuvering must fall.

For example, if the door to your office gets stuck, a handyman might need to manipulate it to get it working again. If there is a log jam at the elevator, you might decide to maneuver around the crowd and take the stairs. No problem there.

However, there is another kind of manipulation and maneuvering that is a problem — when managers use their position to bend subordinates to their will.

While short-term gains may result, in the end the heart is taken out of people.

Your staff may become good soldiers, but they will lose something far more important in the process — their ability to think for themselves.

General George Patton said it best, “Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.”

Unfortunately, ingenuity in many corporations has gone the way of the hula-hoop. “Intellectual capital” is the name of the game these days — and it is the enlightened manager’s duty to learn how to play.

Only those companies will succeed whose people are empowered to think for themselves and respond creatively to the relentless change going on all around them.

Managers must make the shift from manipulators to manifesters.

They must learn how to coach their people into increasingly higher states of creative thinking and creative doing.

They must realize that the root of their organization’s problem is not the economy, cycle time, strategy or outsourcing, but their own inability to tap into the power of their workforce’s innate creativity.

Where does this empowerment start?

First, by recognizing what power is: “the ability to do or act”.

And second, by realizing that power is intimately connected to ideas.

Most managers, unfortunately, perceive new ideas as problems — especially if the ideas are not their own.

More often than not, managers don’t pay enough attention to the ideas of the people around them. They say they want innovation. They say they want “their people” to do something different. But they do precious little to support their subordinates in their efforts to do so. More commonly, they foist their own ideas on others and can’t figure out why things aren’t happening faster.

That’s not how change happens.

If people are only acting out someone else’s ideas, it’s only a matter of time before they feel discounted, dis-empowered and just plain dissed.

People are more than hired hands; they are hired minds and hearts, as well.

Let’s start with the basics.

Everything you see around you began as an idea. The computer. The stapler. The paperclip, the microchip and the chocolate chip. All of these began as an idea within someone’s fevered imagination.

The originators of these ideas were on fire.

Did they have to be “managed?” No way. In fact, if they had a manager, he or she would have done well to get out of the way.

If you want to empower people, honor their ideas. Give them room to challenge the status quo. Give them room to move — and, by extension, move mountains.

Why? Because people identify most with their ideas.

“I think therefore, I am” is their motto. People feel good when they’re encouraged to originate and develop ideas. It gives their work meaning, makes it their own, and intrinsically motivates.

Who has the power in an organization? The people who are allowed to think for themselves and then act on their ideas! Who doesn’t have power? The people who have to continually check-in with others.

Think about it. The arrival of a new idea is typically accompanied by excitement and a wonderful uplifting feeling — even intoxication.

It’s inspiring to have a new idea, to intuit a new way of getting the job done. Not only does this new idea have the potential to bring value to the company, it temporarily frees the idea originator from their normal habits of thinking. A sixth sense takes over, releasing the individual from the gravity of status quo thinking.

In this mindset, the idea originator is transported to a more expansive realm of possibility. All bets are off. The sky’s the limit. All assumptions are seen for what they are — limited beliefs with a history, but no future.

If you are a manager, you want people in this state of mind. It is not a problem. It is not the shirking of responsibility. It is not a waste of time.

On the contrary, it’s the first indicator that you are establishing a company culture that is conducive to innovation.

This is not to say, of course, that you have to fund every idea that comes your way.

On some level, ideas are a dime a dozen — and only a handful of them are ever going to amount to much. But if you treat all ideas as if they are worthless, you will never find the priceless ones.

Creativity, you see, is often a numbers game. Einstein had plenty of bogus theories. Mozart wrote some crap. But they continued being prolific. And it was precisely this self-generating spirit of creation, which enabled them to access the good stuff.

You, as a manager, want to increase the number of new ideas being pitched to you. You want to create an environment where new ideas are popping all the time. If you do, old problems and ineffective ways of doing things will begin dissolving.

This is the hallmark of an innovative organization — a place where everyone is encouraged and empowered to think creatively. Within this kind of environment managers become coaches, not gatekeepers.

“Coaching”, of course, has been widely written about and there are many fine books on the subject. What hasn’t been written about very much is how to become an “innovation coach” — how to create the kind of environment that elicits the hidden genius of the people around you.

It’s one thing to tell people “you want their ideas”, it’s quite another to create the kind of environment that makes this rhetoric real.

Creativity cannot be legislated. It cannot be sustained by pep talks. What needs to happen is that YOU, as a manager, need to change the way you relate to people. Each encounter you have with another person in the workplace needs to quicken the likelihood that their unexpressed ideas will get a fair hearing — enabling a far greater percentage of them to eventually take root.

