Blockchain and Innovation

Beyond Cryptocurrency

Blockchain and Innovation - Beyond Cryptocurrency

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

Blockchain technology, most commonly associated with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, has far-reaching applications that extend beyond the realm of digital currencies. As a human-centered change and innovation thought leader, I will explore how blockchain technology is redefining various industries, driving efficiency, transparency, and trust. In this article, we will examine two case studies that showcase the transformative potential of blockchain: Supply Chain Management and Healthcare.

Case Study 1: Transforming Supply Chain Management

In the intricate world of supply chain management, where product authenticity, tracking, and operational efficiency are paramount, blockchain technology has emerged as a game-changer. By creating an immutable and transparent digital ledger, blockchain provides end-to-end visibility and traceability, revolutionizing how supply chains operate.

Example: Walmart and IBM’s Food Trust Blockchain Platform

Walmart, in collaboration with IBM, has implemented a blockchain-based platform called Food Trust to enhance food safety and traceability. The traditional system of tracking produce and other products through paper-based or siloed digital records was time-consuming and prone to errors. With blockchain, all stakeholders, including farmers, processors, distributors, and retailers, have access to a unified and tamper-proof record of information.

In one notable instance, the time taken to trace the source of mangoes in Walmart’s supply chain was reduced from seven days to merely 2.2 seconds. This significant improvement not only enhances food safety by swiftly identifying contamination sources but also builds consumer trust by providing transparent product information.

Case Study 2: Revolutionizing Healthcare

Healthcare systems worldwide grapple with issues of data security, patient privacy, and interoperability. Blockchain technology addresses these challenges by offering a decentralized platform for securely managing and sharing medical data.

Example: MedRec—Patient-Centric Health Records

MedRec, an MIT-affiliated project, is leveraging blockchain to create a patient-centric electronic health record (EHR) system. Traditional EHR systems are often fragmented and controlled by various entities, leading to inefficiencies and limiting patient access to their own health records. MedRec uses blockchain to aggregate medical data from multiple sources into a single, decentralized ledger that is accessible to patients and authorized healthcare providers.

This approach enhances data interoperability, reduces administrative burdens, and, most importantly, empowers patients by granting them complete control over their own health records. The blockchain ensures that all health data is secure, tamper-proof, and easily transferable among different providers, furthering seamless continuity of care.

Conclusion

Blockchain technology’s potential extends well beyond cryptocurrencies, offering groundbreaking solutions to complex challenges in various industries. The case studies of Walmart’s Food Trust and MedRec demonstrate how blockchain can drive innovation, enhance transparency, and build trust in supply chain management and healthcare. As we continue to explore and harness the power of blockchain, it is evident that this technology will play a crucial role in shaping the future of numerous fields, propelling us towards a more efficient and trustworthy world.

SPECIAL BONUS: The very best change planners use a visual, collaborative approach to create their deliverables. A methodology and tools like those in Change Planning Toolkit™ can empower anyone to become great change planners themselves.

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Creating a Movement that Drives Transformational Change

Creating a Movement that Drives Transformational Change

A while ago I had the opportunity to interview Greg Satell, author of the new book Cascades: How to Create a Movement that Drives Transformational Change.

Greg Satell is a bestselling author, speaker and adviser, who frequently contributes here to my blog Human-Centered Change and Innovation, Harvard Business Review, Inc. and other A-list publications. His first book, MAPPING INNOVATION, was chosen as one of the best business books of 2017 by 800-CEO-READ. His latest book, CASCADES, was recently published by McGraw-Hill Education.

Today, he helps leading businesses overcome disruption through impactful programs and powerful tools he developed researching the world’s best innovators and most effective changemakers.

Without further ado, here is the transcript of that interview:

1. People love to tell the story of Netflix disrupting Blockbuster. What do they get wrong?

It’s funny. People so easily assume that Blockbuster just completely ignored the Netflix threat, when actually nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, the leadership came up with an effective strategy to meet that threat, executed it well and began to surpass Netflix in adding new subscribers.

The real reason that Blockbuster failed was that the leadership failed to manage internal networks—particularly franchisees and investors—and the stock price crashed. That attracted the corporate raider Carl Icahn, who had a heavy handed style. Eventually, things came to a head and he initiated a compensation dispute with the CEO, John Antioco., who left in frustration. The new CEO came in and reversed the strategy. Three years later, Blockbuster went bankrupt.

One of the most interesting parts of the story came out when I interviewed Antioco, who was—and is—something of a retail genius. He told me that, throughout his career, anytime he wanted to do something innovative, he always met resistance. He had always succeeded by pushing through that resistance. This time though, it got the better of him.

We tend to think that if we have the right idea and execute it well, we’ll be successful. The real lesson of Blockbuster is that isn’t always true. We also need to manage stakeholder networks.

2. To be efficient at scale, businesses introduce hierarchies as they grow. What weaknesses does this introduce and how should companies manage these?

To be honest, I don’t see anything inherently wrong with hierarchies. They’ve been put in place because they are effective at executing processes efficiently. Every organization needs that. However, hierarchies tend to be rigid and slow to adapt. That can be a real problem when the marketplace changes.

So what I think leaders need to focus on is building strong informal networks to supplement the formal organization. Chris Fussell calls this a “hybrid organization.” That’s what’s really key, to have the formal organization and the informal organization working hand-in-hand.

Unfortunately, there’s been so much emphasis on “breaking down silos,” that business leaders often miss that silos can be very positive things. They are essentially “centers of capability.” So you don’t want to break them up. What you do want to do is to connect silos so that they can adapt and collaborate.

3. Some would say that hierarchies are created to cascade information. How does information cascade differently within networks? How is better?

Well, hierarchies are essentially vertical networks, so information tends to move up and down fairly well, but not so good side to side, which makes it hard for an organization to adapt laterally. The types of networks I write about in Cascades are horizontal, so are much better set up to transfer information between disparate groups.

Clearly, you need both. The problem is that we tend to ignore the informal networks, which is why organizations over time become vertically driven and rigid.

