Tag Archives: Business Transformation

The Five Gifts of Uncertainty

The Five Gifts of Uncertainty

GUEST POST from Robyn Bolton

“How are you doing?  How are you handling all this?”

It seems like 90% of conversations these days start with those two sentences.  We ask out of genuine concern and also out of a need to commiserate, to share our experiences, and to find someone that understands.

The connection these questions create is just one of the Gifts of Uncertainty that have been given to us by the pandemic.

Yes, I know that the idea of uncertainty, especially in big things like our lives and businesses, being a gift is bizarre.  When one of my friends first suggested the idea, I rolled my eyes pretty hard and then checked to make sure I was talk to my smart sarcastic fellow business owner and not the Dali Lama.

But as I thought about it more, started looking for “gifts” in the news and listening for them in conversations with friends and clients, I realized how wise my friend truly was.

Faced with levels of uncertainty we’ve never before experienced, people and businesses are doing things they’ve never imagined having to do and, as a result, are discovering skills and abilities they never knew they had.  These are the Five Gifts of Uncertainty

  1. Necessity of offering a vision – When we’re facing or doing something new, we don’t have all the answers. But we don’t need all the answers to take action.  The people emerging as leaders, in both the political and business realms, are the ones acknowledging this reality by sharing what they do know, offering a vision for the future, laying out a process to achieve it, and admitting the unknowns and the variables that will affect both the plan and the outcome.
  2. Freedom to experiment – As governments ordered businesses like restaurants to close and social distancing made it nearly impossible for other businesses to continue operating, business owners were suddenly faced with a tough choice – stop operations completely or find new ways to continue to serve. Restaurants began to offer carry out and delivery.  Bookstores, like Powell’s in Portland OR and Northshire Bookstore in Manchester VT, also got into curbside pick-up and delivery game.  Even dentists and orthodontists began to offer virtual visits through services like Wally Health and Orthodontic Screening Kit, respectively.
  3. Ability to change – Businesses are discovering that they can move quickly, change rapidly, and use existing capabilities to produce entirely new products. Nike and HP are producing face shields. Zara and Prada are producing face masks. Fanatics, makers of MLB uniforms, and Ford are producing gowns.  GM and Dyson are gearing up to produce ventilators. And seemingly every alcohol company is making hand sanitizer.  Months ago, all of these companies were in very different businesses and likely never imagined that they could or would pivot to producing products for the healthcare sector.  But they did pivot.
  4. Power of Relationships – Social distancing and self-isolation are bringing into sharp relief the importance of human connection and the power of relationships. The shift to virtual meetups like happy hours, coffees, and lunches is causing us to be thoughtful about who we spend time with rather than defaulting to whoever is nearby.  We are shifting to seeking connection with others rather than simply racking up as many LinkedIn Connections, Facebook friends, or Instagram followers as possible.  Even companies are realizing the powerful difference between relationships and subscribers as people unsubscribed en mass to the “How we’re dealing with COVID-19 emails” they received from every company with which they had ever provided their information.
  5. Business benefit of doing the right thing – In a perfect world, businesses that consistently operate ethically, fairly, and with the best interests of ALL their stakeholders (not just shareholders) in mind, would be rewarded. We are certainly not in a perfect world, but some businesses are doing the “right thing” and rea being rewarded.  Companies like Target are offering high-risk employees like seniors pregnant women, and those with compromised immune systems 30-days of paid leave.  CVS and Comcast are paying store employees extra in the form of one-time bonuses or percent increases on hourly wages.  Sweetgreen and AllBirds are donating food and shoes, respectively, to healthcare workers.  On the other hand, businesses that try to leverage the pandemic to boost their bottom lines are being taken to task.  Rothy’s, the popular shoe brand, announced on April 13 that they would shift one-third of their production capacity to making “disposable, non-medical masks to workers on the front line” and would donate five face masks for every item purchased.  Less than 12 hours later, they issued an apology for their “mis-step,” withdrew their purchase-to-donate program, and announced a bulk donation of 100,000 non-medical masks.

Before the pandemic, many of these things seemed impossibly hard, even theoretical.  In the midst of uncertainty, though, these each of these things became practical, even necessary.  As a result, in a few short weeks, we’ve proven to ourselves that we can do what we spent years saying we could not.

These are gifts to be cherished, remembered and used when the uncertainty, inevitably, fades.

Image credit: Pixabay

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Hyper-Innovation

A Change Management Strategy for Better, Faster Ideas

Hyper-Innovation

GUEST POST from Douglas Ferguson

The nature of innovation is that it is a hyper-fluid force that is never fully predictable. A well-curated change management strategy helps to harness the power of innovative change.

Innovation plays a significant role in driving positive change, as 51% of organizations attribute their success to innovative initiatives, all of whom also experienced an 11% increase in revenue.

In this article, we trace the pathway to innovative change in the following topics:

  • The Plan for Change
  • Designing Strategies for Change
  • An Agile Approach to Transformation
  • Getting Curious About Change

The Plan for Change

In charting a course to bigger and better ideas, a clear change management strategy helps to identify a direct path forward. Creating a thoughtful change management strategy allows you to plan several steps ahead and steer change in your favor.

