Category Archives: collaboration

Fostering Collaboration and Creativity in Leadership

Fostering Collaboration and Creativity in Leadership

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

In the ever-evolving world of business, collaboration and creativity stand as twin pillars supporting innovative solutions and driving organizational growth. As industries face unprecedented challenges and opportunities, leaders must cultivate an environment that encourages collaboration and inspires creativity. Human-centered change and innovation can unlock these potentials and foster a culture that thrives on collective intelligence and innovative problem solving.

The Importance of Collaborative Leadership

Leadership is no longer about simply directing teams or making decisions in isolation. Collaborative leadership emphasizes the importance of engaging diverse perspectives, encouraging cross-functional teamwork, and leveraging the collective strengths of individuals to achieve common goals. This approach not only improves operational efficiency but also fosters resilience and adaptability amid change.

Creativity as a Catalyst for Innovation

Creativity fuels innovation by challenging conventional thinking and encouraging new ideas. A leader’s ability to inspire creativity within their teams can lead to transformative breakthroughs. By embracing diversity, promoting a culture of experimentation, and encouraging open communication, leaders can create an environment where creativity flourishes.

Case Study 1: Google’s “20% Time”

Overview

Google is renowned for its innovative products and services, and a significant part of this success can be attributed to its “20% time” policy. This initiative allows employees to dedicate 20% of their time to projects they are passionate about, outside of their regular job responsibilities.

Approach

This model encourages collaboration and creativity by giving employees the freedom to explore ideas without the constraints of standard workflows. It promotes cross-departmental interaction and provides a platform for unconventional thinking and bold innovation.

Impact

The “20% time” policy has led to the development of groundbreaking projects like Gmail and Google News. By encouraging personnel to pursue their interests and collaborate with others across the company, Google has fostered a sense of ownership and creativity that translates into innovative products.

Case Study 2: Pixar’s “Braintrust” Meetings

Overview

Pixar Animation Studios celebrates creativity and originality in filmmaking. A key component of this success is its “Braintrust” meetings, where directors and writers present ideas to a panel of peers for open and candid feedback.

Approach

The Braintrust is characterized by a candid exchange of ideas and feedback without hierarchy. This non-judgmental space encourages honesty and respects diverse viewpoints, fostering a culture where creativity and collaboration can thrive.

Impact

Pixar’s commitment to this model has resulted in numerous award-winning films. The collective input from diverse voices leads to refined storytelling and innovative cinematography, ensuring successful and critically acclaimed productions.

Strategies for Leaders to Cultivate Collaboration and Creativity

1. Promote Psychological Safety

Create an environment where team members feel secure to voice their ideas and concerns without fear of judgment. Encourage experimentation and accept failure as a learning process.

2. Encourage Cross-Functional Teams

Build diverse teams that draw on a range of skills and perspectives. Cross-functional collaboration enhances problem-solving capabilities and spurs creative innovation.

3. Lead by Example

Embody the values of collaboration and creativity in leadership. Show openness, encourage dialogue, and be flexible in approach. Inspire your team by actively participating and valuing their contributions.

Conclusion

Fostering collaboration and creativity in leadership is essential for organizations aiming to stay competitive and innovative. By supporting a culture of openness, experimentation, and diversity, leaders can unlock the full potential of their teams, driving breakthrough innovations and sustainable growth. The success stories of companies like Google and Pixar are testaments to the power of collaborative and creative leadership. As industries evolve, embracing these strategies will be crucial for navigating the future of work.

Extra Extra: Futurology is not fortune telling. Futurists use a scientific approach to create their deliverables, but a methodology and tools like those in FutureHacking™ can empower anyone to engage in futurology themselves.

Image credit: 1 of 850+ FREE quote slides available at misterinnovation.com

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Managing Knowledge Spaghetti

How collaboration platforms can help turbocharge your innovation efforts

Managing Knowledge Spaghetti

GUEST POST from John Bessant

Say the word ‘innovation’ and many people quickly conjure in their mind the wonderful ‘lightbulb moment’. But of course, innovation isn’t like this — that flash of inspiration is only the start of what will be a long journey trying to create value from that initial idea. It’s all about navigating our way through a landscape of uncertainty, learning to deal with a variety of roadblocks, potholes and other unexpected barriers.

And if we want to be able to repeat the trick, to give our ideas a fighting chance then the evidence is clear; we need some kind of a process. Over a hundred years of research has fed our understanding to the point where the kind of system we need to make innovation happen can be specified as an international standard. And in terms of pictures what we’re really looking for is less a lightbulb moment than a reproduceable process, something like this.

Clear Innovation Strategy Bessant

Which is fine, as long as we bear in mind one important truth. Innovation doesn’t happen like that.

Back in 1931 the mathematician Alfred Korzybski presented a paper to a meeting in New Orleans on mathematical semantics. It was pretty complex stuff but one phrase which he used has stuck in the wider popular memory. He pointed out that ‘the map is not the territory…’ In other words, a description of something is not the thing itself. The model is not reality. Which has some pretty important implications for the way we work with innovation.

Process models, however detailed, are simplifications, ways of representing how innovation might take place. But — like any map, be it a crumpled sketch someone has drawn or a sophisticated Google Maps picture — it is a guide, it isn’t the place itself. The map is, by its nature, a reduction of the process and in reducing it we lose some important information.

The reality, of course, is that innovation is more complex. And it’s all about knowledge spaghetti.

Just like a plate of pasta innovation involves many different strands. Only this time we are talking about knowledge — technical knowledge, market knowledge, legal knowledge, financial knowledge and so on. They need to be woven together to create value.

And these knowledge strands are held by different people, inside and outside the organization. We have to find them and connect them, link them together to enable us to innovate. Whilst we can superimpose structures on it to help us with this task, we shouldn’t forget that we’re really working with knowledge spaghetti.

Spaghetti solutions

So how do we work with it? Just like recipes for spaghetti there are many variations. One approach is to employ specialists and create cross-functional teams which bring together the relevant strands and align them towards a focused target. That’s proved to be a good model for developing new products and services, especially if we can find ways to bring in all the relevant players including users.

We can use a similar cross-functional approach to the design and implementation of major internal process innovations — things like introducing a new IT system or reorganizing to become more customer-focused. And a third approach involves carefully constructed strategic collaborations, bringing knowledge partners together with complementary strands of knowledge spaghetti.

One very powerful model is based on the idea that everyone in the organization has something to contribute to the innovation story — high involvement innovation. Here we’re working on the belief that even small strands of knowledge can be important and if we could bring them in to the story, we’d make significant progress.

Which history tells us we can. In countless embodiments the principle of high involvement has been shown to pay dividends. Ask people for what they know that might help solve problems around quality, cost, delivery, etc — and there’s no shortage of good ideas in response. The challenge has, historically, been one of working with such high volumes of knowledge and keeping the flywheel going by responding to employee suggestions and giving feedback on progress towards their implementation.