Greg Satell - Digital Tonto4. What causes some movements to grow and others to be sidelined at the periphery?

That’s a great and complicated question (in fact, I wrote a whole book about it!). The truth is that, much as Tolstoy said about families, successful movements tend to look very much alike, while unsuccessful movements fail in their own way.

However, if there is one key thing that makes the difference it is to always connect out. Research has shown that the key metric that best determines success is participation. That may seem obvious, but many movements get caught up in idealogical purity and shut out potential allies. If you want to kill a change movement quickly, that’s probably the best way to do it. It’s not the fervor of zealots that brings change about, but when you get everybody else to join in that a true revolution can take place.

A great example of this kind of failure is the Occupy Movement. At first, they gained a lot of sympathy for their “99% vs. the 1%” message. However they were so extreme, and so intent on demonizing anyone who didn’t believe 100% what they believed, that they turned many people off. At one point, the legendary civil rights leader John Lewis asked to speak at a rally and was refused. I mean, John Lewis! Talk about shooting yourself in the foot!

The same is true in the business context. Think about VHS vs. Betamax. Betamax was the better technology, but VHS was more inclusive. VHS won.

Another great example is the Ignaz Semmelweis story. Semmelweis had discovered that hand washing in hospitals greatly reduced infection rates. It was a major discovery. However, rather than working to build a movement around his idea, he railed against anyone who didn’t agree with him. It would take another 20 years for antiseptic practices to gain traction and millions of people died needlessly because of it.

More recently, Jim Allison had a similar challenge with cancer immunotherapy. Pharmaceutical companies didn’t believe it would work and refused to invest in it. I still remember the sound of despair in his voice when he told me the story—and this was 20 years after it happened! But Jim kept pounding the pavement, kept working to bring others in and thousands upon thousands of people are alive today because of Jim.

So again, you have to constantly be connecting out and bringing people in. That’s why Jim Allison won the Nobel Prize last fall instead of dying in an insane asylum like Ignaz Semmelweis.

5. Why do successful movements or revolutions seem to need rules?

I think it’s better to say that movements need values. Values play two important roles: First, they provide constraints and, second, they provide rules for adaptation.

For example, during the Anti-Apartheid movement in South Africa, Nelson Mandela was accused of being an anarchist, a communist and worse. When asked about his beliefs though, he always pointed to the Freedom Charter, which was written way back in 1955. So he could point to something concrete that outlined his values and that of his movement. That commitment to values was crucial for getting support from institutions outside of South Africa and it was the support from those institutions that enabled Mandela and his movement to succeed.

When he got into power those constraints became even more important. Because one of the core values spelled out in the Freedom Charter was that all national groups should have equal rights, he couldn’t infringe upon the rights of white people, even though many urged him to do so. It is because of those self-imposed constraints that we remember Nelson Mandela as a hero and not some tin-pot dictator.

A similar dynamic played out in the “Gerstner Revolution” at IBM in the 1990s. Gerstner famously said that the last thing IBM needed at the time was a vision. But he was very clear that he wanted to shift values, to make IBM more customer focused and more collaborative. That sent important signals to customers, partners and investors and played a big part in Gerstner’s success.

Perhaps even more importantly, the focus on values helped IBM prosper long after he left the company. Irving Wladawsky-Berger, one of Gerstner’s key lieutenants, told me that if the Gerstner Revolution had merely been about strategy and technology, it wouldn’t have survived. But because it was rooted in values, IBM was able to adapt as technology and the marketplace continued to evolve.

Clearly, IBM has had its challenges since Gerstner left in 2002, but it’s still a highly profitable company that continues to be on the forefront of many cutting edge technologies, such as artificial intelligence, blockchain and quantum computing, just to name a few. It’s hard to see how that could have happened if the company was still stuck in a strategy developed in the 90s. That’s the role that values play.

6. How would you contrast the theory behind Cascades with W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne’s Tipping Point Leadership?

I think on the surface they are somewhat similar ideas. However, there are important differences “under the hood.”

First, while “Tipping Point Leadership” implicitly refers to the importance of networks, Cascades is deeply and explicitly rooted in network science. In fact, Duncan Watts and Steven Strogatz, who pioneered modern network theory, have both endorsed the book (although Strogatz has done so more informally). I believe that scientific approach really helps provide a stronger framework to understand how change occurs.

Another important difference is that while Kim and Mauborgne basically built their framework from scratch, Cascades is more of a synthesis of ideas that have already been proven successful in social, political and business contexts.

There has been a lot great thinking about this stuff for a long time, so I saw no reason to try and reinvent the wheel. Rather, I tried to shape already powerful ideas—some of which have been battle-tested for decades—into a coherent framework that people can put to good use. In that way, Cascades is very similar to my previous book, Mapping Innovation.

Of course I’m biased on this point, but I believe the result is a much richer, detailed and useful framework for driving change. When you are driving change in the real world, details matter.

7. What is wrong with the theory of influentials being central to successful change?

Well, first it’s wrong because it’s empirically been shown not to be true. Scientific research has clearly shown, across multiple studies, that you don’t need “influentials” to create a viral cascade or, as Gladwell puts it, a “social epidemic.” I reference many of these studies in the book, so that readers can go check for themselves.

Conceptually, the influentials hypothesis breaks down because you need large chains of influence to create a viral cascade. Somebody may be influential because they are a connector, a maven, or whatever, but unless the people they influence pass on their ideas to others who pass them on to others still, the movement will die out. As I write in the book, it is small groups, loosely connected, but united by a shared purpose that drives transformational change.

The one exception is celebrities like Oprah Winfrey. They can really move the needle if they choose to promote an idea, but not because they have any “rare social gifts.” It’s because what they say is broadcasted by mass media. So there’s nothing really mysterious about it.

Cascades by Greg Satell8. What are some of the critical raw materials for fueling a cascade?

The three most important elements are small groups, loose connections and shared purpose.