The most intentional change management strategies focus on proactive change. The following are key elements in creating a proactive path for change:

1. Prepare to Plan

Preparing to create a change management strategy is essentially planning to plan. As you consider the best approach to creating change, take time to map out each step of your strategy. While it may seem more effective to just dive in, remember that intentionality is the name of the game in lasting change.

2. Cultivate Transparency

Many changes are unexpected and unwanted. For this reason, many organizations make the mistake of keeping changes quiet from the rest of the team. However, this type of secrecy can sabotage your organizational transformation.

Make it a point to cultivate a sense of transparency at every level of your organization. By including all parties in your plans for change, you’ll get a head start on driving innovation. When team members feel included in major decisions like a big change, they are more likely to accept and support it going forward.

3. Encourage High Tolerance

Tolerance for change is a muscle that should be exercised. Challenge your team members to fight their resistance to change by sharing the benefits of change. Explaining “what’s in it for me” gives team members a reason to root for change while increasing their tolerance for the unknown.

4. Monitor and Measure 

Just as true change is a long-term endeavor, creating a change management strategy isn’t just a one-time event. Successful strategies for change will never be static, making monitoring and measuring key performance indicators a perpetual part of the change management process.

Design a fluid change management strategy by teaching your team to measure success, monitor potential problems, and resolve issues as efficiently as possible. This way, your strategy for change will evolve according to your needs.

Designing Strategies for Change

A design thinking change management strategy places team members at the heart of a change. This people-first approach to purposeful change lets team leaders curate a strategy with the greatest benefits for all parties involved. At Voltage Control, we explore design thinking as a change management practice to inspire the most innovative ideas, allowing team members to shape new initiatives together.

Apply design thinking to your change management strategy in the following ways:

1. Find the ‘What’ of Change

Design thinking facilitates purposeful change. Shape your change management strategy by determining the “what” of your change to inform your path to the most viable and innovative solutions.

2. Center Empathy

Successful changes tap into our emotions. Design thinking cuts to the heart of a change by prioritizing empathy from the very beginning. Harness empathy in your next change by considering your team members’ mindsets and perspectives before implementing change. Continue to research how all participants will be impacted by a change as you incorporate empathy into your change strategy.

3. Use Divergent Thinking

Employ divergent thinking in your change management strategy. Through a design-centered approach, shape a plan for change that encourages collaborative thinking, integrated innovation, and holistic decision-making.

4. Practice Constant Experimentation

Experimentation is the beating heart of design thinking. Make the strategizing process more tangible by testing new ideas and running experiments to see what works. By testing an idea on a small scale, you’ll be able to make the necessary changes to help shape your initiative for real change.

An Agile Approach to Transformation

An agile approach to change management zeroes in on a faster, more urgent need for transformation. Agile principles offer a valid framework for transformation. Agile is tailor-made for systemic problem-solving, allowing team members to find the most groundbreaking solutions to the most persistent problem.

According to Carie Davis, a corporate innovation specialist, inventing new methods for problem-solving is the key to driving innovative change. Regardless of how powerful an initial initiative is, lasting change won’t take hold until it truly transforms an organization. For this reason, Davis suggests that businesses initiate long-term shifts by starting small and by making little changes at the core of the company. These smaller changes are a key part of Agile change management strategy and are instrumental in catalyzing lasting transformation.

Consider applying agile methodology to your change strategy in the following ways:

1. Go Lean

  • Focus on a change strategy that provides increased value and positive change. Going lean allows for rapid transformation by limiting factors that waste resources, energy, and time.

2. Practice Continuous Improvement

  • Agile champions continuous improvement through small changes over time. These small changes lead to the most significant shifts.

3. Encourage Employee Authorship

  • Innovative change doesn’t happen with a top-down approach. Create an agile-informed change management strategy by bringing your employees into the decision-making process. This way, all team members can determine the most pressing areas for improvement and make meaningful contributions as they work together to co-create the next change.
  • 4. Practice Reflective Improvement 

  • In shaping a change management strategy to grow with your organization, practicing reflective improvement guarantees consistent long-term change. Regularly evaluate your organization’s performance and initiatives as you continue to shape your change management strategy into a better, leaner plan.
  • Getting Curious About Change

    In designing the most innovative change management strategy, don’t forget to consider a sense of curiosity. Thrive through change and drive innovation by cultivating a curious desire to be better than ever.

    Research shows that curiosity allows us to welcome new experiences with less defensiveness and aggressiveness. By responding to the unknown in uniquely positive and inquisitive ways, your teams can dream up the most imaginative solutions on their path to lasting change.

    In addition to helping teams accept change, facilitating a sense of curiosity is an essential component in designing an innovative workplace. In creating a culture of curiosity, you’ll encourage team members to become change agents themselves. With a desire to learn more, be more, and do more, you’ll be able to reframe the potential pitfalls of change and the fears that come with it as an opportunity to get better and better.

    Innovation and change are infinitely interconnected. Harness the power of both by designing a change management strategy that continues to transform your organization in the best ways possible. Explore our offerings to learn more about taking change management to the next level.

    Image credit: Pixabay

    Article first seen at VoltageControl.com 

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    Getting Through Grief Consciously

    Getting Through Grief Consciously

    GUEST POST from Tullio Siragusa

    Life brings opportunities, happiness, and skyrocketing success when we decide to live it fully and without fear. Along with that, we will face challenging times that will cause us to grieve.

