Future-Proofing Design for Accessibility

Future-Proofing Design for Accessibility

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

In an era where digital engagement is at the core of our everyday lives, the importance of designing with accessibility in mind has never been more critical. Ensuring that your designs are accessible not only caters to the current user base but also future-proofs them for the evolving needs of a diverse, global population.

Understanding Accessibility

Accessibility is about more than just compliance with laws and guidelines. It’s about creating inclusive environments where everyone, regardless of ability, can participate fully. This approach not only increases market reach but also enriches the user experience for everyone. To learn more about the principles of accessible design, visit our detailed guide on Accessibility Principles.

Case Study: Accessible E-commerce

Case Study: Large Online Retailer

A leading online retailer transformed its platform to be more accessible by integrating features such as screen reader compatibility, keyboard navigation, and customizable text sizes. By doing so, they not only aligned with global accessibility standards but also saw a noteworthy increase in customer satisfaction and sales revenue.

Their journey emphasizes that accessible design does not compromise aesthetics or functionality; instead, it enhances user interaction and experience. For more details on implementing accessibility in digital platforms, see our E-commerce Accessibility Guide.

Case Study: Public Sector Website

Case Study: Government Information Portal

A national government revamped its public information portals to adhere to accessibility standards such as WCAG 2.1. The improvements involved making all content perceivable, operable, and understandable for users with diverse accessibility needs. Post-implementation, there was a significant uptick in user engagement and satisfaction, showing how critical accessible design is to inclusivity and public engagement.

Strategies for Future-Proofing Accessible Design

Future-proofing accessible design requires continuous adaptation and innovation. Here are some strategies to consider:

  • Embrace Emerging Technologies: Integrate AI and machine learning to predict and cater to diverse user needs dynamically.
  • Continuous User Feedback: Regularly gather and implement user feedback to address evolving accessibility demands.
  • Universal Design Principles: Adopt principles that benefit all users, not just those with disabilities.

Building An Inclusive Future

Future-proofing design for accessibility is an ongoing journey. It calls for constant vigilance, empathy, and innovation. By prioritizing accessibility today, we lay the groundwork for a more inclusive tomorrow. Interested in more insights on improving user experiences through accessible design? Check out our section on Enhancing User Experience with Accessibility.

Bottom line: 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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What You Must Know Before Leading a Design Thinking Workshop

What You Need to Know Before Leading a Design Thinking Workshop

GUEST POST from Douglas Ferguson

Leading a design thinking workshop can completely transform your company for the better. According to the 71% of brands that champion design thinking, making a shift to a design-centered mindset will dramatically improve productivity and work ethic amongst your staff.

Are you ready to take your team to the next level?

If you’re ready to take your team to the next level by leading a design thinking workshop, it’s essential to know the basics of design thinking first. Having a deeper understanding of this human-centered approach will make it easier to get your team on board with this process.

In this article we’ll cover the basics of design thinking and the best way to approach leading a workshop for your team with the following topics:

  • What is Design Thinking?
  • A History of Design Methodology
  • The Six Phases of Design Thinking
  • Leading a Design Thinking Workshop

Understanding Design Thinking

Design thinking is a creative problem-solving method that centers on the needs of the end-user, by considering them first when creating products or services. When you authentically understand the wants and needs of the consumer, you can develop successful products and services they value and use to improve their lives.

Ultimately, a design thinking approach helps you understand the experience of the end-user by adopting the end user’s mindset and creating your product or service from this perspective.

A History of Design Thinking

The human-centered design process is an extension of the design thinking methodology. Though scientists, creatives, scholars, analysts, and engineers have studied this methodology for the past several years, the idea to apply a design mindset to problem-solving as a business strategy didn’t exist until the cognitive scientist and Nobel Prize laureate Herbert A. Simon coined the term in 1969. Simon explained the modern idea of design as an applicable way of thinking about business in his book, The Sciences of the Artificial.

Whiteboarding

Since Simon began the conversation about the design thinking methodology, many academic elites and experts have adopted this concept and expanded upon it. Yet one thing remains the same: the user should be at the core of any design process. The human-centered process is an exploration of how to accurately and innovatively create a product or service that satisfies consumers’ wants and needs.

“We must design for the way people behave, not for how we would wish them to behave.” –Donald A. Norman, Living with Complexity

Women with Laptop Pexels

The Six Phases of Design Thinking

Let’s take a look at the six phases of the human-centered design process to learn how to create with purpose as you prepare for leading a design thinking workshop.

1. Observe & Understand Users’ Behavior

The first phase of the design thinking process is to observe and understand the end user’s behavior to learn as much as possible about their needs. This allows you to better understand the people you are designing for as you approach problem-solving from their perspective. Doing so will allow you to deeply empathize with them and identify opportunities to better cater to and address these issues.