Small groups engender strong bonds and that’s super important. Creating change is hard. So it’s important to build deep trustful relationships that lead to effective collaboration. That’s at the root of any successful movement. For example, the Otpor Movement in Serbia started with just 11 founders.

However, a small group can’t do much on its own. So it’s important for small groups to connect to other small groups. It’s that continuous linking that creates the conditions upon which a cascade can arise. That’s how Otpor eventually grew to 70,000 members and took down the dictator, Slobodan Milošević. As I explain the book, organizational change movements, such as those in the US Army and at companies like Experian and Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, play out in very much the same way.

Lastly, you need a sense of shared purpose. That’s what ties everything together. It’s also why effective leadership is so important. You need leaders to provide that purpose. As I write in the book, the role of leaders is no longer merely to plan and direct action, but to inspire and empower belief.

9. What’s your view on the phases of a successful change

Generally speaking, change movements have three phases: planning, mobilization and the victory phase.

In the planning phase, you need to formulate your Vision of Tomorrow and your values and also map out the specific constituencies you want to mobilize and the institutions you will need to influence. It’s important to not mobilize too soon, because every revolution inspires a counterrevolution. So by mobilizing too early you run the risk of inspiring opposition as much as you do supporters. This is a very common mistake.

Mobilization is largely about planning and executing tactics and there are a couple of important points to keep in mind. First, you are always mobilizing specific constituencies to influence particular institutions. You are always mobilizing somebody to influence something. You’re never mobilizing just for the sake of mobilizing or to “raise awareness” or anything like that. Everything you do needs to have a strategy in mind.

Another point is that you always want to be mobilizing out and bringing people in. And when you recruit new people you want to immediately train them and get them to act, even if the action is small. It is through action that people take ownership of change, so getting people to act is incredibly important. One of the cases I researched was Experian’s digital transformation. They really focused on this aspect and had enormous success.

The last phase is the victory phase and it’s often the most dangerous. For example, in Ukraine’s Orange Revolution, which I took part in and inspired me to write the book, we thought we had won. As it turned out, we hadn’t and soon the country descended back into chaos, which resulted in a second revolution, the Euromaidan protests in 2013 and 2014.

We’ve seen the same thing happen more recently in Egypt, where they overthrew Mubarak and ended up with el-Sisi, who is very much the same. It’s also common in startups and in corporate transformation, an early surge and then things go awry.

So you need to plan to “survive victory” ahead of time. You do that by focusing on shared values, rather than specific personalities or objectives. You never want to make a change movement about yourself or your organization. It always needs to be about values.

There is a fourth phase and it’s one you want to avoid. It is the failure phase. Almost every movement I researched had a massive early failure. In most cases, it arose from a failure to prepare and build the movement methodically. The successful movements learned from those failures and continued to evolve. The unsuccessful ones didn’t.

10. When it comes to participation and mobilization, what should people keep in mind to accelerate both?

Again, you just want to keep building out and networking the movement. Keep building links. Eventually, you will build critical mass and the movement will accelerate by itself. That’s what a cascade is, when your movement goes viral.

However, before that happens, you want to prepare as much as possible or your movement can spin out of control, if you haven’t invested in building values, training, etc. We’ve seen that happen with Occupy, Black Lives Matter and, to some extent, the modern women’s movement. Values always need to be upfront.

Perhaps most of all, you need to keep in mind that change is always possible. If you looked at Serbia in 1999, what you would have seen was a country ruled by a ruthless dictator with no effective opposition. Occupy only had a few hundred members at the time. A year later, Occupy had grown to 70,000 members and Milošević was out of office. A few years after that, he died in his cell at The Hague.

Very few change efforts have to overcome those kinds of odds, but using the same principle—those that I write about in Cascades—you can bring real change about, whether that change is in your organization, your industry, your community or throughout society as a whole.

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CEOs Say Creativity is the Most Critical Factor for Future Success

CEOs Say Creativity is the Most Critical Factor for Future Success

GUEST POST from Linda Naiman

According to the IBM 2010 Global CEO Study, which surveyed 1,500 Chief Executive Officers from 60 countries and 33 industries worldwide, CEOs believe that,

“More than rigor, management discipline, integrity or even vision — successfully navigating an increasing complex world will require creativity.”

IBM CEO Study: Creative Leadership

CEOs say creativity helps them capitalise on complexity

“The effects of rising complexity calls for CEOs and their teams to lead with bold creativity, connect with customers in imaginative ways and design their operations for speed and flexibility to position their organisations for twenty-first century success.”

Amen to that! If we are going to find solutions in a world that is becoming increasingly interconnected and complex, we cannot rely on traditional ways of leading and managing.

Creativity is the most important leadership quality

Facing a world becoming dramatically more complex, it is interesting that CEOs selected creativity as the most important leadership attribute. Creative leaders invite disruptive innovation, encourage others to drop outdated approaches and take balanced risks. They are open-minded and inventive in expanding their management and communication styles, particularly to engage with a new generation of employees, partners and customers.

High-performing CEOs practice and encourage experimentation and innovation throughout their organisations. Creative leaders expect to make deeper business model changes to realise their strategies. To succeed, they take more calculated risks, find new ideas and keep innovating in how they lead and communicate.

The most successful organisations co-create products and services with customers, and integrate customers into core processes.

They are adopting new channels to engage and stay in tune with customers. By drawing more insight from the available data, successful CEOs make customer intimacy their number one priority.

95 percent of top performing organizations identified getting closer to customers as their most important strategic initiative over the next five years – using Web, interactive, and social media channels to rethink how they engage with customers and citizens. They view the historic explosion of information and global information flows as opportunities, rather than threats.

Better performers manage complexity on behalf of their organisations, customers and partners.

They do so by simplifying operations and products, and increasing dexterity to change the way they work, access resources and enter markets around the world. Compared to other CEOs, dexterous leaders expect 20 percent more future revenue to come from new sources. 54 percent of CEOs from top performing companies indicated they are learning to respond swiftly with new ideas to address the deep changes affecting their organizations.