Suggestion boxes and schemes work but until recently had their limitations. Two recent trends have changed all that. The first, borne on the waves of total quality thinking and then the whole ‘lean’ movement, has shown us that in any context people are very effective innovators, well able to improve on what they are doing on a continuing basis.

And the second has been the emergence of collaboration platforms on which they can deploy their innovation skills. Today’s collaborative innovation platform resembles its suggestion box predecessor in outline only; it’s still a way of collecting ideas from employees. But it does so in an interactive space in which challenges can be posed, ideas suggested, comments added and shaping, and welding together multiple knowledge sets and experience enabled. And in doing so they open up the very real possibilities of high involvement innovation — getting everyone to contribute to the innovation story.

Emergent properties

But it’s not just the raw return on investment which collaboration platforms offer — though these benefits are impressive. Their real value lies in the way they enable ‘emergent properties’ — the innovation whole becomes much greater than the sum of its parts.

They give us new and powerful ways of working with the knowledge spaghetti. Not only can we handle the sheer scale of the knowledge challenge and focus it towards key objectives but we can do so in ways which yield surprising additional benefits. They effectively turbocharge our innovation system.

In particular they contribute in the following ways:

  • Reach — one of the obvious ways in which platforms can help is that they create a network which even remote users can connect to. We can spread the innovation net far and wide, can reach the parts other innovation approaches don’t. For example, recruiting ideas from people on ships at sea or working on an off-shore oil platform would have been impossible until recently. Now they can join the innovation conversation as simply as placing a phone call. Working under extreme conditions like in a humanitarian disaster area can now also be a space for crowdsourcing new and urgent solutions to problems. (We’ve seen this in Ukraine where the problems of getting urgent supplies in and vulnerable people out of a war zone are being addressed by many people sharing ideas across makeshift collaboration platforms based on mobile phone networks). We’re now able to involve people in innovation anywhere on the planet and on a 24/7 timescale.
  • High involvement innovation has always worked well in teams — that’s been at the heart of the success of lean approaches. But until recently that depended on the team being physically together, exploring and co-creating solutions — not easy if you’re working with a distributed team. Platforms solve this challenge, enabling virtual team meetings and collaboration and asynchronous collaboration.

    Organizations like Conoco-Philips employ around 10,000 people, globally distributed and often in hard to access places like off-shore oil platforms. Airbus has around 130,000, again globally distributed and engaged in multiple activities. And Bombardier have over 15,000 ‘knowledge workers’ around the world with whom they want to engage. Through the use of collaboration platforms organizations like these are able to achieve sustained high involvement and significant traction on their innovation challenges.

    • Richness — successful high involvement innovation isn’t just about assembling lots of people. By their nature people are different and diversity matters in innovation. They bring different perspectives, different ways of framing and working with the problem being explored. Plus they are not just cardboard cut-outs, they have a rich history of different experiences — their origins, their education, their work experience. All of this represents potentially useful strands of knowledge spaghetti, and platforms help us draw on this.

    Subsea7, a major player in the world of offshore services for the oil and other industries has used a platform approach to great effect. In one example a long-running concern with turnaround times for fitting out ships was solved when someone on the platform identified a solution which he had originally seen in action at a previous employer. The resulting savings ran into millions of dollars.

    People also bring with them networks of connections; knowledge is socially distributed and connecting to these networks can yield surprising possibilities. It means the innovating organization can access different skills and specialized knowledge inside and outside the organization. It’s classic open innovation, building on the idea that in even the largest organization ‘not all the smart people work for you’.

    • Refining — one of the powerful features of collaboration platforms is that they enable — well, collaboration! They make it possible to comment, criticize (constructively), modify and refine ideas, setting up a process of true co-creation. This fits well with recent research which argues that there’s a fundamental flaw in the model of ‘brainstorming’ used by many organizations to source ideas. The principle of postponing judgment has been replaced by a ‘no criticism’ approach in which every idea is accepted. But the reality is that good ideas need to be tempered, hammered into shape, worked on — and processes of constructive criticism are really important. Pixar, for example, has made this a core feature of its daily ideation process.

    And having access to the diversity of perspectives which platforms allow means that there is real potential for shaping and developing interesting ideas into great and value-adding ones. They provide a way of creating those magical ‘water-cooler’ moments in an online and distributed world.

    • Requiring — using focused campaigns to draw out ideas in particular directions. One of the limits of the old model of suggestion schemes is that they operate in ‘bottom up’ fashion, solving problems which are important and visible at a local level. But the real power of HII lies in mobilizing it to work on ‘top-down’ strategic challenges. The campaign model sits at the heart of many collaboration platforms and allows short intense ‘sprints’ focusing the innovation energy on a key problem area, rather like a laser beam.

    Conoco Philips Alaska have been using a process targeted at continuous improvement of their extensive operations; they run between 6 and 8 campaigns every year, involve around 1500 employees and generate savings running into millions of dollars annually.

    But it depends on several things — not least spending time to ensure the ‘right’ question is being asked. Simply setting ‘how can we improve productivity’ as a target is too vague, a bit like using that medieval weapon, the blunderbuss. Chances are some of your shots will hit the target but there’s an awful lot of waste involved.

    So it’s important to ensure we’re asking the ‘right’ question; a key feature of successful collaboration platforms is the amount of effort which goes in to this kind of front-end problem exploration. The sharper the question the better the quality of answers and the chance that new creative pathways can be opened up.

    • Recombination — ‘ if only our organization knew what it knows’ is a source of concern for anyone concerned with innovation. So much knowledge which might be useful is locked up inside silos and not shared. Worse, we don’t always know what’s inside those silos or whether and how it could be relevant to someone else. Platforms have the power to make this visible, not least by drawing it out in response to focused and challenging campaigns.

    There’s also the possibility that someone else in the organization may have experienced a similar type of problem even if they don’t recognize the relevance of their experience. A powerful principle in creativity is looking for analogous solutions — for example, the challenge of cutting turnaround times in airports for low-cost carriers was solved by applying principles originally developed for Formula 1 pitstops. And the same approach was then adopted by surgeons in London looking to improve the utilization of operating theatres.

    • Reverse reinvention — lots of effort is often wasted by reinventing wheels, solving the same problem in different places. Platforms offer a way of reversing this process, highlighting solutions which have been tried elsewhere and also inviting creative improvisation around those solutions, extending their applicability and effectiveness. A kind of creative re-iteration.

    The Canadian engineering company Bombardier have been using a collaboration platform approach for over ten years and one of the biggest benefits they have seen is a significant increase in the amount of knowledge being shared across their organization.