By identifying the end user’s behavioral patterns you’ll have a clearer understanding of what your customers enjoy and what they are dissatisfied with. This phase allows for greater innovation as you build trust and connect to your consumers.

Women Collaboration Pexels

2. Ideation

The ideation phase focuses on brainstorming new solutions based on what you learned by observing the end-user. Remember to stay focused on a human-centered design process while generating ideas. The use of divergent thinking is critical in this stage to foster creativity and generate as many ideas as possible.

In the ideation phase, everything is fair game. For example, instead of worrying about the details of how your potential ideas will work, focus on “why not?”

There are no right or wrong answers, only potential creative solutions to the problems you’ve identified. When you prioritize the needs and desires of the people you are creating for, you’ll arrive at the most successful solutions that you’ll continue to refine through the rest of the design thinking process.

3. Prototype

Now that you have potential solutions, it’s time to bring your best ideas to life with rapid prototypes. In this phase, you’ll test your ideas in real-time with real people to get their feedback. Rapid prototypes are quick and easy versions of the ideas you want to create. Their role is to ensure that your vision is on target and it allows you space to make amendments based on feedback before you make the final product.

This experimental phase isn’t about perfection. The goal is to create a quick, tangible prototype so that you can test it.

Group of People Whiteboarding Pexels

4. Feedback

In the feedback phase of the design process, you’ll test your prototype. This is perhaps the most vital part of the human-centered design process as it will determine whether or not your idea works for the people you are designing for.

Get your prototype in the hands of your target consumer and ask them: how and why does this product/service achieve or fail to reach your needs and desires? During this stage, you’ll want to collect as many details as possible from testers as you’ll use this feedback to finalize your solution.

5. Integration

The integration phase of the design thinking process helps you to identify the usefulness of the proposed solution. Consider the feedback you receive and how you can implement it into your design to make it better. This is a fluid process: integrate, test, and repeat until you reach the best version of your idea. Once your solution is fully-fledged and replicable, it’s time to share it.

6. Application

It’s time to send your idea out into the world! During this last stage of the design thinking process, make the final prototype and share it. It’s important to keep an eye on changes in your target audience and their needs and desires as time progresses so that you can make adaptations to your design as necessary.

With each new update, return to phase one and repeat the process for best results. Remember that the user’s needs change over time, so it is important to anticipate future alterations to best serve consumers’ changing needs.


Leading a Design Thinking Workshop

When we approach innovation with a human-centered design process, we are able to empathize with and therefore better understand the end-user and what they truly desire. Everything we create is an extension from t

When we approach innovation with a human-centered design process, we can empathize with and therefore better understand the end-user and what they truly desire. By leading a design thinking workshop, you’ll encourage your team to innovate in this human-centered way. As you create everything from this level of self-awareness, you’ll ultimately develop better products and services as you improve your company and team as well.

Once you have a clear understanding of the design thinking process, you’ll be able to lead your design thinking workshop with your team. Whether your design sprint is a few days or a few hours, a well-executed design thinking workshop will help you keep your customers’ needs top of mind.

Hiring a professional facilitator is one of the best ways to lead a design thinking workshop at your company. At Voltage Control, our team of facilitators is happy to assist you in your design thinking needs. With a clear understanding of this methodology and an effort to lead your team with the same mentality, you’re sure to see the benefits of adopting a design thinking approach.

This article originally appeared on VoltageControl.com, you can find it HERE.


Do you want to learn more about human-centered design?

Voltage Control facilitates design thinking workshops, innovation sessions, and Design Sprints. Please reach out at hello@voltagecontrol.com for a consultation.

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Charity Experience Audit 101

Charity Experience Audit 101

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

In today’s competitive nonprofit landscape, delivering exceptional experiences is no longer a luxury; it’s a necessity. This is especially true for charities, who rely on the generosity of donors and the impact they make on beneficiaries. A Charity Experience Audit is a powerful tool to assess and improve both donor and beneficiary experiences.

Why Conduct a Charity Experience Audit?

A Charity Experience Audit provides valuable insights into the following:

  • Donor Experience: Understanding donor motivations, satisfaction levels, and pain points can help charities build stronger relationships, increase donations, and improve fundraising campaigns.
  • Beneficiary Experience: Evaluating the impact of programs and services on beneficiaries can help charities optimize their efforts, measure outcomes, and ensure that their mission is being fulfilled.

Key Steps in a Charity Experience Audit

1. Define Your Goals

Clearly articulate the objectives of your audit. Are you looking to improve donor retention, increase program effectiveness, or enhance your organization’s reputation? Your goals will guide the scope and focus of your audit.

2. Identify Key Stakeholders

Involve a diverse group of stakeholders, including donors, beneficiaries, staff, and board members. Their perspectives will provide a comprehensive understanding of the experiences.