Source:

IBM 2010 Global CEO Study: Creativity Selected as Most Crucial Factor for Future Success — May 18, 2010

My reflection

As a practitioner in the world of business creativity and innovation over the past twenty years, I am heartened by this encouraging news. We’ve all been tracking the success of innovators at companies like Google and Apple, and now it looks like a second wave of creativity and innovation is penetrating C-level leadership. We truly have entered the Age of Creativity.

Whole Brain Creativity

Develop creative leadership in your business:

  • Discover your Creativity and Innovation styles
  • Leverage the four intelligences of creative thinking in your team
  • Develop a language and structure for managing the creative process
  • Create a climate conductive to fostering creativity and innovation
  • Design and conduct high-performance idea-generation/problem-solving sessions
  • Recognize when and how creativity is stifled and be able to prevent this
  • Build innovation and critical thinking into individual and teamwork processes.

Image credits: Pixabay and Linda Naiman

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Overcoming Change Resistance

Addressing Common Barriers to Change

Overcoming Change Resistance

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

Change is the only constant in today’s fast-paced world. Despite this, organizations often encounter significant resistance to change from their employees. As a change and innovation thought leader, my aim is to provide actionable insights to navigate these barriers effectively. In this article, we will delve into the common barriers to change and present real-world case studies to illuminate practical solutions.

Understanding the Common Barriers to Change

Resistance to change is natural. It often stems from fear of the unknown, loss of control, bad timing, or previously unsuccessful change initiatives. By recognizing these barriers early, leaders can strategize on how to address them effectively.

Case Study 1: Transforming a Legacy Retail Company

Background: A well-established retail company with a legacy of over 70 years in the industry was facing declining sales due to increased competition and a shift towards e-commerce. They decided to undergo a digital transformation to stay relevant.

Challenges: The employees were resistant to change as they were comfortable with traditional business processes. There was a significant apprehension regarding the adoption of new technology.

Approach: The leadership team implemented a change management strategy focusing on communication, training, and involvement. They organized town hall meetings to explain the vision and benefits of digital transformation. Training programs were launched to upskill employees in new technologies, and an innovation lab was created, encouraging employees to contribute ideas and test new digital tools.

Outcome: The combination of transparent communication, ongoing training, and employee involvement helped in reducing fear and building a sense of ownership among the staff. Eventually, the company saw a successful transformation with a significant increase in online sales and improved overall efficiency.

Case Study 2: Revamping the Organizational Culture of a Manufacturing Firm

Background: A mid-sized manufacturing firm recognized the need to shift from a hierarchical culture to a more collaborative and innovative work environment in order to drive growth and improve employee satisfaction.

Challenges: Long-standing employees were resistant to this cultural shift, worrying about the loss of status and changes in their work roles.

Approach: The firm’s leadership took a phased approach, starting with the creation of cross-functional teams for specific projects. They encouraged open communication and feedback through regular workshops and surveys. Leadership also modeled collaborative behavior and rewarded teams for innovative solutions.

Outcome: Gradually, employees began to see the positive impact of a collaborative culture on their productivity and job satisfaction. As trust was built and employees felt more valued, resistance decreased. The firm reported an increase in innovation and employee engagement, which translated into business growth.

Key Takeaways

These case studies underscore the importance of addressing resistance to change through clear communication, active involvement, and ongoing support. By understanding and mitigating the emotional and practical concerns of employees, organizations can facilitate smoother transitions and foster a culture of continuous improvement.

Embrace change as a journey rather than a destination, and remember—empathy, patience, and perseverance are your allies in making lasting transformations.

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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10 Clever Ways to Stop Ideation Bullies from Hogging Your Brainstorming Sessions

10 Clever Ways to Stop Ideation Bullies from Hogging Your Brainstorming Sessions

GUEST POST from Howard Tiersky

Whether you’re responsible for digital transformation or just trying to improve a product, process or marketing program, coming up with ideas is almost always an important part of success.

And one way you can create ideas is by bringing everyone together in some sort of brainstorming activity.

But sometimes you find that you’ve invited someone who’s not going to let anyone else talk — someone who is so certain they have the right answers that they take all the oxygen in the room — the ideation bully.

The Ideation Bully has an idea of how “it” should be done and they are so insistent about it that it’s almost not worth having a session because nobody has the energy or the desire to fight with this person.

Fortunately, there are certain tactics that you can use to diffuse the problem and prevent those troublemakers from throwing a monkey wrench into everything you’re trying to do.

Here are 10 ways to Handle Ideation Bullies

1. Choose your Brainstormers

One option is to simply not invite somebody who is known to be a troublemaker if you predict that that person is going to tank the effort to bring people together and generate ideas.

If their ideas are important, there’s always an opportunity to give them input in another way, such as asking them to send you a list of their ideas.

But there can be downsides to this as your primary approach. If that person is politically very important, then excluding them may not be wise.

Additionally, that individual may actually have good ideas to contribute, it’s just that they have a habit of “over-contributing.”

And lastly, sometimes you don’t know in advance who will show up as an “ideation bully.”
Someone who is otherwise quite reasonable and collaborative may get “triggered” by a given topic and transform into a problem.

2. Align on the Goals of the Meeting

Sometimes people who are trying to throw out ideas and who are behaving like bullies aren’t on the same page of what you’re there to ideate about.

Focus on what you want to accomplish and make sure everyone understands what the definition of victory is.

Set some ground rules so that if people start to pull you off topic, you can call them out while still being respectful of the point that they’re making.

3. Leave Rank at the Door

It’s best if the most senior person in the room lets everybody know that we really want everyone’s ideas and definitely doesn’t use their rank to influence the discussion (once all the ideas are on the table they can always later use their position of authority to determine which ideas will be implemented).

In fact, we have a fun acronym we use to highlight this challenge: HIPPO (Highest Paid Person On-hand).

Of course, not just because you’re the highest paid person doesn’t necessarily mean you’re a bully.

But you can be if you come in there and prevent your team from generating a lot of ideas.

It’s a good idea if the HIPPO speaks last because once they’ve spoken, it can be hard for people to feel like they should contradict.