    • Retaining and recording — making sure ideas are retained even if they can’t be applied right now. One of the challenges of mobilizing collective intelligence is that we may well attract thousands of ideas. Some can be shaped and refined for immediate implementation, some require further work and investment. And for some there is the problem of being the right idea at the wrong time. In the past organizations hitting this problem would probably lose sight of the idea, leaving it buried in a file somewhere or gathering dust. But platforms allow for effective curation of ideas, not only tracking and recording all suggestions but also retaining them to match against future campaigns and challenges.
    • Rewiring — organizations are like people — they have ‘predictive minds’ . They are inclined to take a lazy approach, picking tried and tested solutions off the shelf when they confront a problem. But being forced to redefine, to reframe, can trigger a search for new approaches to those old problems. We see this effect often under crisis conditions where traditional solution pathways may not be available and we have to think differently — to make new neural connections across the collective mind. Creating novel campaigns to provide this challenge can open up new idea space — they can help us ‘get out of the box’.
    • Refreshing — at heart high involvement innovation is about people and the key ingredient to its long term success is finding ways to keep the motivation high. People are brilliant problem solvers but they’re only going to give their ideas if they see some benefit. Research has shown that money isn’t a strong motivator — but having your voice heard and having the opportunity to create the change you’d like to see around your organization is. There’s a wealth of research to support this going right back to the early years of organization studies; the message on employee engagement remains the same but the question is then raised about how to achieve this. Collaboration platforms by their inclusive and open nature offer a powerful new tool to help and organizations like Liberty Global consider this motivational aspect to be a key factor in helping build a culture of innovation across a large organization.

    Knowledge Spaghetti Success

    So whether it is an upgrade to continuous improvement activity, harvesting employee suggestions for doing what we do but better, or pushing the frontiers to create novel products and services, there’s real scope for using this turbocharged approach.

    But powerful though they are, collaboration platforms are at heart still software. It’s not a case of ‘plug and play’ — getting the best out of these systems requires hands-on management, something we’ll look at in a future blog.

    For more on innovation-related themes like this please visit my website

    And if you’d like to listen to this as a podcast please visit my site here

    Image credits: Pexels, John Bessant

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    Partnerships for Social Impact to Achieve Collaboration in Innovation

    Partnerships for Social Impact to Achieve Collaboration in Innovation

    GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

    In today’s rapidly changing world, solving complex social challenges requires more than just good intentions—it demands collaboration, innovation, and strategic partnerships. As a human-centered change and innovation thought leader, I’ve witnessed firsthand the transformative power of cross-sector collaborations. By bringing together diverse groups of stakeholders, we can leverage different perspectives and resources to create solutions with a lasting social impact.

    This article explores how partnerships serve as catalysts for innovation and highlights two compelling case studies where collaborations achieved significant social progress.

    Why Partnerships Matter in Social Innovation

    Social innovation thrives on diversity, common goals, and shared values. Partnerships bring together various entities—nonprofits, governments, corporations, and communities—to pool resources, knowledge, and expertise. This collective approach enables us to tackle multifaceted societal issues that no single organization could address alone. It is the synergy created through these relationships that sparks groundbreaking solutions and drives sustainable change.

    Case Study 1: The Alliance to End Plastic Waste

    Launched in 2019, the Alliance to End Plastic Waste (AEPW) is a global partnership of nearly 50 companies in the plastics and consumer goods value chain. Their goal is to eliminate plastic waste in the environment, primarily focusing on developing innovative solutions and infrastructure to manage plastic waste effectively.

    The AEPW collaborates with governments, environmental organizations, and communities to implement projects that improve waste management systems and promote circular economy practices. For instance, in Indonesia, the Alliance worked with local municipalities to enhance waste sorting and collection, directly resulting in significantly reduced plastic leakage into oceans.

    By leveraging the expertise and financial resources of multiple sectors, the AEPW has set a benchmark on how industrial cooperation can lead to scalable environmental solutions with a profound social impact.

    Case Study 2: The Global Vaccine Alliance (Gavi)

    Founded in 2000, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, is a public-private partnership committed to increasing access to immunization in poor countries. By bringing together key international organizations, governments, the vaccine industry, philanthropic institutions, and civil society, Gavi aims to make a substantial impact on public health.

    One notable success story is the introduction of the pneumococcal vaccine in developing countries. Through its Advance Market Commitment model, Gavi incentivized pharmaceutical companies to accelerate the availability of these vaccines at affordable prices. As a result, millions of children worldwide have been vaccinated against pneumonia, dramatically reducing child mortality rates in low-income countries.

    Gavi’s innovative financing and cooperative strategy demonstrate how partnerships can bridge gaps in public health initiatives, making vaccines more accessible to vulnerable populations globally.

    Key Takeaways and Future Directions

    These case studies showcase the immense potential of partnerships in driving social innovation. The key to successful collaboration lies in aligning objectives, maintaining transparent communication, and building trust among partners. It is crucial to continuously evaluate the partnership’s impact and adapt strategies for improving effectiveness.

    As we look to the future, the scope for partnership-driven social impact is limitless. Emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence and data analytics, offer new opportunities to enhance collaborative efforts. By harnessing these innovations, we can further empower communities, improve lives, and revolutionize how we address complex social issues.

    Ultimately, partnerships in innovation are not just about solving problems—they are about building a better world, together.

    Extra Extra: Because innovation is all about change, Braden Kelley’s human-centered change methodology and tools are the best way to plan and execute the changes necessary to support your innovation and transformation efforts — all while literally getting everyone all on the same page for change. Find out more about the methodology and tools, including the book Charting Change by following the link. Be sure and download the TEN FREE TOOLS while you’re here.

    Image credit: Pexels

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    Innovation is About Conversations Not Knowledge

    Innovation is About Conversations Not Knowledge

    GUEST POST from Greg Satell

    One of the most often repeated stories about innovation is that of Alexander Fleming who, returning from his summer holiday in 1928, found that his bacterial cultures were contaminated by a strange mold. Yet instead of throwing away his work, he decided to study the mold instead and discovered penicillin.

    What’s often left out is that it wasn’t Fleming who developed penicillin into a miracle drug. In fact, it wasn’t until a decade later that a team led by Howard Florey and Ernst Chain rediscovered Fleming’s work and, collaborating with several labs in the United States, ushered in the new era of antibiotics.

    For some reason, we tend to assume that great innovators are lone geniuses. However, in researching my book, Mapping Innovation, I found just the opposite to be true. Innovation is, in fact, a highly social activity and great innovators cultivate long standing relationships with trusted thought partners. This was always true, but Covid has pushed it to new heights.

    The “Martians” Of Fasori

    Like a lot of children, Eugene Wigner lacked confidence in math class. In Eugene’s case, however, the problem wasn’t any lack of mathematical ability, but that his classmate and friend at the Fasori Gimnázium was John von Neuman, possibly the single greatest mathematician of the 20th century. Outmatched, Eugene chose to focus on physics, for which he would win the Nobel Prize in 1963.

    The two were part of a group of Hungarian scientists that came to be known as the Martians, including such luminaries as Edward Teller, John Kemeny, George Polya and Paul Erdős, just to name a few. The group would help to revolutionize mathematics, physics and computer science for half a century.

