Innovation killers
Today, most of us will encounter someone or read something written by someone who is anti-innovative. There are many plays in the anti-innovation playbook and the players come in all sizes, shapes and places. They wear different uniforms and hats and sport sneakers with many different endorsers on them. They wear shirts with company logos and their carry- on bags have embroidery that proudly displays their provenance.
Bosses might be the worst. They are cagey, wiley creatures who climbed the ladder by not taking too many chances and are wary of those in their charge who do.
Every day we hear anti-innovative blubs. But, actions speak louder than words. There are many arrows in the boss anti-innovation quiver:
1. Marginalize those with the courage to tell truth to authority.
2. Spread rumors about the trouble makers and their previous failures.
3. Use the HR system, with annual performance reviews particularly, to demoralize and stigmatize as one of "those people" who did not meet expectations.
4. Label them as "disruptive". I don't mean Clayton Christensen disruptive in the good sense, either.
5. Gradually, but relentlessly, deprive them of administrative support and other resources to make their lives more and more uncomfortable.
6. Physically distance organizational gadflies and send them down, since they are obviously no longer fit to play in the bigs.
7. Tell them to write a business plan about their new idea.
8. Say that you want people to innovate, but then have no innovation management plan or system for those who foolishly try. Just sit back and watch them run into the C-suite buzz saw.
9. Say you will be a sponsor and then bail or get promoted to the next level of incompetence when the going gets tough.
10. Promote innovators to get in someone else's hair.
But, anti-innovation can be systemic, not just personal. Do these things happen where you work?
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The current business model dominates the agenda
One-size-fits-all decision making hurts speed & inventiveness
Insisting on untested and detailed business plans
Opinions and past experience matter more than evidence
Outsourcing customer discovery and testing
Lack of senior leadership participation
Obsession of competitor rather than customers
Predominant focus on technology risk at the expense of other risks
Innovation is career suicide in most organizations
The innovation engine is siloed from the execution engine
Integrate new ideas into the execution engine too quickly
Does this look like the org chart where you work?
Anti-innovation goes way beyond merely whining and complaining about who moved the cheese. It has become a well refined organizational blood sport with trophies and awards for those who, through years and years of practice, have perfected it to a fine art. Where everything seems to be gamified, you get a badge for that.
Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA is the President and CEO of the Society of Physician Entrepreneurs on Substack
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4moStandardofcare.com is looking for an entrepreneur to takeover this medical encyclopedia
Executive Director at the Denver Medical Society * Championing Physicians * Connection+Advocacy+Support
4mo#8 above about hiding behind technology. Truth! Installing this platform (often rhymes with "Palesforce") will cure all our problems and bring us clients.
Co-Founder @ FPABIO,LLC | Chief Medical Officer @Airmid Critical Care Products
4moThere are always those who want to maintain the status quo and roadblock innovation. But with believing in what one is doing, in what one has created and the expected good that will come from a great idea, the execution of that idea and the will power to fight through all of the obstacles and the nay sayers and with a little luck one can achieve success and do not take ‘no’ or ‘we have never done it that way’ as an obstacle . . #innovation #SOPE #entrepreneurs
Changing The Face & Place Of Healthcare || Executive & Strategist || Co-Founder & Board Director || Solution-Focused Barrier-Breaker || Authentic Human
4moThere is no perfect LinkedIn post about Innovation kille…
Chief Executive Officer Ardeo
4moCome across it all the time "Not invented here" or "I am not going to tell you that we like (have a deal with) our existing supplier" or "Tell us all you can, I am sure one of our existing suppliers can do this if we ask them" etc.