3. Conduct a Thorough Assessment

Employ a variety of research methods to gather qualitative and quantitative data:

  • Surveys and Questionnaires: Use structured surveys to collect quantitative data on satisfaction levels, preferences, and behaviors.
  • Interviews: Conduct in-depth interviews with key stakeholders to gain insights into their experiences and opinions.
  • Focus Groups: Facilitate discussions with small groups of stakeholders to generate ideas and identify areas for improvement.
  • Observation: Observe interactions between staff and donors or beneficiaries to identify potential pain points and opportunities for improvement.
  • Review Existing Data: Analyze historical data on donations, program outcomes, and feedback to identify trends and patterns.

4. Analyze the Data

Identify key themes, patterns, and insights from the data collected. Use data visualization tools to present findings in a clear and compelling way.

5. Develop Action Plans

Prioritize the most critical areas for improvement and develop actionable plans to address them. Involve stakeholders in the development of action plans to ensure buy-in and ownership.

6. Implement and Monitor

Execute the action plans and monitor their progress. Use key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure the impact of the changes.

Case Study 1: Enhancing Donor Experience

Charity: A mid-sized environmental organization struggling with declining donor retention rates.

Audit Findings: Donors felt disconnected from the organization’s impact and lacked transparency in how their donations were used. They also desired more personalized communication and recognition.

Action Plan: The charity implemented a donor portal that provided real-time updates on project progress, personalized thank-you messages, and exclusive behind-the-scenes content. They also launched a volunteer program to allow donors to directly participate in conservation efforts.

Results: Donor retention rates increased by 20%, and average donation amounts grew by 15%.

Case Study 2: Improving Beneficiary Outcomes

Charity: A global health organization providing healthcare services in under-served communities.

Audit Findings: Beneficiaries reported long wait times, confusion about the services offered, and a lack of follow-up care. Staff members were overwhelmed and struggled to provide personalized support.

Action Plan: The organization implemented a digital health platform to streamline appointment scheduling, provide educational materials, and facilitate remote consultations. They also trained staff on patient-centered communication and provided additional resources to reduce workload.

Results: Patient satisfaction increased by 30%, and the number of patients served grew by 15%.

Benefits of a Charity Experience Audit

A Charity Experience Audit offers numerous benefits for both donors and beneficiaries:

For Donors:

  • Increased satisfaction and loyalty
  • Improved communication and transparency
  • Enhanced understanding of impact
  • More personalized and meaningful giving experiences

For Beneficiaries:

  • Improved program effectiveness and outcomes
  • Enhanced access to services
  • More responsive and tailored support
  • Greater empowerment and dignity

By investing in a Charity Experience Audit, charities can build stronger relationships with donors, increase their impact on beneficiaries, and ultimately achieve their mission.

Bottom line: 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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Partnership Experience Audit 101

Partnership Experience Audit 101

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

In the rapidly evolving marketplace of today, the ability to effectively manage and nurture partnerships is a competitive advantage that no company can afford to overlook. Conducting a Partnership Experience Audit every year is a crucial activity that ensures your collaboration dynamics align with your strategic business objectives. This audit not only strengthens existing relationships but also ensures your company is poised for success in attracting new partners.

Why is a Partner Experience Audit Important?

Think of a Partner Experience Audit as a diagnostic tool for your partnership strategies. It allows you to uncover relationship bottlenecks, enhance communication processes, and align mutual objectives. Conducting this audit annually guarantees that your engagements are not just surviving but thriving. Being proactive in understanding the needs and expectations of your partners empowers your growth strategy by cementing a resilient partnership ecosystem.

Key Activities in a Partner Experience Audit

  • Stakeholder Interviews: Conduct in-depth interviews with key stakeholders to gather insights on the strengths and weaknesses of the partnership.
  • Performance Analysis: Evaluate the past year’s performance metrics to assess alignment and execution against objectives.
  • Feedback Loops: Implement systematic feedback processes to continuously capture partner sentiment and address areas of concern.
  • Communication Review: Analyze communication channels and frequency to ensure transparency and efficiency.
  • Alignment Sessions: Facilitate strategic alignment sessions to ensure shared vision and goal synchronization.

Benefits of Conducting a Partner Experience Audit

Undertaking a Partner Experience Audit enhances collaboration, fosters innovation, and strengthens partnership value. These evaluations allow businesses to identify areas for improvement, offering insights into more effective decision-making and resource allocation. Moreover, they contribute to a culture of continuous improvement, crucial for long-term success.

How Companies Use Partner Experience Audits as a Competitive Advantage

Innovative companies like Apple and Microsoft have leveraged Partner Experience Audits to create seamless, beneficial infrastructures for their partners. For instance, Apple thoroughly assesses partner experiences to refine their supplier protocols and innovate collaboratively, maintaining high product standards and market leadership.