    In 1939, one of the “Martians,” Leo Szilard, became increasingly concerned about the explosive power of nuclear energy, which was poorly understood at the time. He went to confer with his friend Wigner and the two considered the matter important enough to sound the alarm. They drafted a letter, which Albert Einstein signed, which was ultimately delivered to President Roosevelt and led to the development of the Manhattan Project.

    Each of the Martians was a genius in his own right, but combined they formed an important network of support that helped them all thrive and led to breakthroughs such as the first modern computer and the BASIC computer language. The world today is unquestionably better for it.

    The Olympia Academy

    In 1901, Albert Einstein was a recent graduate of the mathematics and physics in the teaching diploma program at the Zürich polytechnic school. Finding himself unable to find a job. he put an ad in the newspaper to attract students he could tutor to earn some money. A Romanian philosophy student named Maurice Solovine answered the ad.

    As it turned out, Einstein didn’t think Solovine needed lessons in physics, but the two hit it off and Einstein invited his new friend to come and visit any time he wanted. Soon, a mathematician named Conrad Habicht joined the group and the three friends began to refer to their meetings as The Olympia Academy.

    The meetings eventually began to take on a regular rhythm. They would read books from intellectual giants such as Ernst Mach, Henri Poincaré and David Hume, then discuss them late into the night and sometimes into the early morning hours. The debates were often vigorous, but always cordial.

    Einstein would later credit these meetings with helping him come up with the ideas that led to the miracle year papers that would shift the foundations of modern physics. Einstein would, of course, become one of the world’s most famous people, but he never forgot his two friends from the Olympia Academy. The three stayed in touch throughout their lives, exchanging ideas and debating finer points.

    The Bloomsbury Group

    Historically, most intellectual clubs were exclusively male. That was certainly true of the Hungarian “Martians” and the Olympia Academy, as with others such as the Vienna Circle, but the Bloomsbury Group of early 20th century Cambridge was an unusual exception.

    Although it was itself somewhat of an offshoot of the wholly male society of Apostles, the Bloomsbury included accomplished women such as Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf. It would come to be highly influential in areas as diverse as art, economics, literature and politics

    It began in 1905, when Thoby Steven started hosting “Thursday Evening’s” for Cambridge intellectuals visiting London and his sister Vanessa followed up with “Friday Club.” The loose gathering’s became an informal network that included literary types like E. M. Forster and Lytton Strachey, as well as such luminaries as the economist John Maynard Keynes and the philosopher Bertrand Russell.

    Although the group came to be seen as snobbish and out of touch, the accomplishments of its members cannot be denied. Nor can the fact that even as they grew in fame and had increasing demands on their time, they continued to see deep value in the dialogue they had with each other.

    Collaboration Is A Competitive Advantage

    What’s most interesting about groups such as the “Martians,” the Olympia Academy and the Bloomsbury group is not just that they exist, but how devoted their members were to them and how integral they saw the dialogue they produced to their own successes. For many of the same reasons, highly innovative firms often design workspaces to promote collaboration.

    That’s no accident. Decades of research, including a study of “star” engineers at Bell labs as well as one of designers at IDEO, found that the best innovators are not necessarily the smartest or even the hardest working, but those who actively build up a strong network of collaborators. Another study of 17.9 million scientific papers found that the most highly cited work tends to come from a group of specialists in a specific field collaborating with an outsider.

    Today’s technology creates new opportunities to collaborate and the impact is beginning to be felt. As Jennifer Doudna explained in The Economist, the Covid crisis is ushering in a “new era of science” in which collaboration is accelerating across national, institutional and disciplinary boundaries in ways that are unprecedented.

    What’s becoming clear is that collaboration is increasingly becoming a competitive advantage and it’s not just what you know, but who you talk to, that will determine whether you succeed or fail. The better networks we build, the more likely it will be that we stumble across that random bit of information or insight that can help us solve an important problem.

    — Article courtesy of the Digital Tonto blog
    — Image credit: Pexels

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    Bring Newness to Corporate Learning with Gamification

    Bring Newness to Corporate Learning with Gamification

    GUEST POST from Janet Sernack

    I was first introduced to gamification upon meeting Mario Herger, in 2012, when he was a Senior Innovation Strategist at SAP Labs LLC, in Israel, as a participant in his two-day gamification workshop for Checkpoint Security Software. It was an exciting and exhilarating journey into the playful and innovative world of gamification pioneers such as Farmville, Angry Birds, and BetterWorks. Creatively exploiting the convergence of trends catalyzed by the expansion of the internet, and by the fast pace of exponential technology development making gamification accessible to everyone.

    Propelled further by people’s increasing desire to socialize and share ideas and knowledge across the globe. Coupled with their desire to learn and connect in a high-tech world, to be met in ways that also satisfied their aspirational, motivational, and recreational needs, as well as being playful and fun.

    The whole notion of making gamification accessible to corporate learning simmered in my mind, for the next ten years, and this is what I have since discovered.

    Evolution of the gamification market

    In 2012 Gartner predicted that – Gamification combined with other technologies and trends, gamification would cause major discontinuities in innovation, employee performance management, education, personal development, and customer engagement. Further claiming that by 2014, 80% of organizations will have gamified at least one area of their business.

    It seems their prediction did not eventuate.

    In their Gamification 2020 report, Gartner then predicted that gamification, combined with other emerging trends and technologies, will have a significant impact on:

    • Innovation
    • The design of employee performance
    • The globalization of higher education
    • The emergence of customer engagement platforms
    • Gamification of personal development.

    It seems this prediction is now an idea whose time has come!

    According to Mordor Intelligence – The global gamification market was valued at USD 10.19 million in 2020 and is expected to reach USD 38.42 million by 2026 and grow at a CAGR of 25.10% over the forecast period (2021 – 2026). The exponential growth in the number of smartphones and mobile devices has directly created a vast base for the gamification market.

    This growth is also supported by the increasing recognition of making gamification accessible as a methodology to redesign human behavior, in order to induce innovation, productivity, or engagement.

    Purpose of gamification

    The initial purpose of gamification was to add game mechanics into non-game environments, such as a website, online communities, learning management systems, or business intranets to increase engagement and participation.

    The initial goal of gamification was to engage with consumers, employees, and partners to inspire collaboration, sharing, and interaction.

    Gamification and corporate learning

    The last two years of the coronavirus pandemic caused many industries to deal with their audiences remotely and combined with an urgent need for having the right technologies and tools to:

    • Reach out to, and connect with, both their employees and customers, in new ways

    Acknowledging the range of constraints and restrictions occurring globally we have an opportunity to couple these with the challenges, disconnectedness, isolation, and limitations of our remote and hybrid workplaces.

    While many of us are seeking more freedom, fun, play, and adventure, yet, we are still mostly bound to our laptops, TVs, and kitchens, and locked up within the boundaries of our homes, local neighborhoods, and hometowns.