    Globally, we are all facing a form of grief right now. Be it the loss of a loved one to Covid-19, or the loss of our free way of life — grief is all around us. Before this pandemic that we are experiencing collectively, you may have suffered the loss of loved ones for other reasons, or you may have gone through a divorce, a breakup, the loss of a friendship, or the loss of a pet.

    There are many forms of loss. You can experience loss of money, your job, reputation, your faith, health, and even loss of hope.

    “Loss is a normal part of life and grief is part of the healing process if we learn to face it with grace.”

    To get through grief with grace it’s ideal to face it with the help of others, but for the most part you have to get through it alone. We are privileged to have family, friends, spiritual direction, therapists, life coaches and other support groups around us, but healing grief is essentially between you and yourself.

    “In time of grief you need to embrace yourself, love yourself and cure yourself.”

    It is easier said than done, but there is truly no other way around grief than to face it fully on your own, courageously, vulnerability and with grace.

    Importance of Grace

    We all, at some point in our lives, have felt as if we reached our breaking point, but eventually we wake up to the desire to not be broken for rest of our lives. For instance, while going through hard times we are not always acting our best selves. Harsh words are often exchanged with others out of the need to “dump the pain” on someone else to feel some sense of relief. After doing that, we often feel guilty about it and apologize.

    It is not bad to apologize, but losing your temper and saying things you normally would not say can not only tarnish your image, but can scar someone badly enough that you lose their trust for a long time, and sometimes forever.

    “When you manage your emotions while grieving, you hold on to grace, and grace is the energy of mercy for yourself and others.”

    Our personality gets groomed with every pain we overcome. If we walk through life’s journey with a mindset that everything happens for a reason, and everything happens to teach us something new, then every challenging time becomes an opportunity to add strong positive and graceful traits to our personality.

    The people who learn to manage their emotions during the toughest times without falling apart, add an unprecedented trait of composure, grace and an emotionally intelligent personality.

    How to Get Through Grief with Grace

    First, you need to fully acknowledge that grief is normal. It is not a disease. It is not a sign of weakness, or lack of emotional intelligence.

    Our human body and mind is built to respond to situations. When we lose something, or someone precious, grief comes knocking. Trying to avoid that grief is not the right way to get over it. The best way to deal with grief is to embrace it and get through it.

    One of my spiritual teachers used to say: “The only way to get to the other side of hell, is one more step deeper into it, that is where the exit door is waiting for you.”

    “In order to grieve with grace, we need the courage to face loss as normal as anything else we experience in life.”

    I know people who have avoided facing the loss of their loved ones for years, but ultimately, they had to go through it and face it. Grief will come for you no matter what, so why postpone it?

    The foremost thing to handle any tough situation is to develop gratitude for all those blessed situations in your life that make it beautiful. No doubt, feeling gratitude while grieving is almost impossible, but if you develop a habit of being grateful on a daily basis, it becomes possible to feel it even during tough times.

    If you are going through grief, find a peaceful place away from all those people reminding you of the loss, and try to connect to any happy moment you can recall. Feel that moment in your heart. Hold on to that feeling as long as possible and write it down later.

    Whenever you feel broken, be mindful of such moments. You will soon be able to tap to a comparatively happy person inside you, anytime you need to.

    “The way to develop your grace muscle is to live daily with gratitude and make a mental library of the happy moments in your life that you can borrow against, during difficult times.”

    We have been living in a time in history void of pain. We are constantly seeking happiness and running from pain and suffering. Now we are being forced to face pain, suffering, uncertainty, and loss.

    There are blessings inherent within loss and suffering. The blessings are always revealed on the other side of grief, and it is always hard to believe that the blessing is happening amidst grief and pain. However, if you look back in your life at the moments that defined you, the moments when you experienced the most Light, the most blessings — it was soon after your darkest hours.

    “When we move through the process of grief believing in our ability to grow from the experience, we become more aware of the blessings in disguise that will come out of it.”

    A sense of serenity can be achieved through releasing the pressure of the expectations of a set pattern for your life. There comes a moment when it is better to embrace what you can’t change, and develop the courage to strive for what you can.

    “Acknowledging your capacities and the difference between what you can and what you can’t control, will make it easier to go through grief.”

    What I am talking about is the power of surrendering to what is, instead of holding on to what could have been. For most people, grace is among the most precious trait of their personality and behavior.

    If you have lost something or someone precious that is an irreparable loss, it is important to take care of yourself during those testing times. Remember that all chaos comes with an expiration date, and to surrender to the change you need to make to keep moving forward.

    Remember the blessings in your life, be grateful for what is, has been, and will be, and be patient with yourself.

    NOTE: For all those who have lost loved ones during the Covid-19 pandemic and have not been able to properly say goodbye, I wish that their memory be a blessing in your life.

    Image credit: Pexels

    Originally published at tulliosiragusa.com on April 27, 2020

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    True Leaders Inspire Freedom

    True Leaders Inspire Freedom

    GUEST POST from Tullio Siragusa

    A baby elephant was tied to a pole at the zoo. For years she tried to break free tugging at the pole by the rope tied around her neck.

    She tried and tried and could never break free.

    Many years later, she grew to be a very big and powerful elephant. She was still tied to the same pole. She could break free of her bondage so easily now that she had become a big elephant, but her mind conditioning will not allow her. She doesn’t even try.