How does a manager do this?

First, by expressing a lot of positive regard. Get interested! Pay attention! Be present to the moment!

This is not so much a technique as it is a state of mind. If your head is always filled with your own thoughts and ideas, there won’t be any room left to entertain those of others. It’s a law of physics. Two things cannot occupy the same place at the same time.

Here’s an example: Let’s say someone comes up to you in the middle of the day and says something like, “I have this great idea for a new product that will generate over $200 million for our company.”

The first thing you need to do is realize the opportunity you have. An idea is about to be shared, one that may herald a breakthrough or, at the very least, solve a problem, capitalize on an opportunity, or make your life easier.

Your willingness to sit up and take notice needs to be just as strong as if a customer were to call and complain. If possible, drop what you’re doing, focus all of your attention on the idea generator, take a deep breath, and begin a series of questions that demonstrate your interest. If you cannot drop what you are doing, schedule some time — as soon as possible — for the idea originator to pitch you.

And whether the pitch is now or later, your response — in the form of exploratory questions — needs to be as genuine as possible. Consider some of the following openers:

  • “That sounds interesting. Can you tell me more?”
  • “What excites you the most about this idea?”
  • “What is the essence of your idea – the core principle?”
  • “How do you imagine your idea will benefit others?”
  • “In what ways does your idea fit with our strategic vision?”
  • “What information do you still need?”
  • “Who are your likely collaborators?”
  • “Is there anything similar to your idea on the market?
  • “What support do you need from me?”
  • “What is your next step?”

Basically, you want the idea originator to talk about their idea as much as possible in this moment of truth. An idea needs to first take form in order to take root, and one of the best ways of doing this is to encourage the idea originator to talk about it — even if their idea is not yet fully developed.

The telling of the idea, in fact, is not unlike someone telling you their dream. The telling helps the dreamer flesh out the details of what they imagined and the subsequent hearing of it firmly installs it in their memory — and yours — so the idea does not fade quite as quickly.

Most of us, however, are so wrapped up in our own ideas that we rarely take the time to listen to others. Your subordinates know this and, consequently, rarely share their ideas with you.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. And it won’t necessarily require a lot of time on your part. Some time, yes. But not as much as you might think.

Bottom line, the time it takes you to listen to the ideas of others is not only worth it — the success of your enterprise depends on it.

Choose not to listen and you will end up frantically spending a lot more time down the road asking people for their ideas about how to save your business from imminent collapse.

By that time, however, it will be too late. Your workforce will have already tuned you out.

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Go Beyond Your Addiction to Incrementalism!

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

In today’s nano-second, downsized, caffeine-buzzed business world, corporations are increasingly demanding that “their people” redouble their efforts to find new and better ways of getting the job done.

If this were the 1950’s, an efficiency expert might be called in, a bespectacled, uncharismatic gentleman with a fascination for predictability, order, and control. His motto? “A place for everything and everything in its place.”

It wasn’t a great leap of faith for upwardly mobile managers to buy into this trendy “consulting service” since it seemed like such a safe way to yield increased productivity and reduced costs.

And yes, sometimes it did…

Eventually, this tidy little service matured into a full blown “organizational intervention” and was renamed and repriced.

The name? “Re-engineering.” The price? A lot.

The theory upon which this was based was difficult to find fault with — that most company’s processes were sadly misconfigured and, like the average American city, had grown to incredibly convoluted proportions without much thought for elegance, orderliness, or efficiency.

Systems, as the story went, were often disconnected from organizational needs, bringing with it an extraordinary amount of confusion, frustration, and a few too many martinis.

But let’s dig a bit deeper.

It’s interesting to note that the root of the word “re-engineer” is “engine” (as in the machine that drives movement forward) and the root of the word engine is “gine” — from the Latin “ingenum”, meaning “genie,” the spirit that drives the engine (from the same root as the word “genius”).

What re-engineering enthusiasts have forgotten is the fact that it is the “genie/genius” that drives the engine — the very same genie being routinely excised from our organizations for the sake of efficiency.

The result? Organizational “solutions” have become overly systems- driven and do not give proper due to the collective intelligence, imagination, and creativity of the workforce.

If you are a Lean Management aficionado or a Six Sigma fan, relax. I am not making fun of you. You are smart. You are committed. And you do good work. Yes, I understand that root cause analyses, histograms, fishbone diagrams and the like do have an important role to play in an organization’s effort to operate optimally. Indeed, when predictability, control and measures are the key drivers, continuous improvement tools can be extremely useful.

