Innovative Leadership Needs Innovation Strategy Models

November 6th, 2008

Innovative leadership needs, seeks and desires a way to envision or describe the organization’s innovation strategy. In more ways than this one specific instance, today’s leaders resemble their traditional counterparts.

If they can model or otherwise map their innovation strategy, they can better experiment with it, put it to the test, stretch its limits and communicate it to others.

“Prayer does not change God, but it changes him who prays.”
- Soren Kierkegaard

Stated another way, strategy is not what changes, it is we who use the strategy to encourage, energize, enlighten, engage, extend and empower ourselves to achieve its ends.

The sole purposes for modeling your innovation strategy are to focus you on, guide you into and reveal the granular yet measurable details of your strategic intentions.

Every innovation strategy must give innovative leaders the means to accomplish three crucial things:

    1) Direct all activities

    2) Develop all resources

    3) Discipline all players

When the innovative leadership team designs their model of an innovation strategy, it should include:

    => A window on historical, internal and external realities;

    => Mechanisms to control and adjust to changes

    => Applications of energy to inspire, relieve and educate;

    => Metrics which expose exchanges, dependencies and transfers;

    => Communications of beliefs, meanings and feelings;

    => Relationships between the observed, measured and assumed;

    => Opportunity “areas” where the strategy can be executed.

“Cast aside those who liken godliness to whimsy and who try to combine their greed for wealth with their desire for a happy afterlife.”
- Kahlil Gibran

Too many managers declare they have a strategy: “Increase shareholder value!” Unfortunately, their strategies are neither inspiring nor seriously implemented.

In this Age where imagination is the primary driver of competitive advantage, your innovation strategy is only your avenue towards sustainable success.

Innovative leadership performs well only when a model for their innovation strategy is formulated - in a word, innovative excellence is achieved through a model for success.

Copyright © 2006, Mustard Seed Investments Inc.,
All rights reserved.

Bill Thomas teaches innovative leadership and innovation
strategy grounded upon Imagination Age concepts and methods
- his books, manuals, handbooks, Executive Briefings, software
and training programs describe sustainable processes which empower
leaders to consistently produce measurably powerful results!
Get Your FREE Copy of our Executive Briefing:
“How to Energize Your Innovative Leadership Power!”
http://www.innovational.info/paper.html

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Innovative Leadership - Substance versus Style!

October 22nd, 2008

This may come as a surprise but when it comes to
innovative leadership, substance wins out over style every
time.

Most organizations focus their time, attention and money on
training or recruiting operational, activity-based leaders -
however, very few companies devote any investment in the
development of innovative leadership competences.

Unlike traditional leadership, style isn’t as important as
the substance of an innovative leader.

Leadership styles usually involve strategic solutions to
tactical challenges - leaders employ styles to influence,
govern or relate to people.

Innovative leadership depends on the substance of one’s
innovation strategy, the model for innovating in use, the
principles and fundamentals of the technologies involved in
the innovation, and the organizational elements needed to
make the innovation successful.

What follows are some criteria you can use to identify,
recruit, develop and improve the capabilities of qualified
candidates for your innovative leadership ranks.

Tip-1 - Has Acquired a Broad, Insightful Knowledge of the
Humanities, Technologies or your Industry

This candidate has extensively read or written about and
possesses in-depth experiential knowledge of one or more of
the following areas:

  1. Understands the challenges of the human condition
    [perhaps worked as a missionary, been a volunteer, or lived
    and participated in the affairs of a foreign community],

  2. Knows one or more of the technologies critical to your
    organization’s success or

  3. Worked in the exact or a related industry or has
    experience working with a similar business model as yours

The more of these experiences and knowledges a candidate has
acquired, the more likely she is to have the potential for
becoming a superior innovative leader.

An ideal profile might look like this:
“Candidate-A is a former relief aid worker who lived and
worked in 2 or more other countries, who studied technology
while in school and who worked for 3 years as a part-time
associate at a competitor company.”

Tip-2 Appreciates Why the Engineering of Systems, Cycles,
Processes and Graphic Representations Are Primary Causes for
Organizational Success

Your search for and promotion of qualified candidates for
innovative leadership positions must include those persons
who are able to eloquently express or demonstrate the
requirements for and importance of systems, cyclical
principles, processes and graphical depictions of key
business elements.

