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7 Part Series - The Foundations of Innovation
Culture of Innovation
Culture of Innovation
Culture of Innovation
Connect the Dots
, U. of Mich. video by Dr. Jeff DeGraff, 8 minutes. EXCELLENT
Jeff DeGraff shares with you some tricks of the trade to help innovation happen in your organization. Master the art of SODOTO—See One, Do One, Teach One—the apprenticeship of future innovation leaders in your organization. Fail early, fail often, fail off Broadway. Show; don’t tell. Leave room for the stuff you don’t know now.
Use Trojan horses
The cavalry isn’t coming
Scroll down on the linked page for the other 13 “Leading Innovation” videos by Dr DeGraff about leading innovation in your organization
The Foundations of Innovation – 7 Part Series
This series provides an overview of Lt Col Dave Lyle's series on the Foundations of Innovation. The first part of the series examines why innovation is necessary and important, especially in the context of the Department of Defense and the Department of the Air Force.
Part 1 – The Foundations of Innovation
Part 2 – The Foundations of Innovation – A Model of Innovative Change
Part 3 – The Foundations of Innovation: Ideas
Part 4 – The Foundations of Innovation: Groups
Part 5 – The Foundations of Innovation: Tools
Part 6 – The Foundations of Innovation: Synthesis of the IGT Model Insights
Part 7 – The Foundations of Innovation: Current Applications of the IGT Model
Defense Innovation Board
Three subcommittees
Science & Technology (S&T);
Workforce, Behavior, and Culture (WBC); and
Space Advisory Committee (SAC)
Defense Innovation Board (DIB) reports and recommendations
Adam Grant (former DIB member) testimony
to Senate Armed Services Committee, 27 Apr, 2021 – starting at 34:30
“DoD’s culture is a threat to national security.”
“DoD’s culture stifles innovation.”
Three causes
Lack of psychological safety
Cognitive entrenchment
Organizational uniqueness bias
DoD is full of subcultures and there are bright spots
Defense Innovation Unit (DIU)
National Security Innovation Network (NSIN)
Kessel Run
AFWERX
NavalX
Army Software Factory
Senior leaders may need leadership coaches (like many industry leaders)
When group problem solving, get everyone’s thoughts BEFORE revealing the commander’s views
Make it unsafe to not speak up
The defense innovation machine: why the U.S. will remain on the cutting edge
, by Gholz and Sapolsky, 25 June 2021
The Hard Truth about Innovative Cultures
, by Pisano, Harvard Business Review, Jan-Feb 2019
The easy-to-like behaviors that get so much attention are only one side of the coin. They must be counterbalanced by some tougher and frankly less fun behaviors.
Tolerance for Failure but No Tolerance for Incompetence
Willingness to Experiment but Highly Disciplined
Psychologically Safe but Brutally Candid
Collaboration but with Individual Accountability
Flat but Strong Leadership
Liberating Structures Handbook
, from Army’s UFMCS
Liberating structures are frameworks that make it possible for people and organizations to create, to do new things, to be innovative. These are processes or rules that can be put in place to encourage people to be free, creative, and get results, rather than find themselves oppressed, constrained, confined, or powerless. For things to really change, structural elements need to change, too. Otherwise change is short-lived. Liberating structures are the forms that make it easy for people to be generative together and make a significant impact with their
creativity.
Liberating Structures
website
This website offers an alternative way to approach and design how people work together. It provides a menu of thirty-three Liberating Structures to replace or complement conventional practices.
Innovation at DARPA
, 2016
The most important factors that define the DARPA creative culture and explain its long and continuing history of innovation are:
Limited tenure and the urgency it promotes
A sense of mission
Trust and autonomy
Risk-taking and tolerance of failure
Creating a Culture of Innovation: Eight Ideas that Work at Google
, at Google Workspace
Think 10x, not 10 percent improvement
A 10x goal forces you to rethink an idea entirely. It pushes you beyond existing models and forces you to totally reimagine how to approach it.
Launch, then keep listening
The beauty of this approach is that you get real-world user feedback and never get too far from what the market wants.
Share everything you can
At Google we believe that collaboration is essential to innovation and that it happens best when you share information openly.
Hire the right people
Google has worked hard to attract people who want to tackle big problems that matter.
Use the 70/20/10 employee time model
70 percent dedicated to the core business
20 percent related to the core business
10 percent unrelated to the core business
Look for ideas everywhere
For instance, we crowdsource innovation to improve the quality of Google Maps…. That led to Google Map Maker, a tool that lets anyone make changes to Google Maps. Today, thousands of citizen cartographers around the world are literally putting their communities on the map.
Use data, not opinions
We also take this data-driven approach with what we call “People Operations,” our human resources department. Googlegeist is a perfect example of this approach. Googlegeist is an anonymous survey that goes out every year to all of our global employees. The response rate is very high: around 90% of Googlers worldwide. The survey asks employees for their views on a broad range of issues
Focus on users, not the competition
We believe that if we focus on users, everything else will follow. If you
can build a robust and loyal base of people who love what you do, you’ll
have something rare and valuable. For us, that always starts with the desire to improve the lives of users.