    • Expanding knowledge, mindsets, behaviors, and skills

    At the same time, this period has also created incredible opportunities for expanding our knowledge, and developing new mindsets, behaviors, and skills!

    In different ways to help teams and organizations adapt, innovate, and grow through gamification, which increases our adaptability to flow and flourish and drive transformation, within a constantly, exponentially changing, and disruptive workplace.

    Benefits of a gamified approach

    Companies that have focused on making gamification accessible within their learning programs are reaping the rewards, as recent studies revealed:

    • The use of mobile applications gamified individually or as a complement to an LMS or e-learning platform has been shown to improve employee productivity by 50% and commitment by 60%.
    • That 97% of employees over the age of 45 believe that gamification would help improve work.
    • That 85% of employees are willing to spend more time on training programs with gamified dynamics.

    Gamification is finally at an inflection point

    The shift from face-to-face and live events to online created an opening for improving the quality of coaching, learning, and training experiences in ways that align with the client’s or organization needs and strategic business goals.

    Keeping people and teams connected, engaged, and motivated in the virtual and hybrid workplace for extended periods of time is a key factor in business success.

    Atrivity is a platform that empowers employees and channels to learn, develop, and perform better through games have identified eight trends influencing the growth and adoption of gamification including:

    • Gamification for Digital Events are here to stay, people are time and resource-poor, and will more likely attend a digital event rather than invest time and resources in travelling.
    • Gamification for Millennials and gen-Z is their new normal, being a generation who have grown up with, and become habitually attuned to Facebook and Instagram.
    • The start of Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality is speeding up and offers new creative approaches.
    • Remote onboarding becomes standard as we all adapt to a globalized and diversified work environment.
    • Gamification helps to reduce hospital strains with emerging telehealth innovations.
    • Customization of, and access to contents allows us to visit museums, galleries, libraries virtually
    • Knowledge evaluation metrics have become common proactive through the use of app-based dashboards and scorecards that provide gamified reward and recognition processes
    • Gamification is an Enterprise “must-have” tactic to attract and retain talent.

    Corporate learning is also finally at an inflection point

    Innovative new organizations like Roundtable Learning focus on co-creating one-of-a-kind training programs that utilize innovative technologies, reflect the client’s brand, and show measurable business results by enhancing traditional corporate learning practices and embracing more interactive, engaging programs.

    This is what ImagineNation™ is collaborating with Binnakle Serious Games to bring newness, creativity and play, experimentation, and learning in gamified ways to enable people and teams to innovate, by making gamification accessible to everyone!

    We have integrated technology and co-created a range of blended learning solutions:

    • Digital and gamified learning experiences for groups and teams.
    • Playful and experiential learning activities that deliver deep learning outcomes.
    • Co-creation of customized or bespoke blended learning programs that deliver what they promise.

    Making corporate learning accessible, affordable, and scalable

    Our aim is to make corporate learning agile, by making gamification accessible, and scalable to everybody, across all time zones, modalities, geographies, and technologies.

    Where people have time and space to unlearn, relearn, reskill and upskill by engaging in and interacting with both technology and people:

    • Understand and learn new innovative processes, concepts, principles, and techniques and feel that their new skills are valued.
    • Retreat, reflect and explore, discover and navigate new ways of being, thinking, and acting individually and collectively.
    • Question, challenge the status quo and experiment with new ideas, explore effective collaborative analytical, imaginative, aligned problem-solving and decision-making strategies.
    • Safely fail without punishment, make and learn from mistakes, to iterate and pivot creative ideas and innovative solutions that really matter.

    To meet our client’s short- and long-term learning needs in terms of innovation focus or topic depth and breadth. Through enhancing teaming, teamwork, and collaboration, by offering products and tools that make gamification accessible to suit all peoples learning styles, time constraints, diverse technologies, and cost needs.

    Who was I to know that it would take another ten years for making gamification accessible enough to reach a tipping point!

    An opportunity to learn more

    Find out about our learning products and tools, including The Coach for Innovators Certified Program, a collaborative, intimate, and deep personalized innovation coaching and learning program, supported by a global group of peers over 9-weeks, starting Tuesday, May 4, 2022.

    It is a blended and transformational change and learning program that will give you a deep understanding of the language, principles, and applications of an ecosystem focus,  human-centric approach, and emergent structure (Theory U) to innovation, and upskill people and teams and develop their future fitness, within your unique context.

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    Impacting Communities via Innovation Empowerment

    Impacting Communities via Innovation Empowerment

    GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

    In today’s rapidly evolving world, innovation is much more than just a corporate buzzword; it is a foundational element for empowering people and transforming communities. When harnessed effectively, innovation can catalyze positive changes that generate long-term social, economic, and environmental benefits. This article explores how communities can be empowered through innovation by focusing on collaborative efforts that engage citizens as co-creators of sustainable solutions. We will delve into two inspiring case studies highlighting creative empowerment strategies that have yielded significant impacts.

    Case Study 1: Solar Sister – Harnessing the Sun to Empower Women

    Solar Sister is a remarkable case study demonstrating how innovation can empower an entire community. Founded with the mission of eradicating energy poverty while promoting women’s entrepreneurship, Solar Sister has become a beacon of hope across Sub-Saharan Africa. By equipping women with clean energy technology such as solar-powered lamps and phone chargers, this initiative not only addresses critical energy shortages but also provides economic opportunities.

    Solar Sister’s approach is both simple and profound: train, support, and mentor women as they build clean energy businesses in their communities. This model not only ensures widespread access to affordable, reliable clean energy but also empowers women by providing them with leadership skills, financial independence, and increased social standing. The innovation lies in its grassroots-driven approach that turns beneficiaries into active participants in transforming their own communities.

    “Solar Sister illuminates the lives of women and their communities through the power of the sun, demonstrating that sustainable energy solutions can come from the most unlikely innovators.”

    The impact of Solar Sister has been widespread. Thousands of women entrepreneurs have joined the movement, providing clean energy to over one million people. The benefits extend beyond individual families, impacting the environment by reducing dependency on kerosene and diminishing carbon emissions, thus helping fight climate change.

    Case Study 2: CityBee – Redefining Urban Mobility

    In Lithuania, urban mobility innovation is revolutionizing how communities interact with their cities, thanks to CityBee. Recognizing the traffic congestion and pollution challenges faced by modern cities, CityBee devised a car-sharing service that blends technology, community involvement, and sustainable transportation solutions.

    CityBee’s model is incredibly intuitive: through an app, users can locate and unlock cars or bikes, use them for short trips, and park them at strategic city locations. This service reduces the necessity for private vehicle ownership, alleviates parking demands, and decreases urban air pollution. CityBee reimagines mobility as a flexible, on-demand service that embraces technological innovation to meet the evolving needs of urban dwellers.