Those candidates who have this level of appreciation for
core organizational components will have performed
prodigious amounts of work on them or spent significant
amounts of time trying to refine, improve or radically
change the systems, cyclical or process-oriented natures, or
graphical representations of their work environments or
operational model.

You’re likely to find these types of employees working
within your midst, or they may have recently joined your
organization from other companies.

Tip-3 - Embraces, Leads or Has Experienced and Is Now
Prepared for Radical Change

While most people either avoid making changes or prefer not
to undergo change, innovative leadership demands an
emotional and psychological acceptance of or a positive
mental attitude for the constant realities of change.

In keeping with the themes of Tips one and two, you will
discover these people have experienced serious changes in
their living conditions or locations, work environments or
situations and in their job descriptions or knowledge
bases.

You may want to groom these people by helping them
strengthen their relationship-building, communications,
collaboration and cooperation and coaching skills. Your
investments of time and money would be well rewarded.

————————————————————

The famous innovator, entrepreneur and industrialist, Howard
Hughes, purportedly said, “Never judge a man by his
appearnace, always judge him by his experience!”
His
sentitment is the dominant theme of this article.

You can not evaluate a person based on what you see, you
must use conversations to determine their worth to your
organization instead. A scripted interview or your everyday
homogenuous scoring sheet system is not likely to identify
truly innovative leadership candidates.

Who would have hired Bill Gates as a software developer,
Warren Buffet as stock broker, Sir Richard Branson as an
entrepreneurial leader or Steve Jobs as a CEO using ordianry
hiring criteria and methods?

“Books were my pass to personal freedom. I learned to read
at age three, and soon discovered there was a whole world to
conquer that went beyond our farm in Mississippi.”

- Oprah Winfrey, Entertainment and Social Entrepreneur

Nearly every innovator has been a serious student of life,
technology or business - the majority of innovative leaders
are readers or experimenters or doers in their subject
matter of choice and interest.

You will discover what the true secret of innovative
leadership is: innovators have a passion, commitment and
loyalty for pursuing and being excellence. In a word,
innovative leaders will put substance above style everytime.

Copyright © 2006, Mustard Seed Investments Inc.
All rights reserved.

About the Author:
Bill Thomas energizes your innovative leadership & innovations via Imagination Age methods - his books, software & training programs empower business skills & processes, improve strategic advantages, produce tangible value & deliver powerful results! See how his Executive Briefings, Management Handbooks, Professional Guides & Innovation Workshops:
“Super-Seed & Sustain Your Innovative Leadership Power!”
http://www.leadership-toolkit.com/innovativeleadership.php

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Innovation Strategy Models Need Innovative Leadership Guides

October 1st, 2008

Innovation strategy models usually follow this uninspired recipe
- let’s encourage employee ideas, throw together a business case,

justify the costs and operating budget, dish-up a marketing
strategy and production project plan, hope for the best.

There are other organizations who believe in innovation
strategies which heavily depend on setting up and managing
arrangements, special relationships or partnerships with their
supplier community. I am not trying to find fault with those
methods, however, my argument is with those who are supposed to
act as the agents of innovative leadership.

What is the purpose of an innovation strategy? We innovate to
take advantage of the opportunities caused by change. For
example, prayer is a strategy we use to cope with our personal
challenges. And “prayer”, as philosopher, Soren Kierkegaard so
aptly observed, “does not change God, but it changes him who
prays.”

Simply stated, it is not the strategy that changes, it is we who
change as we employ our strategy and use it to encourage,
energize, enlighten and engage ourselves to strive for achieving
its objectives. In a word, our innovation strategies can not be
expected to change the world, our strategy must compel us to
change the ways we think about, react to and perform in the
world.

“Without change there is no innovation, creativity, or incentive
for improvement. Those who initiate change will have a better
opportunity to manage the change that is inevitable.”

- William Pollard

Innovative Leadership Guide-1: Thinking through your innovation
strategy model

“Innovation is not the product of logical thought, although the
result is tied to logical structure.”