Another strategy is to have the senior person wait for everyone to finish the session and then just bring them the results of the meeting to assess.

4. Insight Before Ideas

You want to seed people with information beforehand.

One way that people bully during ideation is they come in with supposedly their own set of facts, which may or may not really be facts.

It’s very easy to bully people with fake facts when others don’t have them.

You’re not going to have every insight, every piece of information, but nevertheless thinking about what’s the key information that the group should be fed in advance will help neutralize the ideation bullies.

5. Define the Goal of Generating a Set Number of Ideas

Acknowledge that your goal is to create a whole bunch of different ideas so that you can later assess them.

So when the ideation bully comes, they won’t be able to drown out everybody else because you are compelled to keep going until you get your target number of ideas.

You can always assure the bully that if their ideas are really the best, then you’ll probably wind up picking it.

6. The Possibility Frame

You can always say to somebody, is it possible there’s another idea?

Is it possible there’s a better idea?

Is it possible there’s a way of improving on this idea?

And it’s very difficult even for a bully to say absolutely not.

They just have to basically be willing to down-and-out insult every single person in the room if they want to say there’s no one there that could possibly come up with an idea that’s better than that.

Usually in most corporate environments, someone is not going to go that far.

When you can acknowledge that it’s always possible that there’s another idea, a better idea, or a way of improving the idea, then you have diffused the bully’s ability to crowd out other ideas.

7. The Hypothesis Frame

Any idea is just a hypothesis. It’s just a theory that it might be the solution to a problem.

So whatever idea you have, you don’t know for sure that it’s going to work until you test it through some kind of market research.

When you accept the hypothesis frame, the bully will not be able to shut down other ideas without presenting informational points that suggest their own idea is the best solution.

8. Evidence Quantity per Idea

Identify all the data and see how much evidence we have for each idea.

Sometimes the bully has a strong opinion that their idea is the right answer even when they have no data to support that claim.

We have a fun acronym for those sub variety of ideation bullies as well. We call them the ZEBRAs (Zero Evidence But Really Arrogant).

We want to give ZEBRAs the opportunity to present their facts but also do the same for other ideas.

This helps you prioritize and evaluate the ideas that your team generates.

9. Use Breakouts to Avoid Filibusters

When you have 10, 15, 20 or even more people that are ideating, it can be good to break them into teams and let each team brainstorm separately.

They can later come back together and each team can share what they’ve come up with.

That can be a healthy way of ideating if you have somebody who tries to bully everybody not follow the rules.

At least if you put them in breakouts, they can only do that with part of the group.

It may not solve the problem 100%, but at least then you have groups which don’t have that person and therefore can be productive.

Hopefully, some of these other strategies will help manage that person in the breakout that they’re in.

10. Create Structures with Timing and Turns

Instead of just having a freewheeling conversation, there’s this structure where everyone waits their turn and has their say.
But then there’s a process of making sure that that’s timeboxed and we move on to the next person.

That’s another way of making sure that each person gets their time and that the person who otherwise would want to take over and dominate will find it harder to bully everybody because there are rules.

You don’t need all of those tactics. You can pick just a few, even depending on your situation.

And I’m confident that you will find that you can master handling ideation bullies so that they can potentially still have their say, but it doesn’t disrupt everything you’re trying to do in terms of coming up with great ideas.

Check out my Wall Street Journal bestselling book, Winning Digital Customers, where I go into great length on a wide range of ideation practices in the context of product development and the creation of great customer experiences. It will show you the step-by-step process for coming up with ideas that lead to successful products in the market. You can download the first chapter for free by clicking this link https://WinningDigitalCustomers.com.

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Key Performance Indicators for Innovation

What to Measure

Key Performance Indicators for Innovation

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

Innovation is crucial for sustaining growth, competitive advantage, and relevance in today’s fast-paced market landscape. However, managing innovation can be elusive without clear metrics and indicators. Identifying and tracking Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) is essential for steering your innovation efforts in the right direction. In this article, I will discuss effective KPIs for innovation and illustrate their application through two compelling case studies.

Why KPIs Matter for Innovation

KPIs act as signposts that direct an organization’s innovation initiatives. They provide measurable evidence of progress and help leaders make informed decisions. The right KPIs can foster a culture of innovation, hold teams accountable, align efforts with strategic objectives, and ultimately, drive successful outcomes.

Key Performance Indicators for Innovation

Here are some essential KPIs you should consider when measuring innovation:

  • Number of New Ideas Submitted: Measures the volume of innovative ideas generated within the organization.
  • Idea Conversion Rate: Tracks the percentage of submitted ideas that make it through to implementation.
  • Time to Market: Measures the duration from idea conception to market launch, reflecting the efficiency of the innovation process.
  • Revenue from New Products/Services: Indicates the financial impact of innovation efforts by tracking earnings from newly launched offerings.
  • Customer Satisfaction and Adoption Rates: Measures how well the new products or services are received by the target market.
  • R&D Spend as a Percentage of Revenue: Gauges the investment in research and development relative to the company’s overall revenue.

Case Studies

Case Study 1: Google

Google is renowned for its innovative culture and continuous product evolution. Here’s how they leverage KPIs:

  • Number of New Ideas Submitted: Google encourages a culture of idea submission through its “20% time” policy, empowering employees to spend 20% of their time on innovative projects. This KPI helps Google measure its creative pipeline.
  • Idea Conversion Rate: Google’s X (formerly Google X) division focuses on moonshot projects. Out of numerous ideas, only a select few, like Waymo and Loon, get converted and scaled. Tracking this conversion rate ensures that only the most promising ideas get resources.
  • Time to Market: By measuring the time from concept to launch, Google ensures that innovative products reach consumers quickly. For example, the rapid development and deployment of Google Meet during the COVID-19 pandemic showcased this KPI in action.
  • Revenue from New Products/Services: Alphabet, Google’s parent company, closely monitors the revenue generated from new ventures like Google Cloud, which shows the financial fruitfulness of its innovation efforts.