However, (dramatic pause here, folks… drum roll…and a paradigm shift to go), predictability, control, and measures are not the only forces that guide a company’s success.

Invention, innovation, ingenuity, and creativity are not merely “processes” that can be replicated by getting everyone to follow the dots drawn by some reductionist-driven consultant. For that, something else is needed — something beyond business as usual — something that embraces discontinuity, ambiguity, serendipity, spontaneity, surprise, paradox, mystery, and chaos.

(Sounds like an upstart law firm from the future, eh?)

The invention of penicillin? A surprise to the inventor. A complete accident in the lab. The invention of Teflon? An experiment gone awry. Vulcanized rubber? A big overnight boo boo. The discovery of Velcro? Certainly not a function of a fishbone diagram.

Time and again the literature speaks of breakthrough moments and breakthrough ideas being preceded by a breakdown of the existing order. “You can’t get there from here”, could be their motto. Logic is replaced by a-logic, analysis by intuition, fixed laws by mutable laws. Is light a wave or a particle? Both and neither, depending, of course, on who the experimenter is.

And what about the Theory of Dissipative Structures which posits that everything in this universe eventually falls apart only to reorganize itself at a higher level? (“The act of creation begins, first of all, as an act of destruction” noted Picasso).

Business leaders beating the drums of double digit growth need to wean themselves from their addiction to incremental improvement and allow more discontinuity in their lives. Lots more. In fact, I’d venture to say several standard deviations more.

At the very least, our fearless leaders (and the people they lead) would be well-served to contemplate this pearl by Albert Einstein: “Not everything that counts can be counted; and not everything that can be counted, counts.”

Indeed, honoring the laws of discontinuity is one of the most responsible things forward thinking business leaders can do. Otherwise they are merely moving the chairs around on the deck of the Titanic. (The boat is sinking, but they know exactly at what rate the chairs are sliding into the ocean.)

How then, does a company introduce “discontinuous improvement” into its culture? How does a company stir the soup, challenge the status quo, think more creatively, go beyond business as usual, explore blue sky, get disruptive, and otherwise foster a dynamic culture of innovation without the whole “thing” devolving into some kind of corporate Lord of the Flies?

Stay tuned, folks. We’ll be tackling these and other vital questions in the weeks and months to come.

Until then… some food for thought to tide you over.

“Don’t be afraid to take a big step when one is indicated. You can’t cross a chasm in two small jumps.” — David Lloyd George

“After years of telling corporate citizens to ‘trust the system,’ many companies must relearn instead to trust their people — and encourage them to use neglected creative capacities in order to tap the most potent economic stimulus of all: idea power.” — Rosabeth Moss Kanter

“Systems die; instincts remain.” — Oliver Wendell Holmes

“You can only be as good as you dare to be bad.” — John Barrymore

“There’s always an element of chance and you must be willing to live with that element. If you insist on certainty, you will paralyze yourself.” — J. P. Getty

“If you do not express your own original ideas, if you do not listen to your own being, you will have betrayed yourself.” — Rollo May

“The gift of fantasy has meant more to me than my talent for absorbing positive knowledge.” — Albert Einstein

“The best way to predict the future is to create it.” — Alan Kay

“You can’t just ask customers what they want and then try to give that to them. By the time you get it built, they’ll want something new.” — Steve Jobs

“We’ve reached the end of incrementalism. Only those companies that are capable of creating industry revolutions will prosper in the new economy.” — Gary Hamel

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Definitions of Innovation

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

I just Googled “definitions of innovation” and came up with 5,240,000 choices. Good luck reading them. For now, here are ten I’ve gathered over the years that I like. How about you? And if you have a better one, let me know.

“Change that creates a new dimension of performance.”Peter Drucker

“The ability to deliver new value to a customer.”Jose Campos

“Adapting, altering, or adjusting that which already exists for the sake of adding value.”Anonymous

“The managed effort of an organization to develop new products, new services, or new uses for existing products or services.”Ricky W. Griffin

“The commercialization of creativity.”Anonymous

“The creation, development and implementation of a new product, process or service, with the aim of improving efficiency, effectiveness or competitive advantage.”Government of New Zealand

“Creating something before people know they need it.”Guy Kawasaki

“The successful exploitation of new ideas.”UK Department of Innovation and Skills

“The successful implementation of creative ideas within an organization.”Teresa Amabile

“The act of introducing something new.”The American Heritage Dictionary

Illustration from the back cover of my book

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101 CreativiTeas for the Knew Age

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

Face it. No matter how much we tell people there’s no such thing as a “magic pill,” we all want it.