- Albert Einstein

Your innovation strategy model must enable you to execute four
essential tasks:

  1. It has to help you recognize the components of a changing
    landscape [explore],

  2. It must expose you to the needs imposed upon your ecosystems
    by the change [create]

  3. It should usher you through the changes you hope to exploit [
    implement],

  4. It must empower you to adapt to the changes in your
    marketplace and your offering [supervise].

Innovative leadership means finding clearly defined pathways
through the territories you operate within - this includes the
environments of your organization, partners, markets and
end-customers. Innovative leaders channel or direct the shared,
received and transmitted energies found in their ecosystems of
profound knowledge, work processes and social relationships.

Innovation leadership uses the innovation strategy model as a
guide towards:

    1) Directing innovative activities;

    2) Developing crucial systems, resources and assets;

    3) Disciplining the process, purpose and players of
    innovation

Innovative Leadership Guide-2: Reacting to your innovation
strategy model

Your innovative leadership team uses the innovation strategy
model to tweak, adjust and maintain its course towards
successful outcomes. The most effective strategy models provide
leaders with:

  • Windows on historical, internal and external
    circumstance [Realities];

  • Mechanisms to control and adjust to changes [Dynamic
    Controls]

  • Applications of energy to inspire, relieve and educate [
    Leadership];

  • Metrics which expose exchanges, dependencies and
    transfers [Ecosystem Management];

  • Revelations of beliefs, meanings and feelings [
    Coordinated Communications];

  • Relationships between the observed, measured and
    assumed [Progress Dashboards];

  • Opportunity “areas” where the strategy can be executed [
    Organic Leveraging].

“Cast aside those who liken godliness to whimsy and who try to
combine their greed for wealth with their desire for a happy
afterlife.”
- Kahlil Gibran

If your innovation strategy model depends on a “kiss from the
muse”, a “bright idea” and some similar “eureka” experience, you’ll
have very few and far between innovations emerging from your
organization.

Innovative Leadership Guide-3: Performing on the promises of an
innovation strategy model

“Never before in history has innovation offered promise of so
much to so many in so short a time.”

- Bill Gates

Back in the Industrial Age, we followed a series of steps, made
use of equipment and mechanized systems and relied on prodigious
amounts of fiscal and human capital to achieve the promises of
success. We may live in a different era, I call it, the
Imagination Economy, yet we need the same amounts of effort and
focus to realize our goals.

A few years ago, our competitive advantages were based upon our
ability to shape raw information into forms of relevant,
applicable knowledge. Today, we compete against the imaginations
of others - we have to slice and dice knowledge and blend it
with universal wisdom, intuitive know-how and meaningful
what-ifs to produce sustainable, profitable, productive
innovations.

In the Imagination Age, innovative leadership will be called
upon to map-out the complexities, model optimal congruencies and
mold evolutionary conceptualizations of our world. Leaders will
meet the many challenges of this new Age by seeing people as
four dimensional beings - that is, as physical, intellectual,
spiritual and developmental entities.

Innovative leadership will use their innovation strategy models
to fully exploit and leverage the many strengths of their
available human capital assets - intellectual and physical assets
[think and do], production and social assets [process and
interact], as well as, innovative and developmental assets [learn and imagine].

“Innovation is the specific instrument of entrepreneurship. The
act that endows resources with a new capacity to create wealth.”

- Peter F. Drucker

A model for your innovation strategies is an essential
ingredient in your organization’s competitive recipe - without
such a model, your business will lack the flavor of innovating.
Your customers, constituents and communities may begin to
perceive the staleness of your old, crumbling offerings and stop
putting your products on their shelves.

You need to mix together all the elements of an innovation
strategy model listed above and use these innovative leadership
guidelines to manage and energize your strategy. Innovation is
industry and it requires persistent, determined effort. And just
like the industries of old, innovation can follow a process, it
can use capital assets, it can be measured or assessed and it
can be led and managed.

“Do not go where the path may lead, go instead were there is no
path and leave a trail.”

- Ralph Waldo Emerson

Copyright © 2006, Mustard Seed Investments Inc., All rights
reserved.

Bill Thomas develops innovative leaders and helps them design
innovation strategy models for success in the Imagination Age -
his books, manuals, Executive Briefings, software, speeches and
training programs define sustainable innovation processes and
empower leaders to produce measurably powerful results!
Learn “How to Energize Your Innovative Leadership Power and
Model Your Winning Innovation Strategy!”

http://www.leadership-toolkit.com/innovation.html

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