    Much like the elephant in this story, we have been conditioned for a very long time in a work culture that is based on commands and controls. A work culture supported by an education system that was developed for the assembly line, industrial revolution. An educational system that subtly teaches subservience.

    From a society’s viewpoint, we have also been part of a narrative for thousands of years that encourages self-sacrifice, for the greater good, which is contrary to our nature as human beings.

    Do we have a lot stacked up against us, or do we just have the baby elephant syndrome, and think we can’t break free?

    I was in Russia three years ago. Specifically, in Siberia Russia where I met with Tomsk State University students to talk about freedom-based cultures. We talked about shared authority, self-managed teams, equivalence, and leaders versus bosses.

    These young men and women were curious, and open, and had many questions. I had just finished talking about the sense of duplicity that is predominant in many people’s lives today.

    Having to be one way at the office, and another at home. We talked about how duplicity causes stress, and worse how it does not foster trust among people because it does not encourage authenticity.

    Are you the same person at the office, as you are at home? Does your work environment dictate what you should wear at the office? Do you have to show up and leave at a certain time? Do you have to do things you don’t care to do, just to please your boss? Do you compete with your peers, or work as a team? Are you free to speak your mind and offer up suggestions for company improvements?

    Today’s work environment based on command and controls, does not foster innovation, or creativity. Today’s work environment demands conformity.

    “Today’s work environment wants you to stay a baby elephant for the rest of your life.”

    Freedom Cultures

    I went on to explain how leaders earn followers because they are willing to serve, and they are willing to be of service.

    What’s the difference between serving and being of service?

    You can get paid to serve but being of service is a state of being that cannot be purchased. You enjoy being of service because it is part of who you are at your core.

    “True authentic leaders are of service, because they desire to serve — it is a calling.”

    The difference between a boss and a leader is that of control vs. freedom. One requires you conform to how things are done, the other encourages you to find better ways to do things, to create, to innovate, and to do things on your terms.

    Why would companies not embrace freedom?

    Fear is the main reason. The other reason is that much like the elephant they just accept things for how they have been, instead of how things could be.

    Some of the questions and comments these young men and women asked me were:

    • How do you make the change from a command and control to freedom-based company?
    • How can companies adopt this in countries that don’t encourage free societies?
    • This is one of those big, change the world ideas, how can it be implemented?

    The questions left me feeling a sense of hope and excitement that these university students saw the value of what was being presented and started to wonder about how to implement it.

    I answered every question truthfully and made myself available for follow up with any of the students. The comment made about “changing the world” stood out for me.

    I looked at the young man in the eyes and said to him: “It is someone like you, who will start a company, become the leader of one, and remember this presentation, that will make the change.

    Then one of your people will do the same, and the trickled down effect of that will change a society, a country, and the world.”

    Some of us are on a mission to start this change, to spark it, to inspire it, with a Radical Purpose Movement to help organizations embrace freedom and equivalence.

    My personal mission and responsibility, as the author of the upcoming book “Emotionally Aware Leadership” is to stop the spread of a worldwide epidemic that fosters co-dependency and keeps us in a mind-set prison of not being able to break free of controls.

    “The most pervasive disease that plagues all of humanity is low self-worth.”

    True leaders operate from a high level of self-worth that is inner directed, not based on external outcomes, or input. Those leaders encourage others to believe in themselves and to grow.

    Want to change the world?

    You must break free of the limiting mindset conditioning. You can’t be a giant elephant and act like you are still a baby tied to a pole. More importantly as a leader you want to inspire freedom in your organization, at home, and in the world.

    Freedom is synonyms with happiness.

    Tomsk State University presentation about freedom-centered cultures:

    Image credit: Pexels

    Originally published at tulliosiragusa.com on April 29, 2019

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    Voting Closed for the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022

    Voting Closed for the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022CLICK HERE TO SEE WHO HAS BEEN NOMINATED

    For more than a decade I’ve devoted myself to making innovation insights accessible for the greater good, because I truly believe that the better our organizations get at delivering value to their stakeholders the less waste of natural resources and human resources there will be.

    As a result, we are eternally grateful to all of you out there who take the time to create and share great innovation articles, presentations, white papers, and videos with Braden Kelley and the Human-Centered Change and Innovation team. As a small thank you to those of you who follow along, we like to make a list of the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers available each year!

    CLICK HERE TO SEE WHO HAS BEEN NOMINATED

    Our lists from the ten previous years have been tremendously popular, including:

    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2015
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2016
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2017
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2018
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2019
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2020
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2021

    Do you just have someone that you like to read that writes about innovation, or some of the important adjacencies – trends, consumer psychology, change, leadership, strategy, behavioral economics, collaboration, or design thinking?

    Human-Centered Change and Innovation is now looking to recognize the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022.

    It is time to vote and help us narrow things down.

    The deadline for submitting votes is December 31, 2022 at midnight GMT.

    CLICK HERE TO SEE WHO HAS BEEN NOMINATED

    Build a Common Language of Innovation on your team

    The ranking will be done by me with influence from votes and nominations. The quality and quantity of contributions to this web site by an author will be a BIG contributing factor (through the end of the voting period).