Case Study 2: 3M

3M is an iconic innovator, known for products like Post-it Notes and Scotch Tape. Here’s a look at their KPIs:

  • R&D Spend as a Percentage of Revenue: 3M allocates approximately 6% of its revenue to research and development. This KPI underscores their commitment to continuous innovation.
  • Revenue from New Products/Services: 3M tracks the percentage of sales from products launched in the past five years, aiming for 30%. This helps them understand the impact of recent innovations on their bottom line.
  • Customer Satisfaction and Adoption Rates: Customer feedback is integral to 3M’s innovation process. They measure satisfaction and adoption rates to ensure that new products meet or exceed customer expectations.
  • Number of Patents Filed: 3M files over 3,000 patents yearly. This KPI reflects their innovative output and secures intellectual property to protect and leverage their inventions.

Conclusion

Measuring innovation is not a one-size-fits-all approach. The KPIs you choose should align with your strategic objectives and organizational culture. By implementing effective KPIs and learning from examples set by industry leaders like Google and 3M, you can better manage your innovation efforts and drive sustainable growth.

Remember, the key is to balance quantitative metrics with qualitative insights to get a holistic view of your innovation process. With the right KPIs, you’ll be better equipped to navigate the complex terrain of innovation and achieve success.

SPECIAL BONUS: The very best change planners use a visual, collaborative approach to create their deliverables. A methodology and tools like those in Change Planning Toolkit™ can empower anyone to become great change planners themselves.

Image credit: Pixabay

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Importance of Long-Term Innovation

Importance of Long-Term Innovation

GUEST POST from Greg Satell

Scientists studying data from Mars recently found that the red planet may have oceans worth of water embedded in its crust in addition to the ice caps at its poles. The finding is significant because, if we are ever to build a colony there, we will need access to water to sustain life and, eventually, to terraform the planet.

While it’s become fashionable for people to lament short-term thinking and “quarterly capitalism,” it’s worth noting that there are a lot of people working on—and a not insignificant amount of money invested in—colonizing another world. Many dedicate entire careers to a goal they do not expect to be achieved in their lifetime.

The truth is that there is no shortage of organizations that are willing to invest for the long-term. In fact, nascent technologies which are unlikely to pay off for years are still able to attract significant investment. The challenge is to come up with a vision that is compelling enough to inspire others, while still being practical enough that you can still make it happen.

The Road to a Miracle Vaccine

When the FDA announced that it was granting an emergency use authorization for Covid-19 vaccines, everybody was amazed at how quickly they were developed. That sense of wonder only increased when it was revealed that they were designed in a mere matter of days. Traditionally, vaccines take years, if not decades to develop.

Yet appearances can be deceiving. What looked like a 10-month sprint to a miracle cure was actually the culmination of a three-decade effort that started in the 90s with a vision of a young researcher named Katalin Karikó, who believed that a molecule called mRNA could hold the key to reprogramming our cells to produce specific protein molecules.

The problem was that, although theoretically once inside the cytoplasm mRNA could instruct our cell machinery to produce any protein we wanted, our bodies tend to reject it. However, working with her colleague Drew Weissman, Karikó figured out that they could slip it past our natural defenses by slightly modifying the mRNA molecule.

It was that breakthrough that led two startup companies, Moderna and BioNTech to license the technology and for investors to back it. Still, it would still take more than a decade and a pandemic before the bet paid off.

The Hard Road of Hard Tech

In the mid-90s when the Internet started to take off, companies with no profits soon began attracting valuations that seemed insane. Yet the economist W. Brian Arthur explained that under certain conditions—namely high initial investment, low or negligible marginal costs and network effects—firms could defy economic gravity and produce increasing returns.

Arthur’s insight paved the way for the incredible success of Silicon Valley’s brand of venture-funded capitalism. Before long, runaway successes such as Yahoo, Amazon and Google made those who invested in the idea of increasing returns a mountain of money.

Yet the Silicon Valley model only works for a fairly narrow slice of technologies, mostly software and consumer gadgets. For other, so-called “hard technologies,” such as biotech, clean tech, materials science and manufacturing 4.0, the approach isn’t effective. There’s no way to rapidly prototype a cure for cancer or a multimillion-dollar piece of equipment.

Still, over the last decade a new ecosystem has been emerging that specifically targets these technologies. Some, like the LEEP programs at the National Laboratories, are government funded. Others, such as Steve Blank’s I-Corps program, focus on training scientists to become entrepreneurs. There are also increasingly investors who specialize in hard tech.

Look closely and you can see a subtle shift taking place. Traditionally, venture investors have been willing to take market risk but not technical risk. In other words, they wanted to see a working prototype, but were willing to take a flyer on whether demand would emerge. This new breed of investors are taking on technical risk on technologies, such as new sources of energy, for which there is little market risk if they can be made to work.

The Quantum Computing Ecosystem

At the end of 2019, Amazon announced Braket, a new quantum computing service that would utilize technologies from companies such as D-Wave, IonQ, and Rigetti. They were not alone. IBM had already been building its network of quantum partners for years which included high profile customers ranging from Goldman Sachs to ExxonMobil to Boeing.

Here’s the catch. Quantum computers can’t be used by anybody for any practical purpose. In fact, there’s nobody on earth who can even tell you definitively how quantum computing should work or exactly what types of problems it can be used to solve. There are, in fact, a number of different approaches being pursued, but none of them have proved out yet.

Nevertheless, an analysis by Nature found that private funding for quantum computing is surging and not just for hardware, but enabling technologies like software and services. The US government has created a $1 billion quantum technology plan and has set up five quantum computing centers at the national labs.

So if quantum computing is not yet a proven technology why is it generating so much interest? The truth is that the smart players understand that the potential of quantum is so massive, and the technology itself so different from anything we’ve ever seen before, that it’s imperative to start early. Get behind and you may never catch up.

In other words, they’re thinking for the long-term.