Microsoft, on the other hand, uses these audits to enhance partner ecosystems, supporting their mission to empower every organization. By ensuring frictionless interactions through their audits, Microsoft builds trust and reinforces its strategic partnerships, contributing to its reputation as a collaborative powerhouse.

Beyond these giants, consider any organization that wishes to harness the energy similar to that detailed in Change Management Strategy, where aligning change initiatives with partnership audits can further drive synergy and success.

Conclusion

Executing a thorough Partner Experience Audit yearly isn’t just an operational exercise; it’s a strategic necessity. As your company navigates the complexities of the modern business landscape, these audits will serve as the cornerstone for building robust, adaptive, and successful partnerships. Embrace this opportunity to fine-tune your partner relationships and set the stage for sustainable growth.

Bottom line: 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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The Future of Agile

Trends and Innovations

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

The Future of Agile

Introduction to the Evolving Landscape of Agile

As thought leaders in human-centered change and innovation, we must continuously adapt and evolve. Agile methodologies have transformed how organizations operate, focusing on flexibility, collaboration, and customer-centric solutions. As we look to the future, several trends and innovations are expected to reshape the Agile landscape.

Emerging Trends in Agile

The Agile landscape is ever-evolving, responding to technological advancements and shifts in organizational culture. Here are the trends that are gaining momentum:

  • Agile Beyond Software Development: Agile principles are now being applied across various sectors, from marketing to finance, embracing a more holistic approach to organizational agility.
  • Remote and Distributed Teams: With the rise of remote work, Agile practices are evolving to support distributed teams, emphasizing virtual collaboration and digital tools.
  • AI and Machine Learning Integration: Agile processes are increasingly integrating AI and machine learning, optimizing workflows, and enhancing decision-making.

Case Studies: Leading the Agile Revolution

Case Study 1: Spotify’s Squad Model

Spotify has become synonymous with Agile innovation through its unique approach known as the ‘Squad Model.’ This framework promotes team autonomy and accountability, empowering ‘squads’ to operate as self-contained units focusing on specific objectives. Each squad is cross-functional, enhancing collaboration and efficiency.

The success of Spotify’s model highlights the importance of customizing Agile practices to fit organizational needs and culture, fostering an environment conducive to rapid innovation and experimentation.

Case Study 2: ING’s Agile Transformation

In the financial services sector, ING has demonstrated the power of Agile transformation. Through the adoption of Agile principles, ING restructured its operations, breaking down silos and fostering a collaborative, customer-focused culture.

This transformation involved training over 3,500 employees in Agile methodologies, integrating Agile teams across multiple departments to enhance efficiency and speed to market. ING’s journey underscores the potential for Agile practices to drive significant organizational change, even within highly regulated industries.

Innovations Driving the Future of Agile

As Agile continues to evolve, several innovations are expected to shape its future:

  • Agile at Scale: Large organizations are increasingly seeking ways to implement Agile at the enterprise level, integrating Agile methodologies across all facets of their operations.
  • Agility in Strategic Leadership: Leadership teams are adopting Agile practices to enhance strategic decision-making and responsiveness to market dynamics.
  • Hybrid Models: Many companies are blending Agile with traditional project management methodologies to create hybrid models that leverage the strengths of both approaches.

Conclusion

The future of Agile is bright, driven by the need for organizations to remain competitive in an ever-changing environment. By embracing these trends and innovations, companies can not only survive but thrive in a landscape marked by constant change.

For more insights into organizational change, explore our article on Agile Leadership and discover strategies for effective Digital Transformation.

Bottom line: 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: Pixabay

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Disrupt Yourself, Your Team and Your Organization

Disrupt Yourself, Your Team and Your Organization

GUEST POST from Janet Sernack

Moving into a new year is always a time for retreating and reflecting to accelerate growth and harvest new ideas from our feelings, thoughts, and learnings gleaned from the last two years of disruption, extreme uncertainty, and instability. Whether you are actively seeking to disrupt yourself, your team, and your organization to effect sustainable success this year, or not, we all have the opportunity to adapt, innovate and grow from the range of challenging events that impacted us in the past 24 months. This is why it might be useful to see these disruptive events as positive, powerful, and impactful forces for creating new cracks in your own, or your team or organizational soil – to sow some imaginative, creative, and inventive seeds for effecting positive change in an unstable world.

To see them germinate the desired changes you want for yourself, your team, and organization and deliver them, to survive and thrive in 2022.

We are all being challenged by disruption

Our status quo and concepts of business-as-usual have all been significantly disrupted, resulting in a range and series of deep neurological shocks, that have shaken many of us, our teams, and our organizations, to our very cores.  Some of us adapted to a sense of urgency and exploited the opportunity to reinvent, iterate, or pivot our teams and organizations, towards co-creating individual and intentional “new normals” and just “got on” with it. Some of us have continually denied, defended, and avoided making changes, where many of us have sunk deeply into our fears and anxieties, falsely believing that our lives, and our work, would eventually go back to “normal”.