    You can vote in any of these three ways (and each earns points for them, so please feel free to vote all three ways):

    1. Sending us the name of the blogger by @reply on twitter to @innovate
    2. Adding the name of the blogger as a comment to this article’s posting on Facebook
    3. Adding the name of the blogger as a comment to this article’s posting on our Linkedin Page (Be sure and follow us)

    The official Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022 will then be announced here in early January 2023.

    CLICK HERE TO SEE WHO HAS BEEN NOMINATED

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    Why is it important to innovate in 2023?

    Why is it important to innovate in 2023?

    GUEST POST from Janet Sernack

    At ImagineNation™ we have just celebrated 10 years as a global innovation consultancy, learning, and coaching company. During this time, we’ve identified some of the common patterns that people demonstrate as a result of feeling uncomfortable, frozen, inert, stubborn, and confused and as a result, are resistant to innovation. Where many organizations, teams, and leaders appear to walk backward as if they are sleepwalking through this time in their lives.

    At the same time, we know that innovation is transformational, and why, at this moment in time, it is more important than ever to create, invent and innovate. We also know that is crucial to be better balanced, resilient, and adaptive to grow and flow, survive and thrive, in today’s chaotic BANI environment. We also know exactly what transformative innovation involves, and how to enable and equip people to connect and collaborate in new ways to effect constructive and sustainable change in a world of unknowns.

    Innovation is, in fact, the water of life!

    Shaping the next normal

    According to a recent article by McKinsey and Co “The future is not what it used to be: Thoughts on the shape of the next normal” the coronavirus crisis is a “world-changing event” which is forcing both the pace and scale of workplace innovation.

    Stating that businesses are forced to do more with less and that many are finding better, simpler, less expensive, and faster ways to operate.  Describing how innovative health systems, through necessity, constraints, and adversity have exploited this moment in time, to innovate:

    “The urgency of addressing COVID-19 has also led to innovations in biotech, vaccine development, and the regulatory regimes that govern drug development so that treatments can be approved and tried faster. In many countries, health systems have been hard to reform; this crisis has made the difficulty much easier to achieve. The result should be a more resilient, responsive, and effective health system”.

    We all know that it is impossible to know what will happen in the future and yet, that it is possible to consider and learn from the lessons of the past, both distant and recent.  On that basis, it’s crucial to take time out, be hopeful, and positive, and think optimistically about the future. To be proactive and innovate to shape the kind of future we all wish to have, through making constructive and sustainable changes, that ultimately contribute to the common good.

    Strategically deciding to innovate

    Strategically deciding to innovate, is the first, mandatory, powerful, and impactful lever organizations, teams, leaders, and individuals can pull to effect constructive and sustainable change that enables people to execute and deliver real benefits:

    • Deal with, and find solutions to a world full of complex and competing social, civic, and political problems that are hard to solve and aren’t going away.
    • Better adapt, respond to, and be agile in fast-changing circumstances, uncertainty, instability, and to random and unexpected Black Swan events, like the global Covid-19 Pandemic and the Russian-Ukraine war.
    • Become human-centric to help people recover and manage their transition through the challenges of the global pandemic and enable them to exploit the range of accelerating technological advances in the digital age.
    • Develop corporate responsibility, sustainability, diversity, and inclusion strategies that are practical and can work and really deliver on their promises.
    • Compete by applying and experimenting with lean and agile start-up methodologies and take advantage of the opportunities and possibilities of the global entrepreneurship movement’s new models for leadership, collaboration, and experimentation.
    • Align to the range of changing workplace dynamics and trends, resulting from the pandemic, including WFH, the “soft resignation” and the demands of a hybrid workplace.
    • Shift individual, group, and collective consciousness towards collaboration and experimentation in ways that rebuild the trust that has been lost through incompetence, corruption, greed, and dishonesty.
    • Respond creatively to meet the increasingly diverse range of customer expectations and choices being made around value.

    Important to innovate – three elements

    To take advantage of living in a globalized world, where we are interconnected through technologies and values and where we have an interrelated structure of reality, we can:

    • Accept that innovation-led adaptation and growth are absolutely critical and develop targets and a willingness to invest in new scalable business models, achieve fast and effective developments, and launch processes to reflect these.
    • Invest in a coherent, time-risk balanced portfolio of initiatives and provide the resources to deliver them, at scale, strategically, to innovate to the right market, at the right price, at the right time, and through the most effective channels.
    • Adopt an ecosystem approach to adapt and grow by creating and capitalizing on both internal and external networks, and stakeholder management through developing workforce ecosystems – a structure that consists of interdependent actors, from within the organization and beyond, working to pursue both individual and collective goals.

    Problem-solving, cultural change, and improving people’s lives

    It is more important than ever to make innovation transformational, so that it delivers constructive, ethical, and sustainable change, by building on three critical successful abilities:

