Are innovation departments scams?

Are innovation departments scams?

Innovation centers have become increasingly popular among organizations striving to drive innovation and remain relevant and competitive in today's dynamic business environment. However, despite good intentions, many innovation centers are not achieving their goals, and worse, some organizations are seeing a decline in innovation after the establishment of the innovation department. While there are many reasons why innovation centers may be dysfunctional, today I would like to address two important points.

One reason innovation centers may not be effective is that once established, they are often perceived as being in charge of innovating on behalf of the organization. Innovation must occur at all levels of the organization. It is essential to create an environment that fosters creativity and innovation but unfortunately, instead of encouraging it, creating an innovation department can simply stop it. A dedicated innovation center can provide the resources, time and space for employees to work together, share ideas and collaborate on projects. Therefore, rather than designating one person or group of people as responsible for innovation, organizations need to create a culture of innovation that encourages employees to be creative and share their ideas freely.

Another reason innovation centers fail is that they are simply set up backwards. In many cases, organizations start by finding a space, decorating it with whiteboards, inspirational phrases on the walls, and Bean bags. They call this space the innovation department, and then look for people to innovate in it. This approach is the opposite of what needs to be done.

Rather than creating an environment and hoping that innovation will follow, organizations should focus on finding the right people with the right mindset, skills and expertise to drive innovation. In addition, organizations should take a multidisciplinary approach to innovation and involve employees from different departments and backgrounds to bring diverse perspectives and expertise, which will lead to more innovative solutions.

However, the dysfunction of innovation centers can be attributed to other factors. A lack of strategic alignment, unclear goals, insufficient funding, and inadequate support from top management are some of the common reasons why innovation centers fail to drive innovation. It is important to ensure that innovation centers are aligned with the organization's overall strategy, have clear goals, adequate funding, and top management support to succeed.

Innovation centers are not a silver bullet for driving innovation in an organization. To succeed, leaders must create a culture of innovation that encourages employees to be creative and share their ideas freely, and take a multidisciplinary approach to innovation involving employees from different departments and backgrounds. In short, we must start with the human aspect, because innovation is first and foremost a social act of appropriating the new.

Yassr HADJ ABDOU RAZACK

Software engineer | JS | TS | Blockchain Enthusiast

1y

Very interesting and instructful Yann Rousselot-Pailley

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Rahaf Almarzouki, PhD, Prosci®

Innovation and Change practitioner in Strategy, Entrepreneurship and Digital transformation | Assistant Professor | Consultant

1y

Such in intriguing piece Yann Rousselot-Pailley, M. Sc. Innovation departments facilitate effective and efficient ‘thinking outside the box’ in an organisation! Indeed innovation is not about gadgets or a task done by a single department or individual. As you said it’s about creating a culture that innovates in a cohesive environment where every human is involved with a single goal in mind.

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Great post Yann Rousselot-Pailley, M. Sc.. I'm yet to see one successful innovation center that was created without a proper, usually multi-year, innovation culture development roadmap implemented ahead of and around it. Another challenge is the definition of success. If it's just about gadgets and overhyped trends, the innovation center will inevitably fail (hint: AI call center agent that never works). On the other hand, if success is too focused on short term revenues goals, the innovation center might not be given enough runway to succeed.

David Jamieson

Rossum | AI | Strategic Alliances Director

1y

Interesting piece Yann Rousselot-Pailley, M. Sc. - From the software vendor side, how innovation teams collaborate with internal and external development teams can also play a role in their effectiveness. I've often seen innovation departments housed within the GBS & SSC's organisation being really effective, as they are very close to the problems and process they are designed to solve.

Praveen Gajjala

Empowering Financial Growth

1y

Yann Rousselot-Pailley, M. Sc. Absolutely well depicted, couldn't agree more that we must start with the human aspect, because innovation is first and foremost a social act of appropriating the new

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