    The community impact has been profound. By championing a shared economy model, CityBee has encouraged users to fundamentally change how they perceive transportation—shifting from ownership to access. This transformation not only positions cities as spaces designed for people rather than vehicles but also empowers communities to participate in more sustainable urban living practices.

    “Innovative solutions like CityBee prove that rethinking and reshaping urban mobility isn’t just a possibility—it’s a necessity for sustainable, vibrant city landscapes.”

    Innovative Pathways to Empowerment

    The profound lessons from these two case studies underscore the limitless potential of innovation as a mechanism for empowerment. By involving communities in innovation processes, leveraging locally driven solutions, and fostering inclusive environments that uplift underrepresented voices, we can ensure sustainable development and community well-being.

    Communities empowered through innovation are better equipped to navigate the complexities of the modern world—transforming challenges into opportunities, sparking economic vibrancy, and nurturing social cohesion. As we continue to explore and harness the boundless potentials of innovation, our commitment to human-centered design should remain steadfast. By creating platforms for shared learning, meaningful engagement, and collaborative co-creation, we lay the foundation for empowered, resilient communities.

    Conclusion

    Empowerment through innovation is not just an ideal; it is a pragmatic strategy for fostering sustainable growth and collective responsibility across our diverse global communities. As demonstrated by Solar Sister and CityBee, the innovative forces that empower individuals simultaneously invigorate the communities they inhabit. By prioritizing people-centric innovation and nurturing community involvement, we catalyze positive changes that transcend generations. Together, let us embrace the transformative power of innovation as a conduit for empowerment and social good, nurturing a world where communities thrive, and hope flourishes.

    Extra Extra: Because innovation is all about change, Braden Kelley’s human-centered change methodology and tools are the best way to plan and execute the changes necessary to support your innovation and transformation efforts — all while literally getting everyone all on the same page for change. Find out more about the methodology and tools, including the book Charting Change by following the link. Be sure and download the TEN FREE TOOLS while you’re here.

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    Best Practices and Pitfalls of Building an Innovation Ecosystem

    Best Practices and Pitfalls of Building an Innovation Ecosystem

    GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

    In today’s rapidly evolving business environment, fostering innovation isn’t just a strategic advantage—it’s a survival imperative. An effective innovation ecosystem integrates diverse elements, harnessing external and internal synergies to fuel sustained creativity and growth. But as with any complex system, crafting a robust innovation ecosystem comes with its own set of best practices and potential pitfalls. In this article, we’ll delve into both, supported by case studies that illustrate these critical points.

    Best Practices for Building an Innovation Ecosystem

    1. Foster a Collaborative Culture

    The cornerstone of any successful innovation ecosystem is a culture that champions collaboration. Organizations must cultivate environments where ideas are freely exchanged without fear of judgment, encouraging cross-pollination between departments and disciplines. Providing platforms for collaboration—both physically and digitally—enables diverse teams to work together towards breakthrough innovations.

    2. Leverage External Partnerships

    In the journey to foster innovation, no organization is an island. Building partnerships with startups, academic institutions, and even competitors can inject fresh perspectives and capabilities. Open Innovation, driven by interfacing with external entities, is a key strategy many successful businesses employ to enhance their innovative potential.

    3. Invest in Continuous Learning

    An innovation ecosystem thrives on continuous learning and development. Encouraging employees to engage in ongoing education, whether through formal programs or earmarked “innovation time,” keeps the ecosystem agile and forward-thinking. It’s about creating a learning organization that can adapt and evolve as new challenges and opportunities arise.

    Case Study 1: 3M

    The Post-it Note Phenomenon

    3M stands out as a paragon of innovation, with the famous invention of the Post-it Note serving as a testament to the company’s innovation ecosystem. Initially, the adhesive technology behind Post-it was considered a failure because it wasn’t strong enough for its intended use. However, 3M’s culture of openness and experimentation enabled this “failure” to be repurposed. The internal 15% rule, where employees could spend a portion of their time on projects of their own choosing, played a crucial role in nurturing this innovation.

    3M’s approach highlights the value of a corporate culture that not only tolerates failure but also turns it into opportunities. By encouraging a culture where ideas can be recycled and reused creatively, 3M successfully transformed a dud product into a blockbuster staple. Their innovation ecosystem thrives on sustained encouragement of exploratory projects and cross-departmental collaborations, a model many other companies strive to emulate.

    Common Pitfalls in Building an Innovation Ecosystem

    1. Over-reliance on Internal Resources

    A major misstep in fostering an innovation ecosystem is the tendency to solely rely on internal talents and resources, often leading to echo chambers. Without external input, solutions may be limited to existing knowledge and conventional thinking. This not only stifles creativity but also undermines competitive advantage in the long run.

    2. Lack of Strategic Alignment

    Innovation efforts that aren’t aligned with an organization’s overarching goals can lead to disjointed initiatives and wasted resources. Ensuring that innovation strategies sync with the broader business objectives is crucial. Strategic misalignment often results in minimal support from top management, under-funding, and ultimately, failure.

    Case Study 2: Kodak

    The Fall of a Giant

    Kodak’s story is often cited as a cautionary tale for organizations attempting to foster innovation ecosystems. Despite inventing the digital camera in 1975, the company failed to capitalize on its potential due to an internal focus that prioritized film sales over technological advancement. This case illustrates a pitfall of missing strategic alignment and over-reliance on existing business models.

    Kodak’s downfall underscores the necessity of aligning innovation with future-oriented business goals. Their internal culture, focused heavily on their traditional cash cow, was unable to adapt quickly enough to the disruptive technology they themselves had pioneered. The innovation ecosystem failed not from lack of technological prowess, but a failure to strategically embrace and integrate emerging technologies.

    Conclusion

    Building a thriving innovation ecosystem is a complex yet rewarding endeavor that requires thoughtful planning and execution. By fostering a collaborative culture, leveraging external partnerships, and investing in continuous learning, organizations can create a fertile ground for innovation. However, avoiding pitfalls such as over-reliance on internal resources and lack of strategic alignment is equally important. The contrasting case studies of 3M and Kodak serve as a poignant reminder that the path to innovation lies not merely in novel ideas but in the capacity to strategically harness and integrate them within a supportive ecosystem framework.

    Extra Extra: Futurology is not fortune telling. Futurists use a scientific approach to create their deliverables, but a methodology and tools like those in FutureHacking™ can empower anyone to engage in futurology themselves.

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    How to Effectively Manage Remotely

    How to Effectively Manage Remotely

    GUEST POST from Douglas Ferguson

    Consider five best practices for managing remotely.

    Remote work was once associated with poor accountability, incohesive teamwork, and confusing communication practices. Fortunately, that’s now easily preventable. With the right management practices and tools, remote management should feel empowering, productive, and streamlined. Consider these five best practices for managing remotely.

    Hybrid and remote work is something to embrace.