A Plan Isn’t Enough, You Need To Have A Vision

It’s become fashionable to bemoan the influence of investors and blame them for short-term and “quarterly capitalism,” but that’s just an excuse for failed leadership. If you look at the world’s most valuable companies—the ones investors most highly prize—you’ll find a very different story.

Apple’s Steve Jobs famously disregarded the opinions of investors, (and just about everybody else as well). Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, who habitually keeps margins low in order to increase market share, has long been a Wall Street darling. Microsoft invested heavily in a research division aimed at creating technologies that won’t pan out for years or even decades.

The truth is that it’s not enough to have a long-term plan, you have to have a vision to go along with it. Nobody wants to “wait” for profits, but everybody can get excited about a vision that inspires them. Who doesn’t get thrilled by the possibility of a colony on Mars, miracle cures, revolutionary new materials or a new era of computing?

Here’s the thing: Just because you’re not thinking long-term doesn’t mean somebody else isn’t and, quite frankly, if they are able to articulate a vision to go along with that plan, you don’t stand a chance. You won’t survive. So take some time to look around, to dream a little bit and, maybe, to be inspired to do something worthy of a legacy.

All who wander are not lost.

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

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Case Studies in Human-Centered Design

Lessons from Top Companies

Principles of Inclusive Design

GUEST POST from Art Inteligencia

Human-centered design (HCD) is a creative and strategic approach to problem-solving that places the needs, behaviors, and experiences of people at the forefront of the design and development process. Unlike traditional methods that may prioritize technical feasibility or business goals in isolation, HCD seeks to integrate these elements with deep empathy and understanding of the end user. By involving users throughout different stages of the design process, from research to prototyping and testing, HCD ensures that the solutions created are both usable and meaningful to those they are intended to serve. This approach not only enhances user satisfaction but also drives innovation and success for organizations that embrace it.

Case Study 1: IDEO’s Approach with Ford’s Focus

IDEO, a global design company renowned for its human-centered design methodology, partnered with Ford to redesign the Ford Focus, making it more user-friendly and appealing. This collaboration offers a wealth of lessons on the importance of putting the user at the center of the design process.

The Challenge: Ford wanted to revitalize the Focus, a line that was quickly becoming outdated and faced stiff competition.

Key Steps Taken:

  • User Research: IDEO conducted extensive ethnographic research, observing how real users interacted with their vehicles. This research highlighted pain points such as difficult-to-use controls and the need for a more intuitive interface.
  • Prototyping: Rapid prototyping allowed IDEO to quickly iterate on design ideas and receive real-time feedback from users.
  • Empathy Maps and Personas: Detailed empathy maps and personas were created to ensure that the design team stayed focused on actual user needs throughout the process.

The Result: By focusing on the human experience, the new Ford Focus was not only aesthetically pleasing but also significantly more intuitive and user-friendly. Sales of the Focus increased, and the car was awarded multiple design accolades.

Lessons Learned:

  • Consistent user research provides invaluable insights and ensures the product meets the real needs of users.
  • Rapid prototyping and user feedback loops are essential for refining ideas quickly and effectively.
  • Empathy maps and personas keep the design process grounded in user realities, leading to more meaningful and impactful design decisions.

Case Study 2: Airbnb’s Design Transformation

Airbnb’s journey from a struggling startup to a global powerhouse is a quintessential example of the power of human-centered design. By focusing on the user experience, Airbnb transformed its service and significantly improved customer satisfaction.

The Challenge: In its early days, Airbnb struggled with low user retention and satisfaction. The booking process was cumbersome, and listings were inconsistent in quality.

Key Steps Taken:

  • User Journey Mapping: Airbnb analyzed the entire user journey from search to booking to check-in. This helped identify friction points and areas for improvement.
  • Design Thinking Workshops: The company held design thinking workshops with stakeholders from various departments. This collaborative approach ensured that everyone had a shared understanding of user needs and priorities.
  • Improved Visuals and UX: Investing in professional photography for listings and redesigning the website and mobile app interfaces made the experience visually appealing and easier to navigate.

The Result: Airbnb’s user-centered redesign led to dramatically improved user satisfaction and engagement. The platform became more accessible, visually appealing, and user-friendly, which contributed to its explosive growth.

Lessons Learned:

  • User journey mapping is crucial for identifying pain points and opportunities across the entire experience.
  • Collaborative design thinking can unlock innovative solutions and foster a unified vision around user-centric goals.
  • Investing in visual and functional design elements can significantly enhance user experience and satisfaction.

Human-centered design is not just a buzzword—it’s a transformative approach that can propel companies to new heights. By learning from the case studies of IDEO and Ford, as well as Airbnb, organizations can see the tangible benefits of putting the user at the center of their design processes. These examples highlight the importance of empathy, collaboration, and iterative design in creating products and services that truly resonate with users.

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: Microsoft Copilot

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Being Too Focused on the Test is Dangerous

Being Too Focused on the Test is Dangerous

GUEST POST from Arlen Meyers

Like most premeds, I got into medical school, mostly, because I am good at taking standardized tests, I can memorize lots of information , I had some cultural and economic advantages and I knew what to say to interviewers who did not know how to interview. It certainly was not about my being creative or imaginative.

Fortunately, for this generation, that is gradually changing.

As more and more medical educators try to reform the structure, process , goals, learning objectives and outcomes of medical undergraduate and post-graduate education, they run into some recurring questions:

  1. How do we find the right people to teach new subjects?
  2. How do we find the time to teach all of this new information when we are already constrained by the explosive growth of new basic science and clinical information?
  3. How do we make sure that our students and residents pass the tests required to graduate and get board certified so that they can practice and so that the education and training programs get accredited? In other words, how do we practice educational ambidexterity
  4. Should we change how and who we admit?
  5. How do we bridge the now, with the next with the new?

The latest trend in management theory is what’s called organizational ambidexterity. It’s the social scientists take on being a switch hitter, and is defined as an organization’s ability to be aligned and efficient in its management of today’s business demands while simultaneously being adaptive to changes in the environment. In other words, being able to simultaneously lead the now, the new and the next. Some describe it as bimodal people management.