Does Your Culture Encourage Innovation?
by Whittinghill et al, Defense Acquisition University (DAU) journal, April 2015, 25 pages
“The data suggest that organizations can improve innovativeness through culture modification.”
5 most effective actions in changing culture to encourage innovation
Communicate and demonstrate the importance of creative innovative thinking
Give members time to think innovatively
Allow and encourage members to collaborate
Allow members flexibility to approach problems as they see fit, free from group-think
Assign motivating work and trust members to perform without being micromanaged
What Characteristics Do Organizations That Successfully Innovate Possess and Are They Transferrable to the Military?
by Walker, School of Advanced Military Studies (SAMS), 2019, 45 pages
This paper uses a literature review to select four determinants of innovation organizational culture, the effective use of knowledge, experimentation, and acceptance of risk when combined with an absence of constraints.
Includes case studies of Google and Apple
Cites military advantages of teamwork as second nature, and a history as a learning organization
Distribution, Disruption and Failure: Building a Culture of Innovation in the Canadian Armed Forces
, by McHardy, Canadian Forces College, 2013, 68 pages
videos can be watched for free online, but can be combined with a for-fee 12-week program of study/projects/coaching to get a Certified Professional Innovator certificate
14 educational videos by Dr Jeff DeGraff, at the University of Michigan
Practice Prismatic Thinking
This model consists of four different methods of innovation—
Create [green], Control [red], Collaborate [yellow],
and
Compete [blue]
—each with their own pros and cons. Every person and every organization has a dominant logic that determines the way they see the world and approach innovation.
How to Think about Growth
Sources of Innovation
Set High-Quality Targets
Enlist Deep & Diverse Domain Expertise
Take Multiple Shots on Goal
Learn from Experience and Experiments
Creative Thinking
Gaining Buy-in
Assess to Progress
Innovation Processes
Evaluating and Measuring Innovation
Connect the Dots
Case Study
Skills advertised for the Certified Professional Innovator Certificate program - "Hone the skills that will prepare you for leading innovation in your organization"
Leading Innovation: How to Make Innovation Happen in Your Organization
- a free video series from the University of Michigan, by Dr Jeff DeGraff
Selecting and assessing high potential innovation leaders
Diagnosing an organization’s innovation culture and competency
Developing an innovation strategy
Building a high performing innovation team
Launching innovation projects and teams
Jumpstarting processes
Gaining buy-in for solutions
Synchronizing growth opportunities and organizational practices
Community of Practice – sharing and communicating with other participants
The Innovation Code: The Creative Power
, by Jeff DeGraff & Staney DeGraff, at Talks at Google, May 16, 2018 - one hour 17 minutes
In The Innovation Code, Jeff DeGraff (the “Dean of Innovation”), and Staney DeGraff introduce a simple framework to explain the ways different kinds of thinkers and leaders can create constructive conflict. They show you the four steps to normalize conflict, channel it, and develop something completely new, using tools, methods, examples, exercises, and assessments.
Notion of "dominant logic"
Innovation, by definition, is a form of deviance
Uber's innovation is a social innovation - young people will get in the car with a stranger
The latitude and longitude of innovation
Innovation has to eliminate (kill) something
Innovation is a form of useful novelty
Breakthrough innovation pays in the future
There is a shelf life, only an innovation for a moment in time
Challenge of maintenance vs growth
Innovative organizations have very little in common
Money is almost never a barrier to innovation
Competitors often innovate in opposite ways (for example, Google is open, Apple is closed)
Incumbents are seldom first movers
Breakthroughs occur at the edges of the bell curve
Diversity is the only known key to success
Mindset – Feedback that encourages, and positivity
The power of believing that you can improve, Carol Dweck, TEDx talk, 2014, 10 minutes
To encourage “growth mindset” (vice “fixed mindset”), praise the process (you must have tried really hard), not the talent (you’re so smart). And rather than “you failed” say “you haven’t got it yet.”
The Power of belief -- mindset and success, Eduardo Briceno, TEDx talk, 2012, 11 minutes
An international chess champ said the best thing to happen to him was losing his first championship.
Getting stuck in the negatives (and how to get unstuck), Alison Ledgerwood, TEDx talk, 2013, 10 minutes
“70% successful” and “30% failures” have different impact on individual opinions and choices, based on the order you present them, even though logically they say the same thing
Why does a failure seem to stick in our minds so much longer than a success? According to social psychologist Alison Ledgerwood, our perception of the world tends to lean negative, and reframing how we communicate could be the key to unlocking a more positive outlook. In this sharp talk, Ledgerwood shares a simple trick for kicking negative thinking to the curb so we can start focusing on the upside.
Physical Design
These 7 Innovative Offices Were Designed to Spark Creativity, by Hill, Apr 24, 2018
20 super-cool design offices to stir the senses, by Creative Bloq Staff, Feb 01, 2021
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