    1. Seeing and sensing the real systemic problem or breakthrough opportunity:
    • What problem are we solving? And is there a customer who wants to pay to have that problem solved?
    • What problem are we solving for the customer? Who needs this?
    • What are the possibilities and opportunities available to us? And is there a customer who wants to pay to have this opportunity realized?
    • What are some of our strengths? What are some of the things we are doing well that we can build upon or exploit?
    1. Shifting the culture:
    • Where are we today? Where do we want to be in the future?
    • What are our prevailing mindsets? How can we measure and contextualize their impact? What mindsets might we embrace to adapt and grow in an uncertain world?
    • How ready and receptive are we to really embrace change?
    • What do we need to unlearn and relearn to ensure our people are open-minded, hearted, and willed to embody and enact the desired change?
    • How engaged and passionate are our people in problem-solving?
    • How might we harness our people’s collective intelligence to solve problems and realize opportunities?
    1. Aligning technologies, processes, artifacts, and behaviors as a holistic system:
    • What is our appetite for risk? How do we define risk in our context?
    • What type of innovation do we strategically want to plan for and engage in?
    • What old legacy technologies no longer serve your needs? What new technologies might you be willing to invest in for the future?
    • What disciplines are in place to ensure that people have a common understanding of the key processes and comply with managing them?
    • How are we ensuring that everyone is motivated and skilled to innovate?
    • How are we ensuring that people are acknowledged, rewarded, and organized to repeatedly innovate?
    • What are the key mindsets and behaviours that enable and equip people to embody and embrace repeatedly innovate and design solutions with the end customer in mind?

    Become an adaptive and resilient difference maker

    As many of us are aware, Toys R Us and Blockbuster were huge companies, that enjoyed massive success; however, this was all brought to an end due to their failure to innovate.

    We can all avoid this fate by choosing to innovate and create constructive and sustainable change through:

    • Accepting and acknowledging that to survive and thrive in a BANI world, where necessity is still the mother of all invention, and the urgency to do this is more important than ever.
    • Identifying, understanding, and dealing with our own resistance to innovation, safely and proactively, and transforming resistance into resilience, to be adaptive and safely innovate.
    • Understanding where we are today and then assessing the gap to what we want to be in the future, and mitigating the risks of both closing the gap and leaving the gap wide open.
    • Enabling leaders, teams, and individuals to connect, explore, discover and navigate new ways of approaching and delivering commercially viable, value-adding, constructive and sustainable change, and outcomes.
    • Leveraging innovation to transform an organization, a business, the way people lead and team, to improve the quality of people’s lives in ways they appreciate and cherish.

    “In order to transcend mere adequacy and make a mark of creative transcendence on the world, organizations need to stop walking backward, following a trail that has already been blazed. The motto of the British Special Air Service is, “Who dares, wins.” It is time for businesses to be bold, inspired, and look to the horizon. The next great innovation is out there. Will you have the guts to create it?”

    Will you make a fundamental choice to innovate?

    According to McKinsey and Co “The point is that where the world lands is a matter of choice – of countless decisions to be made by individuals, companies, governments, and institutions”.

    Will you make a fundamental choice to use the current crisis to lead to a burst of innovation, productivity, resilience, and exploration in 2023, to take advantage of our connected world to create the constructive and sustainable changes we all want to have?

    Or will you continue walking backward and sleepwalking through life, and fail to take advantage of this moment in time, to innovate, and continue life with the same thinking that is causing the current range of results, that many of us don’t want to have?

    Find out more about our work at ImagineNation™

    Find out about our collective, learning products and tools, including The Coach for Innovators, Leaders, and Teams Certified Program, presented by Janet Sernack, is a collaborative, intimate, and deeply personalized innovation coaching and learning program, supported by a global group of peers over 9-weeks, starting Tuesday, February 7, 2023.

    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 innovation context. Find out more about our products and tools

    Image Credit: Unsplash

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    Voting Closed – Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022

    Vote for Top 40 Innovation BloggersFor more than a decade I’ve devoted myself to making innovation insights accessible for the greater good, because I truly believe that the better our organizations get at delivering value to their stakeholders the less waste of natural resources and human resources there will be.

    As a result, we are eternally grateful to all of you out there who take the time to create and share great innovation articles, presentations, white papers, and videos with Braden Kelley and the Human-Centered Change and Innovation team. As a small thank you to those of you who follow along, we like to make a list of the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers available each year!

    Our lists from the ten previous years have been tremendously popular, including:

    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2015
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2016
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2017
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2018
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2019
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2020
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2021

    Do you just have someone that you like to read that writes about innovation, or some of the important adjacencies – trends, consumer psychology, change, leadership, strategy, behavioral economics, collaboration, or design thinking?

    Human-Centered Change and Innovation is now looking to recognize the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022.

    It is time to vote and help us narrow things down.

    The deadline for submitting votes is December 31, 2022 at midnight GMT.

    Build a Common Language of Innovation on your team

    The ranking will be done by me with influence from votes and nominations. The quality and quantity of contributions to this web site by an author will be a BIG contributing factor (through the end of the voting period).

    You can vote in any of these three ways (and each earns points for them, so please feel free to vote all three ways):

    1. Sending us the name of the blogger by @reply on twitter to @innovate
    2. Adding the name of the blogger as a comment to this article’s posting on Facebook
    3. Adding the name of the blogger as a comment to this article’s posting on our Linkedin Page (Be sure and follow us)

    The official Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022 will then be announced here in early January 2023.

