Who is Crushing Creativity in Your Office?

How Can We Create a Climate that Empowers People?

Paul Sloane
If you speak to people about what is impeding innovation in their organizations you often encounter a paradox. Senior managers feel frustrated that their people are complacent; they are not showing initiative or enterprise. People lower down the organization feel upset that they are micromanaged, that they are not empowered to try out their own ideas and that their managers stop them from challenging the established way of doing things. Both groups blame the other. Who is really at fault here? It is often true that middle managers block new proposals. But the real problem lies with the leaders. It is easy for them to make visionary statements that include all the right words about how important innovation, change, enterprise and risk are. But unless they back up the words with actions they will be seen as paying lip service to innovation and not having the will to make it happen.

How can leaders become more receptive, more open to challenging ideas? How can we create a climate that empowers people, allows risk-taking and encourages innovation? Here are some pointers:

Listen more and tell less. We are all in a terrible hurry but if we swiftly dismiss the complaints, suggestions and ideas of our people and tell them to focus on the task in hand we send many negative signals and discourage initiative. If we spend time carefully listening to people's objections and proposals we are likely to uncover the real issues and find useful ideas.

Recognise risk-takers. If someone comes up with a good idea that you implement then make a fuss of them. Praise and recognise them in front of the crowd. Send a message that challenging the way things are done is welcomed.

Reward failure. If someone makes an honest attempt to try something new and different and fails then do not chastise or blame them. Recognise their endeavour and see what lessons can be learnt. Nothing crushes enterprise like a fear of failure. If you are going to succeed with innovation you are going to have quite a few failures along the way - so welcome and manage them.

Ask for suggestions. Throw down a challenge. Explain the goal you are trying to achieve and then ask people for their input and ideas. Encourage a free flow of ideas. Suspend judgment during the idea generation phase. Evaluate the best proposals and then implement them.

Set Goals for Innovation. Define metrics for innovation and include them in your balanced scorecard. These might include number of ideas generated, number of prototypes in trial, proportion of revenue from new products, or meantime between idea evaluation and implementation. People do what gets measured so measure innovation.

Invest in training. Train your people in how to generate, how to evaluate and how to implement ideas.

Borrow with pride. Observe other organizations and copy their best practice. Have a deliberate policy for sourcing innovations from outside your business. Establish links with Universities, business networks and other successful organizations.

Most people blame 'the system' or their bosses for inhibiting their creativity. But when we talk about great leaders who inspire their teams it is plain that we all fall short of the ideal. We need to make greater efforts to encourage our people to be creative, challenging and adventurous. Ultimately, it all comes down to the actions of the leaders. Innovative leaders communicate with inspiring words and then quietly reinforce those words with actions. They challenge, they ask, they listen, they empower. In innovative organization leaders build the self-belief of their people. It is this self-belief that unlocks the door to successful innovation.

Paul Sloane runs workshops on innovation and creative thinking.

http://www.destination-innovation.com

Published by Paul Sloane

I am a Speaker & Author of books on lateral thinking puzzles, leadership & innovation. I help organisations to improve creativity and innovation. I give keynote talks and I facilitate brainstorms and worksh...  View profile

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  • Annalie Killian6/1/2010

    Hi Paul...generally a useful list but I want to boldly disagree with the use of that phurphy "Reward failure"- its statements like that spoken as part of a creativity culture that crushes creativity's credibility as a value creating endeavour. Not even in art- especially in art...is failure rewarded. Failure is failure and its a nonsense to reward it- and any thinking person will find this phrase an instant cause for rejection of the idea. So, for the preservation of creativity as a serious value-adding principle. please let this phrase no longer be perpetuated. It should be phrased as "Reward learning, experimentation and risk-taking" - which you subsequently expand on- but please, no more "Reward failure" cliches- it crushes creativity. ( By the way, 2 good criteria for judging if something is an experiment are: 1, Have you articulated a hypothesis? 2. Can you afford to return a failed result? If not, its not an experiment!)

  • mtolent232/19/2010

    Great post! We borrowed with pride open source practices in our software product development which created an actively engaged internal community. Like within open source communities, employees were empowered and much more motivated. So can we rebuild companies as community? Our internal community had great success and bubbled-up to executive level. Unfortunately, middle management was still in the way...

  • Susanne Dansey2/19/2010

    I like this post a lot since it talks about what I tend to think about a lot. I always try and read and listen to people who challenge me either in terms of their knowledge or their opinion. That helps me develop that ability to objectively approach situations but also consider ideas outside of my 'norm'.

  • Nigel Collin - Leading Creatives11/19/2009

    Great piece. I reckon you nailed the 3 big ones. We recently conducted a survey of creative people working in orgs and the #1 frustration was a company's failure to take risks. www.nigelcollin.com

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