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Friends,
I wrote last week about innovation, and only three people left blog comments. Then I posted a 5-question survey about innovation. Take it. It will take you - about 2 minutes max. When you finish it'll show you the results. But here's a major preview.
83% of respondents said that "innovation is extremely important for our economic competitiveness," and another 15.5% said it's "pretty important." But are we doing it? I don't think I have ever worked at a place where 98% of us were acting like innovation was that important. Do your leaders - both the ones who get paid to lead and the ones who do it without title or position - act like innovation is that important? If we are serious about innovation and competitiveness, then I think we should put this question on every staff meeting agenda: What can we do that (more) customers or clients will feel we are giving them a better product, service, or deal?
And here's the other primary takeaway from the survey results: people's answers demonstrate, as Buckingham and Coffman wrote in
First Break All the Rules
: "managers trump companies." It's not corporate policy but manager behavior that creates an innovative work culture. The two most important behaviors for creating an innovative culture, according to respondents are: "my manager values my ideas" (almost 60% say that's extremely important) and "you don't get punished for taking risks." So, if you're a manager the script is clear:
listen to your people's ideas and let them know how you value them, and do all you can not to punish creative thinking.
Develop a relentless focus on innovating for customers, and
Lead with your best self,
Dan
P.S. Speaking of innovation - follow me at http://twitter.com/danmulhern.
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