    Here are the people who received nominations this year along with some carryover recommendations (in alphabetical order):

    Adi Gaskell – @adigaskell
    Alain Thys
    Alex Goryachev
    Andy Heikkila – @AndyO_TheHammer
    Annette Franz
    Arlen Meyers – @sopeofficial
    Art Inteligencia
    Braden Kelley – @innovate
    Brian Miller
    Bruce Fairley
    Chad McAllister – @ChadMcAllister
    Chris Beswick
    Chris Rollins
    Dr. Detlef Reis
    Dainora Jociute
    Dan Blacharski – @Dan_Blacharski
    Daniel Burrus – @DanielBurrus
    Daniel Lock
    David Burkus
    Dean and Linda Anderson
    Diana Porumboiu
    Douglas Ferguson
    Drew Boyd – @DrewBoyd
    Farnham Street
    Frank Mattes – @FrankMattes
    Geoffrey A Moore
    Gregg Fraley – @greggfraley
    Greg Satell – @Digitaltonto
    Helen Yu
    Howard Tiersky
    Janet Sernack – @JanetSernack
    Jeffrey Baumgartner – @creativejeffrey
    Jeff Freedman – @SmallArmyAgency
    Jeffrey Phillips – @ovoinnovation
    Jesse Nieminen – @nieminenjesse
    John Bessant
    Jorge Barba – @JorgeBarba
    Julian Birkinshaw – @JBirkinshaw
    Julie Anixter – @julieanixter
    Kate Hammer – @Kate_Hammer
    Kevin McFarthing – @InnovationFixer
    Lou Killeffer – @LKilleffer
    Manuel Berdoy

    Accelerate your change and transformation success

    Mari Anixter- @MariAnixter
    Maria Paula Oliveira – @mpaulaoliveira
    Matthew E May – @MatthewEMay
    Michael Graber – @SouthernGrowth
    Mike Brown – @Brainzooming
    Mike Shipulski – @MikeShipulski
    Mukesh Gupta
    Nick Partridge – @KnewNewNeu
    Nicolas Bry – @NicoBry
    Nicholas Longrich
    Norbert Majerus and George Taninecz
    Pamela Soin
    Patricia Salamone
    Paul Hobcraft – @Paul4innovating
    Paul Sloane – @paulsloane
    Pete Foley – @foley_pete
    Ralph Christian Ohr – @ralph_ohr
    Randy Pennington
    Richard Haasnoot – @Innovate2Grow
    Robert B Tucker – @RobertBTucker
    Robyn Bolton – @rm_bolton
    Saul Kaplan – @skap5
    Shep Hyken – @hyken
    Shilpi Kumar
    Scott Anthony – @ScottDAnthony
    Scott Bowden – @scottbowden51
    Shelly Greenway – @ChiefDistiller
    Soren Kaplan – @SorenKaplan
    Stefan Lindegaard – @Lindegaard
    Stephen Shapiro – @stephenshapiro
    Steve Blank
    Steven Forth – @StevenForth
    Tamara Kleinberg – @LaunchStreet
    Teresa Spangler – @composerspang
    Tim Stroh
    Tom Koulopoulos – @TKspeaks
    Tom Stafford
    Yoram Solomon – @yoram

    Subscribe to Human-Centered Change & Innovation WeeklySign up here to get Human-Centered Change & Innovation Weekly delivered to your inbox every week.

    We’re curious to see who you think is worth reading!

    Nominations Closed for the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022

    Nominations Closed for the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022Human-Centered Change and Innovation loves making innovation insights accessible for the greater good, because we truly believe that the better our organizations get at delivering value to their stakeholders the less waste of natural resources and human resources there will be.

    As a result, we are eternally grateful to all of you out there who take the time to create and share great innovation articles, presentations, white papers, and videos with Braden Kelley and the Human-Centered Change and Innovation team. As a small thank you to those of you who follow along, we like to make a list of the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers available each year!

    Nominations are now closed.

    Our lists from the ten previous years have been tremendously popular, including:

    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2015
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2016
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2017
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2018
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2019
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2020
    Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2021

    Do you just have someone that you like to read that writes about innovation, or some of the important adjacencies – trends, consumer psychology, change, leadership, strategy, behavioral economics, collaboration, or design thinking?

    Human-Centered Change and Innovation is now looking for the Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022.

    The deadline for submitting nominations is December 24, 2022 at midnight GMT.

    Nominations are now closed, but people were able to submit a nomination in either of these two ways:

    1. Sending us the name of the blogger and the url of their blog by @reply on twitter to @innovate
    2. Sending the name of the blogger and the url of their blog and your e-mail address using our contact form

    (Note: HUGE bonus points for being a contributing author)

    So, think about who you like to read and let us know by midnight GMT on December 24, 2022.

    We will then compile a voting list of all the nominations, and publish it on December 25, 2022.

    Voting will then be open from December 25, 2022 – January 1, 2023 via comments and twitter @replies to @innovate.

    The ranking will be done by me with influence from votes and nominations. The quality and quantity of contributions by an author to this web site will be a contributing factor.

    Contact me with writing samples if you’d like to publish your articles on our platform!

    The official Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2022 will then be announced on here in early January 2023.

    We’re curious to see who you think is worth reading!

    Subscribe to Human-Centered Change & Innovation WeeklySign up here to get Human-Centered Change & Innovation Weekly delivered to your inbox every week.

    Forbidden Truth About Innovation

    Forbidden Truth About Innovation

    GUEST POST from Robyn Bolton

    If you heard it once, you heard it a thousand times:

    • Big companies can’t innovate
    • We need to innovate before we get too big and slow
    • Startups are innovative. Big companies are dinosaurs. They can’t innovate.

    And yet you persevere because you know the truth:

    Big companies CAN innovate.