    Managing remote teams takes a focused and thoughtful approach. The role of a manager is to guide, support, and connect the team. Approach the responsibility with a proper strategy, and hybrid or remote work becomes an asset to both the employees and the employer.

    As the benefits of remote work become apparent, it’s safe to say that remote and hybrid work are here to stay. There’s plenty of existing research for remote work. According to a Forbes study, “Teleworkers are an average of 35-40% more productive than their office counterparts, and have measured an output increase of at least 4.4%.” Below are a few more positive consequences of remote work.

    1. Employees have location independence, and employers have the option to recruit top talent worldwide.
    2. Employees can be more productive, in turn reflecting on the company’s performance.
    3. Employee engagement tends to rise.
    4. Both sides tend to save money, enhancing profitability for the company.

    With an effective manager, confidence and trust become apparent on a team. Build best practices into place, and you can expect game-changing results.

    Effectively Managing a Remote Team

    How can you effectively manage a remote team?

    It takes practice and the right mindset to master effective management. We recommend practicing the steps below, and considering our Workshop Design course to build lasting results.

    1. Embrace technology and tools.

    Technology is on your side. There are countless tools made specifically to improve, and manage remote work, especially remote management. Make the most of the tools you have, and use them consistently. Focus on empowering your team to value available resources. Here are a few tools that we recommend.

    Make sure each person understands how to use the tools in place. A chain is as strong as its weakest link. If your team depends on a project management tool to share and develop work, everyone should know or be taught how to use it effectively. It’s your job to oversee processes and enable people to work efficiently.

    Define clear communication practices. Everyone benefits from guidelines for communication, and technology is on your side. Clarify when and where to share certain messages. For example, urgent messages should be shared via Slack or another instant messaging tool, while they should use email for higher level communication about projects.

    Technology should enable you, as a manager, to manage less. Redundant tasks are easily minimized with the right tools. If your team is confident in how to use them, you can focus on more important tasks.

    2. Implement boundaries and state expectations.

    Boundaries are especially important with hybrid and remote work. They’re a sign of respect for employees. Working from wherever should not equate to always available. People work from different time zones and schedules, so align on a work schedule and respect those hours. Constant notifications outside of work hours often have a negative impact on engagement and morale.

    Stating expectations clearly defines how to respect the team. Outline expectations for work hours, available hours, assignments and deadlines, email turnaround time, meeting timeliness, and communication practices. If you’re following a hybrid model, be sure to clarify when and how often in-office work is expected.

    Individual Remote Work

    3. Check in on individuals.

    Remember the value of face-to-face interaction and use tools to continue it. This is especially important to newly remote teams. As an employee, it’s affirming to know that leadership values your work and recognizes your productivity.

    As an employee, it’s affirming to know that leadership values your work and recognizes your productivity.

    One-on-one check-ins offer space for connection. Having a regular check-in on the calendar is motivating, especially when the work is acknowledged and rewarded. While it will take practice to know the right cadence, it’s important to start with something on the calendar. Try weekly check-ins to start. If you have the option, schedule those for while you’re both in the office.

    Clean up before hanging up. Outline current projects and align priorities before the next check-in. Looking to improve the structure of your current meetings? Look to our expert facilitators for guidance through a meeting systems workshop. We’re here to help.

    4. Check in on them, not just their work.

    Understand that people are working from a variety of environments. Some may work in solitude, others in a coffee shop or at home with young children. It’s important to provide opportunities to connect.

    Countless benefits can arise from open conversation and listening. Working remotely means working with differing experiences and viewpoints. It also means that acknowledging shared stress of work goes a long way. Your employees sense the emotions you convey. Focus on conveying calm and empathy when it’s appropriate. When people sense space for sharing their experiences, camaraderie is built and they feel invested in.

    Provide opportunities for connection whenever possible, including in-person. Consider monthly happy hours outside of work.

    Communicate Priorities and Manage Your Team

    5. Communicate priorities and values to manage your team.

    Proactive communication lends itself useful. Communicate values from the start. Aligning on values gives individuals a tool for navigating decisions and managers’ confidence in employees. Values serve as the first resort for help.

    Keeping the team aligned on priorities is also essential. Focus on goals and outcomes rather than how people are accomplishing their work. It minimizes micromanaging and enables employees to settle into their own style of work. Different people work differently.

    Make sure that you’re finding ways to lead the team, not just manage it. Constantly tracking progress is a waste of time on both ends. Communicate tasks that need to be accomplished, but don’t use that as an excuse to check in on their work more often than is necessary. Trust communication practices you put into place, and use your time for accomplishing work.

    Explaining the “why” behind priorities and deadlines is also important. Employees have a greater sense of purpose when they understand the reason for a project.

    How should I go about implementing these five strategies?

    Practice. Practice in our workshops and with our library of tools. Practice with other leaders and with your team. We want you to see a lasting impact from your work, and we’ve seen it many times over with our toolkit.

    This article originally appeared at VoltageControl.com

    Voltage Control offers workshops and courses for a forward-looking workplace. Managing teams remotely effectively takes practice with an advanced toolkit. Just like you should exit a meeting with a plan for action, you’ll complete our Workshop Design course with experience and valuable feedback for how you specifically can effectively manage a remote team. Please reach out to us at hello@voltagecontrol.com to discuss what we offer.

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    A How To Guide for Overcoming Procrastination

    A How To Guide for Overcoming Procrastination

    GUEST POST from Janet Sernack

    I often wonder why some people procrastinate by delaying, postponing, or avoiding solving problems, or by withdrawing from making smart decisions, taking calculated risks, or taking intelligent actions?

    • Why do they become paralyzed and unable to take the actions necessary to solve some of their key problems?
    • Why do they often resist making even the most necessary changes to support the delivery of their creative solutions?
    • Why do so many also avoid taking personal responsibility and being accountable towards achieving their desired outcomes and goals?
    • Why do people disengage, even when the situation or problem may be critical to their own, their teams, or their organizations success?

    Despite knowing that there may be a range of negative consequences for procrastinating, involving a crippling, overwhelming, and paralyzing combination of reactive responses?

    Which then typically impacts negatively on people’s self-efficacy and self-belief, self-worth, and self-esteem and diminishes their motivation, disengages them and immobilizes their ability to take the necessary actions and as a result, spiral downwards?

    How do we help people overcome procrastination?

    • Why is this important?

    It seems that procrastination is a challenge we and many others have faced at one point or another, where we struggle with being indecisive, delaying, ignoring, avoiding taking actions to initiate, progress, or completing tasks that may be important to us, as well as on issues that really matter to us, our teams, partners and organizations.

    Ultimately leading to failures, and an inability to mitigate risks, or be creative and inventive and decreasing possibilities for innovation and increasing engagement, productivity, and improving performance.

    Also potentially leading to feelings of loss, insecurity, inadequacy, frustration, disengagement, and depression and in extreme cases, client, project failures and job losses, and even burnout!

    Why do people procrastinate?