Well, I don’t have the magic pill, but I DO have something even better — a virtual potion that has the potential to free you up from mucho obstacles and activate your inner manifester.

All you need to do is read the list below, pick the creativitea you need the most, and drink deep. Then noodle on WHAT you can do to activate this quality in your life.

Bottoms up!

  1. Opening Up to PossibiliTea
  2. Easy Going FlexibiliTea
  3. Gandhi-like HumiliTea
  4. Well-timed AdaptabiliTea
  5. Taking Care of Details Amidst InfiniTea
  6. Loosey Goosey ManeuverabiliTea
  7. Acceptance of MortaliTea
  8. Total QualiTea
  9. Beyond MoraliTea
  10. An Occasional Dose of RealiTea
  11. Following Your Passion With ImpuniTea
  12. Balancing PolariTea
  13. InterdimensionaliTea
  14. Flashes of NonsensicaliTea
  15. Unfettered CreativiTea
  16. Appreciation of DiversiTea
  17. Tuning in to SynchroniciTea
  18. OriginaliTea
  19. UnconventionaliTea
  20. Old Fashioned PracticaliTea
  21. CuriosiTea
  22. Celebration of IndividualiTea
  23. A Deeper Sense of InevitabiliTea
  24. Letting Go of FutiliTea
  25. A Transformed MentaliTea
  26. Go With the Flow FluidiTea
  27. Baby Oh Baby SensualiTea
  28. WhimsicaliTea
  29. Child-like SimpliciTea
  30. Tiger-like FerociTea
  31. Nose to the Grindstone DurabiliTea
  32. Let it Rip TheatricaliTea
  33. Grrr!! TenaciTea
  34. Authentic AuthenticiTea
  35. Mucho GenerosiTea
  36. Acceptance of AsymmetricaliTea
  37. Quick Moving MobiliTea
  38. Enlightened SpiritualiTea
  39. Day By Day ClariTea
  40. Sylvester Stallone MusculariTea
  41. In the Moment SpontaneiTea
  42. Twelve Step SobrieTea
  43. Beethovian VirtuosiTea
  44. Wild Maniacal HilariTea
  45. Increased CapaciTea
  46. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTea
  47. Lucid PerspicaciTea
  48. Ha Ha Ha LeviTea
  49. Focused SingulariTea
  50. A Daily Shot of InsaniTea
  51. Expressing Your PersonaliTea
  52. Frontal NudiTea
  53. International CommuniTea
  54. Much More VarieTea
  55. Information Highway ActiviTea
  56. Higher ProductiviTea
  57. Que Sera SororiTea
  58. Off the Wall BanaliTea
  59. Alimentary CanaliTea
  60. Relaxed InformaliTea
  61. Sprint? Verizon? AT&Tea?
  62. Understanding Primal CausaliTea
  63. SpecificiTea
  64. Huge Amounts of PubliciTea
  65. Give Up Feeling ShitTea
  66. IntentionaliTea
  67. Beyond Beyond MetaphysicaliTea
  68. A Bowl of Soup and a BLTea
  69. Hip Hop, Reggae MusicaliTea
  70. Calling on Your Own DiviniTea
  71. A Touch of SubtleTea
  72. Profound ProfundiTea
  73. Bottom Line ProfitabiliTea
  74. Surprise and SerendipiTea
  75. Do It Now InstantaneiTea
  76. Proven CertifiabiliTea
  77. Solid MarketabiliTea
  78. Truth, Love and BeauTea
  79. ExponentialiTea
  80. Let Go and Be EmpTea
  81. We Are the World SolidariTea
  82. A Twist, A Change, Some NovelTea
  83. Getting Down to the Nitty GritTea
  84. San Andreas FaulTea
  85. Midwestern SinceriTea
  86. Transcending Financial ScarciTea
  87. Death of CertainTea
  88. Buddha and KrishnamurTea
  89. You Don’t Have to Feel So GuilTea
  90. Total ResponsibiliTea
  91. Challenge AuthoriTea
  92. Anyone here From Joisey CiTea?
  93. More and More CredibiliTea
  94. Get it Done MasculiniTea
  95. Be More Receptive to FemininiTea
  96. A Three Month Vacation in TahiTea
  97. Get Rich and Become a CelebriTea
  98. Much Deserved SereniTea
  99. Hot Diggity DoggiTea
  100. Tons of PositiviTea
  1. If All There Is Is Now, What Is EterniTea?

