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Ask questions to evaluate your organization's innovation and identify areas for improvement.
February 28, 2021
By: Jordan Erskine
Dynamic Blending
Most entrepreneurs have one thing to thank for their success–innovation. Fresh, new ideas are always in demand in the marketplace, but once you’ve grown your business to a certain point, it can be hard to remain agile and continue to grow and change ahead of competitors. Forcing innovation almost never works. Reacting to a situation in which innovation is needed instantly is stressful and tends to yield ideas that are easy to implement, instead of truly innovative. And brainstorming is often unsuccessful because groups begin to conform to each other. Instead of flash periods of innovation, perhaps a review of the innovative process is in order. Here are some questions to ask to evaluate how your organization is innovating, and identify areas for improvement. • Do my employees feel safe enough to share their ideas?
The best way to ensure your company stays at the cutting edge is to create the kind of environment and company culture that encourages innovation. Ideas that come from every area of your organization and have the buy-in of your workforce as a group are far more likely to result in ground-breaking innovation. You won’t hear any ideas from your workforce if they don’t feel comfortable sharing them. Workers have to know that taking a risk by speaking up to solve problems or try something new will be rewarded, even if the idea is not ultimately successful. A risk-friendly company culture starts from the top. Listen when team members speak. Leave the phone and other devices on the desk when making the rounds or taking meetings, so you aren’t tempted to be distracted. Follow up on ideas and conversations. Explain the reasoning behind decisions. And never look back–focus on solutions for the future rather than blame in the past. • What problems do my employees face on a daily basis?
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