This is because a significant number of our habitual, largely unconscious mental models and emotional states, were disrupted, largely by events beyond our individual and collective control.  Causing many of us to experience “cognitive dissonance” (a situation involving conflicting attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors that produce feelings of mental discomfort leading to an alteration in one of the attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors to reduce the discomfort and restore balance) from the chaos, discomfort, confusion, and conflict.

Which saw many of us, disconnect cognitively and emotionally, from the current disruptive reality, where some of us secretly hoped that “it will all go away” manifesting and festering fundamentally and unconsciously, as inherent neurological immobility, (freeze, fight, flight) resulting in many areas as resistance to change.

Why disrupt yourself, your team, and organization?

Yet disruptive change is inevitable, the speed and pace of exponential change cannot be stopped, the range of complex and wicked global and local problems that need to be solved collectively, aren’t going away.

Job security and full-time employment, as hybrid and virtual work, and technology accelerate, are becoming “things of the past” as the workplace continues to destabilize through digitization, AI, and automation.

Whilst the war for talent also accelerates as the great resignation sets in and people make powerful, empowered life balance decisions and are on the move globally.

Taking the first steps to disrupt yourself, your team, and organization

In this time of extreme uncertainty, we have a unique moment in time, to disrupt ourselves, teams, and organizations by:

  1. Hitting our individual, collective mental, and emotional pause buttons, to retreat from our business-as-usual activities, and take time out to reflect upon paying attention and qualifying:
  • How specifically have I/we been disrupted?
  • How have our people,  teams, and customers been disrupted?
  • What are some of the major collective impacts on our organization’s current status and how might these impact our future growth potential and overall sustainability?
  • How connected are we to an exponential world, how can we ensure that our feelings, thoughts, and actions, connect with what is really happening to us, our teams, and our customers?
  • What causes disconnection and how might we manage it to be more mentally tough and emotionally agile in an extremely uncertain future?
  • What really matters to us, our teams, organizations, and customers – what do our people, teams, and customers really want from us?
  • What are some of the key elements of our organizational strategy to enact our purpose and deliver our mission?
  1. Generating safe, evocative, provocative, and creative conversations, that evoke deep listening and deep questioning, about how to individually and collectively reconnect, revitalize, rejuvenate and reenergize people, teams and organizations to survive and thrive through asking:
  • How can we engage and harness our people and teams’ energies in ways that mobilize their collective intelligence to evoke new mindset shifts and new ways of thinking and acting?
  • What are some of the key mindsets and traits we need to disrupt, shift, and cultivate to be successful to adapt and grow through disruption?
  • What skills do our leaders and teams need to learn to think and act differently to shift the organizations culture to deliver our strategy?
  • How might we shift our teams and organizations to be agile, and redesign our organizations for both stability and speed?
  • What does it mean to us, our teams, and organizations to be creative, inventive, and innovative – How might we shift our teams and organizations to be more creative, inventive, and innovative?
  • What are the new behavioral norms that will support and enable us to execute agile and innovative changes?
  • How might becoming agile and innovative help our people, teams co-create a healthy, high-performing, and sustainable organizational culture?
  • How might becoming agile and innovative add value to the quality of people’s lives and help our customers flourish?
  1. Becoming comfortable with being uncomfortable by developing our peoples, teams, and our organizational “discomfort resilience” and dance of the edge of your comfort zones through:
  • Creating safe environments where people and teams are allowed to experiment,  have permission, and are trusted to practice, make mistakes as they move through difficult emotions, and take little bets in low stake situations.
  • Intentionally breaking organizational routines and habits, to create space in people’s brains for new neural pathways to be developed.
  • Enabling people and teams to become mindful of their triggers, to interrupt their automatic reactions.
  • Equipping people and teams to thoughtfully and intentionally respond to situations, that make them uncomfortable and risk-averse, by knowing how to think differently.
  • Bringing more play into the way people work, encourages people to be imaginative, inquisitive, curious, and improvisational, to seek different ways of thinking and acting, that really make a difference in how work gets done.
  • Support people and teams to learn by doing, and failing fast, without the fear of blame, shame, and retribution, despite it being risky to do that.

Why not disrupt yourself, your team, and organization?

The future is going to be full of disruptive events and circumstances that will impact is our families, communities, team, and organizations, and the conditions of extreme uncertainty and disruption are not going to go away. In fact, they are fundamental to what might be described as our collective “new normal” and it’s up to you to disrupt yourself, your team, and organization, to lead, adapt and grow, to survive and thrive through it.

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 organization through disruption.

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Overcoming Challenges in Sustainable Innovation

Overcoming Challenges in Sustainable Innovation

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

Sustainable innovation is the frontier where ecological responsibility and business ingenuity meet. However, pioneering in this field often involves overcoming significant challenges. This article delves into how leading organizations have successfully navigated obstacles in sustainable innovation through three revelatory case studies.