While some are very vocal about eliminating standardized tests, it is unlikely they will be eliminated. The rate of growth of scientific and clinical information will increase. New faculty develoment is always a challenge. So, what are some answers?

  1. Faculty development programs that are people-centric and expand their knowledge, skills, abilities and competencies about introducing and integrating new subjects into their existing subject matter expertise. Engage the champions, build innovation teams around them, set the standards and goals then get out of their way. Identify the skeptics and either convert them or just let them do what they do best now. Sabateurs should be quickly exposed and “rehabilitated”.
  2. Recruit, develop, promote and reward for skills, like innovation, entrepreneurship , data analytics and artificial intelligence
  3. Create interdisciplinary and cross functional teaching teams
  4. Encourage industry collaboration
  5. Decrease, don’t increase, lecture time and give students the flexibility to learn when and how they do it best.
  6. Focus on competencies, while at the same time making it clear to students what they will be tested on to practice medicine
  7. Reform the standardized test and maintenance of certification process
  8. In the age of search, teach students how to learn, not what to memorize. Take advantage of how students learn, not how you think they learn.
  9. Accelerate up the hierarchy of learning from recall to interpretation to problem solving to creativity
  10. Take small steps in integrating the new subjects into the traditional four year/three year curriculum
  11. Test new ideas and incorporate the results into the next iteration
  12. Encourage students to be prosumers (producer/consumers) and help you build the product
  13. Rethink how and who you admit to medical school. In one recently opened school, 75% of the first year class have engineering or computer science degrees.
  14. Integrate and continue to build medical school education with post-graduate education and training
  15. Change and define GME required competencies and accreditation standards to meet contemporary needs.

Here are themes/motifs that are becoming part and parcel of the practice of medicine and are incrementally being intergrated into the medical school curriculum:

Some new schools are leapfrogging the old ways and launching entirely new curriculum maps from the start.

We should strive for educational ambidexterity and evolve from teaching and learning to the test and forgetting about all the rest.

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Introduction to Agile: Principles and Practices

Introduction to Agile: Principles and Practices

GUEST POST from Chateau G Pato

What is Agile?

Agile is not just a methodology, but a holistic approach to project management and software development. It emphasizes flexibility, collaboration, and rapid iteration. The core of Agile lies in its set of principles and practices designed to advance productivity and responsiveness to changing customer needs.

The Core Principles of Agile

  1. Customer Satisfaction through Early and Continuous Delivery: Deliver valuable software frequently, with a preference for shorter timescales.
  2. Welcome Changing Requirements: Even late in the development process, Agile processes harness change for the customer’s competitive advantage.
  3. Deliver Working Software Frequently: Prefer shorter timescales from a couple of weeks to a couple of months.
  4. Collaborate Daily with Business People and Developers: Ensure a close, daily cooperation between business stakeholders and developers.
  5. Build Projects around Motivated Individuals: Provide support and trust to the team, allowing them to get the job done.
  6. Face-to-Face Conversation: The most efficient method of conveying information to and within a development team is direct communication.
  7. Working Software is the Primary Measure of Progress: Focus on functional software to gauge how well the project is advancing.
  8. Maintain a Sustainable Pace: Agile processes promote sustainable development — the team should maintain a constant pace indefinitely.
  9. Continuous Attention to Technical Excellence: Enhances agility by focusing on good design and technical details.
  10. Simplicity is Essential: Maximize the amount of work not done, which is important.
  11. Self-Organizing Teams: The best architectures, requirements, and designs emerge from self-organizing teams.
  12. Regular Reflection and Adjustment: Periodically, the team reflects on how to become more effective and adjusts their behavior accordingly.

Case Study 1: Pixar’s Agile Film Making

Many might be familiar with Agile in software development, but Pixar, a leading animation studio, has effectively applied Agile principles in film making. Pixar’s process is not linear. Instead, they iterate on pieces of the film, from storyboarding to final animation, with constant feedback loops.

One key Agile principle Pixar uses is “early and continuous delivery of valuable increments.” This is evident where they focus on delivering short, rough sequences of the film for team and stakeholder review. These rough animations, or ‘reels,’ are iterated upon until the final movie emerges. Pixar also promotes a culture where it’s safe to fail early, as their focus is on rapid prototyping and feedback cycles.

Case Study 2: Spotify and Agile Scaling

Spotify, the global music streaming service, provides a stunning showcase of scaling Agile. Instead of traditional teams, Spotify uses “squads” — small, cross-functional, and self-organizing teams. Each squad operates much like a mini-startup, with accountability for a particular aspect of the service.

Spotify has scaled Agile by structuring squads into Tribes, which work on related areas of the service, allowing for collaboration and alignment. Governance is decentralized, and autonomy is high, which aligns with the Agile principle of self-organizing teams. Another critical aspect is Spotify’s use of “guilds” — groups of individuals with shared interests spanning across different squads, facilitating knowledge sharing and continuous improvement across the organization.

Agile Practices to Implement

Below are several Agile practices to consider implementing in your organization:

  • User Stories: Captures requirements from the perspective of the end-user.
  • Sprint Planning: Prioritize and plan work in time-boxed iterations.
  • Daily Stand-ups: Short, focused meetings to synchronize the team and address obstacles.
  • Sprint Reviews: Demonstrate and inspect the product after each iteration.
  • Retrospectives: Reflect on the process to identify improvements.
  • Kanban Boards: Visualize workflow and limit work in progress to optimize efficiency.

Conclusion

The adoption of Agile introduces a paradigm shift in how teams approach project management and execution. By embracing its principles and practices, organizations can enhance flexibility, foster innovation, and better respond to evolving customer needs. The case studies of Pixar and Spotify illustrate the versatile application of Agile across different domains, highlighting its potential to drive success whether in film making or global software services.

SPECIAL BONUS: The very best change planners use a visual, collaborative approach to create their deliverables. A methodology and tools like those in Change Planning Toolkit™ can empower anyone to become great change planners themselves.

Image credit: Pixabay

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