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56 Reasons Why Innovation Initiatives Fail

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

Innovation is in these days. The word is on the lips of just about every CEO, CFO, CIO, and anyone else with a three-letter acronym after their name. As a result, many companies are launching all kinds of “innovation initiatives” – hoping to stir the soup. This is understandable. But it is also, far too often, very disappointing…

Innovation initiatives sound good, but usually don’t live up to the expectations. The reasons are many.

What follows are fifty-six of the most common ones – organizational obstacles we’ve observed in the past twenty-two years that get in the way of a company really raising the bar for innovation.

See which ones are familiar to YOU. Then, sit down with your Senior Team… CEO… innovation committee, or best friend and jump start the process of going beyond these obstacles. Let the games begin:

  1. “Innovation” framed as an initiative, not the normal way of doing business
  2. Absence of a clear definition of what “innovation” really means
  3. Innovation not linked to company’s existing vision or strategy
  4. No sense of urgency
  5. Workforce is suffering from “initiative fatigue”
  6. CEO does not fully embrace the effort
  7. No compelling vision or reason to innovate
  8. Senior Team not aligned
  9. Key players don’t have the time to focus on innovation
  10. Innovation champions are not empowered
  11. Decision making processes are non-existent or fuzzy
  12. Lack of trust
  13. Risk averse culture
  14. Overemphasis on cost cutting or incremental improvement
  15. Workforce ruled by past assumptions and old mental models
  16. No process in place for funding new projects
  17. Not enough pilot programs in motion
  18. Senior Team not walking the talk
  19. No company-wide process for managing ideas
  20. Too many turf wars. Too many silos.
  21. Analysis paralysis
  22. Reluctance to cannibalize existing products and services
  23. NIH (not invented here) syndrome
  24. Funky channels of communication
  25. No intrinsic motivation to innovate
  26. Unclear gates for evaluating progress
  27. Mind numbing bureaucracy
  28. Unclear idea pitching processes
  29. Lack of clearly defined innovation metrics
  30. No accountability for results
  31. No way to celebrate quick wins
  32. Poorly facilitated meetings
  33. No training to unleash individual or team creativity
  34. Voodoo evaluation of ideas
  35. Inadequate sharing of best practices
  36. Lack of teamwork and collaboration
  37. Unclear strategy for sustaining the effort
  38. Innovation Teams meet too infrequently
  39. Middle managers not on board
  40. Ineffective rollout of the effort to the workforce
  41. Lack of tools and techniques to help people generate new ideas
  42. Innovation initiative perceived as another “flavor of the month”
  43. Individuals don’t understand how to be a part of the effort
  44. Diverse inputs or conflicting opinions not honored
  45. Imbalance of left-brain and right brain thinking
  46. Low morale
  47. Over-reliance on technology
  48. Failure to secure sustained funding
  49. Unrealistic timeframes
  50. Failure to consider issues associated with scaling up
  51. Inability to attract talent to risky new ventures
  52. Failure to consider commercialization issues
  53. No rewards or recognition program in place
  54. No processes in place to get fast feedback
  55. No real sense of what your customers really want or need
  56. Company hiring process screens out potential innovators

Others we may have missed?

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Brainstorming Breakthroughs Require the Right Question!

GUEST POST from Mitch Ditkoff

There’s a simple reason why so many brainstorm sessions are a waste of time. The problem statement being pitched to participants is the wrong one.

This is not surprising – especially when you consider how little time most facilitators put into preparing for a session.

Here’s what happens: The person who calls the session is usually scrambling – overwhelmed, over-caffeinated, and running from one meeting to the next. Out of breath, they pitch the topic to the group, but the topic is either vague or secondary to a more essential challenge that remains unspoken.

G.K. Chesterton, one of the most influential English writers of the 20th century, distilled the phenomenon down to 13 words. “It’s not that they can’t see the solution,” he said. “They can’t see the problem.”

Then, of course, there’s also the phenomenon of perception bias.

Pitch a challenge to an IT person, and it will be seen as a technology problem. Pitch it to a CFO, and it will be seen as a financial problem. Pitch it to a marketing person and it will be seen as a branding problem.

Or as a wise man once said, “When a pickpocket meets a saint all he sees are pockets.”

If you plan on running an ideation session any time soon, don’t just stumble into the room and pitch a vague topic to the group. Do your homework. Make the effort to identify the REAL issue before asking for ideas. If it’s the WRONG QUESTION you present, no amount of idea generation is going to make a difference.

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