Case Study 1: Patagonia’s Eco-Friendly Supply Chain

Patagonia has long been a beacon for sustainable business practices. Their commitment to environmentally friendly production processes required a radical re-imagining of their supply chain. By investing in alternative materials, such as recycled polyester and organic cotton, Patagonia not only lessened its ecological footprint but also tapped into a growing market of environmentally conscious consumers.

One key challenge was converting suppliers to sustainable practices. Patagonia tackled this by developing strategic partnerships with companies committed to sustainability, thereby transforming their entire supply chain. This case demonstrates how aligning business goals with environmental stewardship can lead to a competitive advantage.

Case Study 2: Tesla’s Electric Vehicle Revolution

Tesla faced numerous hurdles in its quest to revolutionize the automobile industry with electric vehicles (EVs). From initial skepticism about EV technology to considerable capital requirements and infrastructure development, Tesla’s journey was fraught with challenges. However, by focusing on cutting-edge battery technology and expanding supercharger networks, Tesla has steadily increased the adoption of EVs.

The key takeaway from Tesla’s approach is the importance of innovation in product design and delivery. By pushing the boundaries of technology and ensuring availability of charging infrastructure, Tesla addressed both practical and perceptual barriers to driving EV adoption.

Case Study 3: IKEA’s Circular Economy Model

IKEA’s mission to create a circular economy exemplifies how large enterprises can overcome sustainability challenges. Recognizing the environmental impact of its operations, IKEA has implemented strategies like furniture take-back programs and product recycling initiatives, aiming to become fully circular by 2030.

One challenge for IKEA was shifting consumer behavior towards participation in their circular model. By providing incentives and convenient options for customers to recycle, repair, and reuse products, IKEA not only enhanced sustainability but also deepened customer engagement and loyalty.

Conclusion

These case studies illustrate that overcoming challenges in sustainable innovation requires a blend of strategic partnerships, groundbreaking technology, and comprehensive customer engagement. For more insights into innovation, check out the Human-Centered Innovation Toolkit page and discover helpful resources on innovation execution, or check out the free innovation maturity assessment (aka Innovation Audit).

This HTML document provides a structure for an article about overcoming challenges in sustainable innovation, with case studies showcasing real-world examples from Patagonia, Tesla, and IKEA. The internal links point to relevant pages on Braden Kelley’s website to enhance the article’s value and SEO performance.

Bottom line: 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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Five Immutable Laws of Change

Five Immutable Laws of Change

GUEST POST from Greg Satell

When I first arrived in Poland in 1997, change was all around me. It was like watching a society transform itself through time-lapse photography. Everywhere you looked, the country was shaking off decades of post-communist rust and striving to make good on the promise of 1989’s historic Round Table Agreement.

Yet it wasn’t until the fall of 2004 that I truly understood the power of change. By then, I was living in Kyiv, Ukraine and the entire country erupted in protests now known as the Orange Revolution. While Warsaw in the 90s was like rebuilding after a tornado hit, Ukraine was like being in the eye of the storm itself.

That experience led to a 15-year long journey of discovery and my book Cascades. What I found was that throughout history many have sought to create change and most have failed, but a few succeeded brilliantly. Starting out with very different challenges, philosophies and personalities, they eventually all arrived at the same principles that allowed them to prevail.

Law #1: The Status Quo Has Inertia On Its Side And Never Yields Gracefully

We tend to overvalue ideas. We think that if we have a good idea, people will immediately see its worth. Yet that’s hardly ever the case. As computer pioneer Howard Aiken put it, “Don’t worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you’ll have to ram them down people’s throats.”

Consider the case of Ignaz Semmelweis, who first came up with the idea that medical staff in hospitals should wash their hands before operating on patients. You would think that would be an obviously good idea. Nevertheless, he was ostracized for it and ended up dying in an insane asylum, ironically from an infection he contracted under care.

Semmelweis’s plight was tragic, but is also so amazingly common that the tendency for the establishment to reject ideas is referred to as the Semmelweis effect. In fact, while researching my book Mapping Innovation I interviewed dozens of successful innovators and I found that every single one had to overcome stiff resistance to transform their idea into something useful.

The fact that you will face opposition when protesting an authoritarian regime is obvious, but an organizational environment can be just as cutthroat. Make no mistake. If your idea is important and has real potential for impact, there will be some who will hate it and they will work to undermine it in ways that are dishonest, underhanded and deceptive.

That must be your primary design constraint.

Law #2: Small Groups, Loosely Connected, But United By Shared Purpose Drive Transformational Change

For decades, change consultants have been telling us that if we want to drive transformation, we should “start with a bang” and create a “sense of urgency” through a big communication campaign. The results have been atrocious. In fact, McKinsey has found that nearly three quarters of organizational transformations do not succeed.