    • The need for security and self-protection is the key root causes of procrastination

    Procrastination is most often a self-protection strategy, a way of defending ourselves, rooted in fears that result in anxieties around feeling unsafe, vulnerable, and being judged or punished, especially in times of uncertainty, unpredictability, uncontrollability, and when feeling overwhelmed.

    In most organizational contexts, procrastinators are likely to respond be risk-averse by:

    • Being apprehensive and even withdrawing energetically (dis-engaging) from people as well as from the creative conversation, coupled with a lack of commitment to the change process or towards achieving the agreed goal (lacking conviction and being worried about the future).
    • Not showing up and spending a lot of time and energy zigzagging around and away from what they feel is consuming them or making them feel threatened or uncomfortable (avoidance).
    • Blaming external people and factors for not “allowing” them to participate or succeed (time, workload, culture, or environment).
    • Denying that achieving the goal really matters, bringing up excuses, and reasonable reasons about why having the goal doesn’t really matter to them, as well as a willingness to take risks (non-committal).
    • Being fearful of the future, dreading what might be the range of possible negative and overwhelming events and situations (pessimism).

    What are the key signals of an effective procrastinator?

    The first step in noticing the key signals is to tune into our own, and peoples’ effective avoidance default pattern as to what is really going on from a systemic perspective.

    By paying deep attention, and being non -judgmental and non evaluative to the range of signals outlined as follows:

    Behavior Signals

    • “Playing it safe” or “being nice” by being unwilling to challenge and be challenged.
    • Resisting any change efforts, disengaging, and being reluctant to disclose and share authentically what is really going on for them.
    • Unwillingness to take risks.
    • Shying away from engaging with their partners, families, colleagues, group activities, and from having candid conversations.
    • Being overtly indecisive and non-committal.

    Neurological State Signals

    • Increased anxiety and “attention deficit” syndrome.
    • Low motivation and self-confidence.
    • Diminished ability to self-regulate and self-control.
    • Diminished self-efficacy and self-concept.
    • Onslaught of the creeping doubts and the imposter syndrome.

    Extrinsic or Environmental Signals Occur When Fearful of Perception of Others

    • Performing poorly, making mistakes, or failing.
    • Fearful of doing too well, or in being too successful.
    • Losing control, status, or role.
    • Looking stupid, or being disapproved of.
    • Avoids conflict situations.

    Fear of Success Signals

    Some of us are unconsciously afraid of success, because irrationally we secretly believe that we are not worthy of it and don’t deserve it, and then self-sabotage our chances of success!

    • Being shy, introverted, and uncomfortable in the spotlight.
    • Being publicly successful brings social or emotional isolation.
    • Alienating peers as a result of achievement.
    • People may think you’re self-promoting.
    • Being perceived as a “tall poppy”.
    • Believing that success may not be all it’s cracked up to be, and that it might change you, but not for the better.

    Fear of Failure Signals

    Some people’s motivation to avoid failure often exceeds their motivation to succeed, which can cause them to unconsciously sabotage their chances of success.

    • Cognitive biases or irrational beliefs act as filters distorting reality.
    • Past pains felt from being vulnerable, abandoned, punished, blamed, or shamed in front of others, or of being disapproved of, envied, rejected, or disliked by others.
    • Fearful of looking “bad” or incompetent, in front of others.
    • Feeling threatened, a sense of danger or potential punishment, causing them to move away (freeze, fight, take flight) from confronting dangerous, painful situations as threatening.

    Overcoming Procrastination Tips 

    • Co-create a safe, compassionate, and collaborative relationship

    As most people find safety in procrastination at some point in time, to be an effective leader, manager, or coach in these situations, it’s important to be empathic and compassionate and “work with” where they may be coming from in terms of underlying self-beliefs:

    • “I don’t want to get hurt”.
    • “I don’t want to expose myself to risk”.

    As well as respond constructively to their thoughts about how others may see them including:

    • Lacking confidence,
    • Hesitant.

    Noticing how they may perceive themselves:

    • “I am nowhere near as good as I should be”.
    • “I am inadequate.”

    Then by paying deep attention, and being intentional in co-creating a safe creative, and collaborative conversation that builds safety, permission, rapport, and trust by being:

    • Gentle and non-threatening, being both kind and courageous,
    • Aware of being both too direct, fast, and too laid back.
    • Providing gentle guiding, assurance, and lots of patience.
    • Focused on encouraging engagement, commitment, and confidence towards setting and achieving the desired outcome.

    Ultimately enabling and equipping people to overcome procrastination creates openings and thresholds for learning and growth, to become the best person, to themselves and others, they can possibly be, and achieve the changes they wish to make in the world.

    Find out about The Coach for Innovators Certified Program, a collaborative, intimate, and deep personalized innovation coaching and learning program, supported by a global group of peers over 8-weeks, starting May 2022. It is a blended learning program that will give you a deep understanding of the language, principles, and applications of a human-centered approach to innovation, within your unique context. Find out more.

    Contact us now at mailto:janet@imaginenation.com.au to find out how we can partner with you to learn, adapt, and grow your business, team and organisation through disruption.

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    Invest Yourself in All That You Do

    Invest Yourself in Everything You Do

    GUEST POST from Douglas Ferguson

    Diversity of thought and diversity of perspective is crucial to innovative solutions within teams. Building a work culture around diversity and inclusion is proven to provide performance rates that outshine the competition.

    “If everybody is thinking alike, then somebody isn’t thinking.” — General George S. Patton Jr

    The market environment that we find ourselves in is ever-changing, especially when we look at ideating and problem-solving in a remote or hybrid landscape. Being acutely aware that not only do you have a diverse workforce but that there are measures in place to promote psychological safety within that diverse pool of ideas and emotions will lead to a transformation from complex problem solving, into simple and often beautiful solutions. The critical fact here is that we must always be exploring ways to unleash everyone in order to promote true idea-sharing.

    Matthew Reynolds, a dear friend, and peaceful warrior built a Diversity and Inclusion Consultancy inspired by finding a sense of belonging within the industry. By exploring how to shift the consciousness of humanity we begin to open the door to whom we think we are, we begin to discover our authentic self, and with that knowledge, we can shift our consciences to a more inclusive mindset. To hear more on Crafting Your Equity Lens, listen in on the Control the Room Podcast with Matthew.

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    When we listen to ideas, like the one Matthew presents, and we take a moment to look inward, we begin to make important shifts within ourselves that have an outward effect. As John Coltrane says, “Invest yourself in everything you do. There is fun in being serious.” When you brake that down, and truly invest in shifting your perspective to one that embraces diversity and inclusion there is a natural shift into building a psychologically safe foundation for your community. When that is achieved, there is much and more fun to be had! Every voice being heard and appreciated means new ideas, and it means more effective problem-solving.

    We hold diversity, equity, and inclusion very close here at Voltage Control as one of our core values and we invite you and your community to do the same.

    Image credit: Pixabay, unknown

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