“Innovation is a deliberate change towards unlocking new value.”<\/em><\/p>\n We live in unprecedented times of technology advancements happening at a blistering pace, creating endless possibilities for individuals and organisations. The global political and economic environment is also shifting constantly, often moving in unpredictable directions. It seems clear that innovation will be a defining trait of those organisations that thrive over the next few decades. In a 2015 survey of the Center for Creative Leadership, 94 percent thought innovation was important and only 14 percent thought their organisations were effective at innovating.<\/p>\n The research interviewed teams on the front lines of innovation work from various industries to better understand the leadership behaviours that encourage innovation. They identified the critical leadership behaviour exhibited during successful innovation efforts, as well as those that worked against innovation. What does it take to lead innovation? Their findings led to the following 5 characteristics: 1.\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0Leaders that support innovation Let us look at the first one closely<\/strong> Ironically, it is not very obvious that leading an innovation team is indeed different from leading an existing successful operation. This is a trap that many innovation efforts and their leaders fall into. If you try adopting the same approach to innovation as is used to lead an ongoing operation, it is likely to fail.<\/p>\n It often requires creating something radically new, instead of just making incremental changes. It demands a different approach to leadership. Defining these differences and helping leaders adopt behaviours, values, attitudes, and techniques that support innovation are essential for any organisation pursuing innovation.<\/p>\n How Innovation Leadership is Different<\/strong> Let us look at how leadership behaviours differ by function in Traditional Leadership versus Innovation Leadership.<\/p>\n Finance<\/strong> Strategy<\/strong> Management<\/strong> Innovation is about the new, the unknown and unchartered value, products or services. Working to lead this unique proposition highlights the emotional stakes and amplifies the daily fluctuations that innovation teams experience. Here is how it makes it interesting.<\/p>\n Innovation is ambiguous.<\/strong>\u00a0The outcome of any innovation effort is uncertain. In fact, the entire context of innovation is ambiguous and unknown. It is impossible for leaders to know for certain if innovators are pursuing the right idea at the right time, giving the entire enterprise of innovation an ambiguity that is not present in other ongoing business activities. This means innovation leaders require great emotional fortitude, confidence, resilience and energy to persist in their work.<\/p>\n Innovation is high profile.<\/strong>\u00a0The innovation efforts of most organisations are highly visible. Regardless of who is leading them, everyone is watching closely. For innovation leaders, high visibility creates enormous pressure to succeed leading to greater anxiety thus taking an emotional toll.<\/p>\n Innovation is risky.<\/strong>\u00a0Because it is unpredictable, there is a high risk of failure built into innovation. This makes innovation work an emotional roller coaster, as the work advances or stalls. The highs are higher, the lows lower, and these ups and downs are emotionally draining.<\/p>\n Innovation is uncharted territory.<\/strong>\u00a0Innovation means moving into uncharted territory. There is no path to follow. The role of innovators is to forge a new path, without certainty if it will take them where they want to go, the time it may take or the effort required to get there.<\/p>\n All leadership jobs are challenging in the modern corporate environment, but innovation leaders and their teams face greater emotional stress because there is no clear map of success for them. Persistence and success requires more risk taking and greater emotional tenacity. Leaders, then, must find ways to guide and support innovation managers through this fraught organisational environment.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" “Innovation is a deliberate change towards unlocking new value.” We live in unprecedented times of technology advancements happening at a blistering pace, creating endless possibilities for individuals and organisations. The global political and economic environment is also shifting constantly, often moving in unpredictable directions. It seems clear that innovation will be a defining trait of[…]<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":534,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[6],"tags":[31,16,12],"yoast_head":"\n
\n2. \u00a0\u00a0 A culture that supports innovation
\n3.\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0A formal innovation strategy
\n4. \u00a0\u00a0 Budget allocated for innovation
\n5. \u00a0\u00a0 A clear direction for their innovation efforts<\/p>\n
\nInnovation is an unpredictable and uncharted territory. Traditional leadership behaviour was developed largely to produce excellence in the relatively predictable context of execution and driving for results. There are several reference points established by now for successful operational leadership like its own history, case studies, competitor’s history, and existing data to understand current and past scenarios. Leading innovation, however, is radically different. It is often a new way of looking at the same things.<\/p>\n
\nWhen leading business as usual there are clear goals and a definable path to reach those goals. Of course that clarity does not always ensure success; it does make success more likely. It is also easier to know, as you move down that path, whether you are on track or not. Innovation, however, happens in a unique manner. Many organisations do not appreciate how different innovation is and what the implications are for leadership behaviours.<\/p>\n
\nRevenue is already flowing, giving leaders financial information that helps them make decisions. Compared to this, the return on investment from innovation efforts is difficult to forecast accurately.<\/p>\n
\nA path to success is already in place or can be mapped based on past experience and formal expertise. Comparatively, during innovating, the path is still being formulated without knowing exactly where it will lead to or how long it will take to get there.<\/p>\n
\nLeaders usually have experience and knowledge related to the problems and issues that may arise. During new innovation, novel challenges arise that no one may have dealt with before.<\/p>\n