It’s not hard to understand why. If there are people who are determined to see your change fail—and every significant change encounters resistance—than a “rally the troops” type of approach will only serve to alert those who oppose change that they better get started undermining it or it might actually happen.

Fortunately, science points to another way. The truth is that small groups, loosely connected, but united by a shared purpose drive transformational change. So instead of trying to convince everybody at once, identify those who are already enthusiastic about your idea, who want it to work as much as you do. Those are people you can empower to succeed and can help bring in others, who can bring in others still.

Yet identifying advocates is only part of the battle. You also need to find imbue the effort with purpose and give it meaning. Unfortunately, all too often the quest for purpose is treated as a communication exercise. It isn’t. For change to be meaningful it has to actually solve a problem that people care about.

Law #3: Revolutions Begin With a Cause, Not A Slogan

Every change effort starts with a grievance. There’s something that people don’t like and they want it to be different. In a social or political movement that may be a corrupt leader or a glaring injustice. In an organizational context it’s usually something like falling sales, unhappy customers, low employee morale or technological disruption.

Whatever the case may be, the first step toward bringing change about is understanding that getting mired in grievance won’t get you anywhere. You can’t just complain about things you don’t like, but must come up with an affirmative vision for how you would want things to be.

The best place to start is by asking yourself, “if I had the power to change anything, what would it look like?” Martin Luther King Jr.s vision for the civil rights movement was for a Beloved Community. Bill Gates’s vision for Microsoft was for a “computer on every desk and in every home.” A good vision should be aspirational, but not completely out of reach.

One of the things I found in my research is that successful change leaders don’t try to move from grievance to vision in one step, but rather identify a Keystone Change, which focuses on a clear and tangible goal, includes multiple stakeholders and paves the way for future change, to bridge the gap.

For King, the Keystone Change was voting rights. For Gates it was an easy-to-use operating system. For your vision, it will undoubtedly be something different. The salient point here is that every successful transformation I found started out with a Keystone Change, so that’s where you will want to start as well.

Law #4: Design Tactics That Mobilize People to Influence Institutions

Organizational change consultants often recommend that changemakers prepare a stakeholder map. This isn’t necessarily a bad idea, but it is somewhat inadequate because it fails to distinguish between different kinds of stakeholders. Some stakeholders are targets for mobilization and others are targets for influence.

For example, both parents and school boards are important stakeholders in education, but for very different reasons. School boards wield institutional power that can effect change, parents do not, so we mobilize parents to influence school boards, not the other way around. We need to approach constituencies and institutions in very different ways.

One of the things we’ve consistently found in our work helping organizations to drive transformational change is that leaders construe stakeholders far too narrowly. Fortunately, decades of non-violent activism have given us powerful tools for both: the Spectrum of Allies for constituencies and the Pillars of Support for institutions.

A crucial point to remember is that you can’t dictate change by mandate. You can’t overpower but must instead attract people and empower them so that they can take ownership of the cause and make it their own. You need to accept that people will do things for their own reasons, not for yours.

Most of all, remember that every action has to have a clear purpose and be directed at influencing specific institutions. So before taking any action, ask two questions: Who are we mobilizing and to influence what?

Law #5: Every Revolution Inspires Its Own Counter-Revolution

In the aftermath of the Orange Revolution we thought we had won. After all, we had stood up to the injustice of a falsified election and prevailed. Unfortunately, it didn’t turn out that way. Five years later, Viktor Yanukovych, the same man who we had taken to the streets to prevent from office, rose to power in an election that international observers deemed free and fair. His corrupt and incompetent rule would trigger a second Ukrainian Revolution.

We find a similar pattern with many of the executives we work with. They work for months—and sometimes years—to get a project off the ground. Yet just when they think they’re turning the corner, when they’ve won executive sponsorship, signed up key partners and procured enough financing to have a realistic budget, all the sudden things seem to get mired down.

That’s no accident. Just because you’ve won a few early battles doesn’t mean opposition to your idea has melted away. On the contrary, faced with the fact that change may actually succeed, those who oppose it have probably just begun to redouble their efforts to undermine it. These efforts are often not overt, but they are there and can easily derail an initiative.

That’s why every change effort must learn how to survive victory. The truth is that change is always a journey, never a particular destination, which is why lasting change is always built on common ground. That doesn’t mean that you need to win over your fiercest critics, but it does mean you need to try to empathize with their perspective.

There is a reason why some change leaders succeed while others fail. At some point everybody needs to decide whether they would rather make a point or make a difference and, in the end, those that prevail choose the latter.

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

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High-Performing Innovative Culture Case Studies

High-Performing Innovative Culture Case Studies

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

In today’s fast-paced business environment, cultivating a high-performing innovative culture is not just an advantage—it’s a necessity. Organizations that manage to embed innovation into their cultures can harness the creativity and problem-solving capabilities of their employees to deliver sustained competitive advantages. Here, we explore three compelling case studies of organizations that have successfully fostered such cultures. To deepen your understanding of fostering innovation in a work environment, check out my innovation strategies page.