    They CHOOSE not to.

    Using Innovation to drive growth is a choice.

    Just like choosing to grow through acquisition or expansion into new markets is a choice.

    All those choices are complex, uncertain, and risky. In fact:

    Hold on. The odds of failure are the same!

    All three growth drivers have similar failure rates, but no one says, “Big companies can’t acquire things” or “Big companies can’t expand into new markets.”

    We expect big companies to engage in acquisitions and market expansion.

    Failed acquisitions and market expansions prove us (or at least our expectations) wrong. Because we don’t like being wrong, we study our failures so that we can change, improve, and increase our odds of success next time.

    We expect big companies to fail at innovation.

    In this case, failure proves us right. We love being right, so we shrug and say, “Big companies can’t innovate.”

    We let big companies off the hook.

    Why are our expectations so different?

    Since the dawn of commerce, businesses engaged in innovation, acquisitions, and market expansion. But innovation is different from M&A and market expansion in three fundamental ways:

    1. Innovation is “new” – Even though businesses have engaged in innovation, acquisitions, and market expansion since the very earliest days of commerce, innovation only recently became a topic worthy of discussion, study, and investment. In fact, it wasn’t until the 1960s that Innovation was recognized as worthy of research and deliberate investment.
    2. Innovation starts small – Unlike acquisitions and new markets that can be easily sized and forecasted, in the early days of an innovation, it’s hard to know how big it could be.
    3. Innovation takes time – Innovation doesn’t come with a predictable launch date. Even its possible launch date is usually 3 to 5 years away, unlike acquisition closing dates that are often within a year.

    What can we do about this?

    We can’t change what innovation is (new, small, and slow at the start), but we can change our expectations.

    • Finish the sentence – “Big companies can’t innovate” absolves companies of the responsibility to make a good-faith effort to try to innovate by making their struggles an unavoidable consequence of their size. But it’s not inevitable, and continuing the sentence proves it. Saying “Big companies can’t innovate because…”  forces people to acknowledge the root causes of companies’ innovation struggles. In many ways, this was the great A-HA! of The Innovator’s Dilemma: Big companies can’t innovate because their focus on providing better (and more expensive) solutions to their best customers results in them ceding the low-end of the market and non-consumers to other companies.
    • Be honest – Once you’ve identified the root cause, you can choose to do something different (and get different results) or do everything the same (and get the same results). If you choose to keep doing the same things in the same ways, that’s fine. Own the decision.
    • Change your choice. Change your expectations – If you do choose to do things differently, address the root causes, and resolve the barriers, then walk the talk. Stop expecting innovation to fail and start expecting it to be as successful as your acquisition and market expansion efforts. Stop investing two people and $10 in innovation and start investing the same quantity and quality of resources as you invest and other growth efforts.
    • The first step in change is admitting that change is needed. When we accept that “big companies can’t innovate” simply because they’re big, we absolve them of their responsibility to follow through on proclamations and strategies about the importance of innovation as a strategic driver of growth.

    It’s time to acknowledge that innovation (or lack thereof) is a choice and expect companies to own that choice and act and invest accordingly.

    After all, would it be great to stop persevering and start innovating?

    Image credit: Pixabay

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    Five Key Skills for Chief Transformation Officers

    Five Key Skills for Chief Transformation Officers

    GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

    As digital transformation continues to become more commonplace in the modern business landscape, the role of the Chief Transformation Officer (CTO) has become increasingly important. A CTO is responsible for leading and managing large-scale, enterprise-wide transformation initiatives that typically involve multiple stakeholders, departments, and processes.

    Given the complexity of their role, CTOs must possess a blend of technical and leadership skills in order to be successful. Here are five key skills that every CTO should have:

    1. Strategic Thinking

    The CTO needs to be able to identify and prioritize potential areas of transformation in order to develop a comprehensive and effective transformation plan. This requires a deep understanding of the organization and its goals, as well as the ability to think strategically and plan ahead.

    2. Change Planning, Leadership and Management

    The CTO must be able to effectively lead and manage the transformation process, which includes developing and implementing a plan, managing stakeholders, and ensuring that the transformation is successful. This requires a deep understanding of change planning, leadership, and management principles and processes. Ideally, they should be a certified Human-Centered Change professional, skilled at leveraging the Change Planning Toolkit™.

    3. Cross-Functional Communication

    The CTO must have excellent communication skills in order to effectively communicate the transformation plan and objectives to stakeholders across functional siloes, as well as to ensure that everyone is on the same page throughout the process. The Change Planning Canvas™ is a great tool for getting everyone literally all on the same page for change, and is introduced in Braden Kelley’s best-selling book Charting Change.

    4. Technical Expertise

    The CTO must possess a strong understanding of the technical and operational aspects of the organization in order to develop effective transformation plans and strategies. This may involve a deep understanding of data, analytics, and enterprise systems.

    5. Relationship Building

    The CTO needs to be able to build relationships with stakeholders across the organization in order to ensure that everyone is on board with the transformation plan and objectives. This requires the ability to understand different perspectives and build consensus among stakeholders.

    These five skills are essential for any CTO to be successful in their role. With the right skillset and a strategic approach, a CTO can lead their organization to success and ensure a successful transformation.

    To read more about Chief Transformation Officers, see my other article here:

    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: Pexels

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