Case Study 1: Google

Google has long been heralded as a paragon of innovative culture. With its famous ‘20% time’, where employees can dedicate a portion of their workweek to personal projects, Google encourages creativity and exploration. This policy has led to the creation of products like Gmail and Google News. Google’s culture emphasizes psychological safety, allowing team members to express ideas without fear of ridicule. To understand more about managing successful innovation programs, explore our deep dive into innovation programs.

Case Study 2: Spotify

Spotify’s organizational model is known for its flexibility and adaptability, encapsulated in what it calls “squads, tribes, chapters, and guilds.” Spotify encourages autonomous teams, or “squads”, to develop and iterate quickly while maintaining alignment with broader company goals through cross-functional “tribes”. This decentralized model enables rapid innovation while fostering a strong sense of team ownership and accountability.

Case Study 3: 3M

3M is often cited as a pioneer of innovative culture, with its commitment to innovation deeply embedded into its history. The company dedicates a significant percentage of its annual revenue directly to research and development. Known for its ‘15% culture’, 3M allows employees to allocate 15% of their working time to developing projects of their own choosing, which has been instrumental in creating breakthrough products like the Post-it Note. This approach highlights 3M’s focus on long-term innovation and sustained market leadership.

Conclusion

As demonstrated by these organizations, a high-performing innovative culture does not materialize overnight. It requires deliberate strategies, such as promoting psychological safety, decentralizing decision-making, and encouraging creative freedom. The success stories of Google, Spotify, and 3M offer valuable insights into the elements necessary to create such an environment. For more insights into innovation and culture, visit more of the articles here on the Human-Centered Change and Innovation blog.

Bottom line: 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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Innovation Theater – How to Fake It ‘Till You Make It

Innovation Theater - How to Fake It 'Till You Make It

GUEST POST from Arlen Meyers

The overwhelming number of doctors, engineers and scientists don’t have an entrepreneurial mindset. What’s more, when they have an idea, they don’t know what to do with it since they will not learn those competencies in their formal training. They just don’t know how to innovate their way out of our sick care mess.

But, that hasn’t stopped lots of them from trying, include non-sick care entrepreneurs. They just improvise.

Now that Elizabeth Holmes has been convicted, many are commenting on the pros and cons of the “fake it ’till you make it” ethos of entrepreneurs and Silicon Valley. But, is this really a black and white issue? Is it true that “You have no business being something you are not, or doing something without proving your worth.” I venture to say many of us, including me, have done something that was not a good fit and we have all tried things when we simple did not know what we did not know.

Here’s how to fake it when you don’t know what you are doing or you forgot your lines:

  1. Avoid these wannapreneur rookie mistakes.
  2. If you are a female, find a male wing man so someone will invest in your product
  3. Surround yourself with people who are way above your pay grade at lots of Meetups
  4. Practice Therantology
  5. When you inevitably fail, make a big deal out of it and about how much you learned from your mistakes and include them on your Linked profile. Rinse. Repeat
  6. Wear a fleece vest with your company logo
  7. Plead ignorance about how hard it is to get anybody in sick care to change and the long sales cycles.
  8. Be sure you have lots of hood ornaments (doctors with fancy titles) on your advisory board prominently posted on your website
  9. Hire a virtual assistant that answers all of your calls and says that she/he will not be able to immediately connect you because you are in an investor meeting
  10. Get your co-working space guy to allow you to use more space than you are actually paying for when people come for meetings. Bribe interns with pizza to come and look busy.
  11. Forget being your authentic self. “You are generally better off coming across as likable, which will generally require some effort, restraint, and attention to what others expect and want to see. Seeming authentic in the process is the cherry on top of the cake, but it requires a fair amount of faking.”
  12. Try being a good rebel even if you are a bad one.
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During these times, we are supposed to wear a mask. Most of us wear a mask all the time to hide our insecurities or avoid being outed as an imposter or physician wannapreneur, so none of this should be new to you.

 In a follow-up to their February 2021 article challenging the commonly understood definition of imposter syndrome, authors Ruchika Tulshyan and Jodi-Ann Burey offer actionable steps managers can take to end imposter syndrome in their organizations. Doing so will require work at both the interpersonal and organizational levels, and success will depend in part on gathering data and implementing real mechanisms for accountability. The authors call on managers to stop calling natural, human tendencies of self-doubt, hesitation, and lack of confidence “imposter syndrome.” Those who want women to lend their full talents and expertise must question the culture at work — not their confidence at work.

These things come with practice. But, since you are part of innovation theater, practice your lines, be sure you are wearing the right costume and that the stage is set properly. Break a leg.

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