Thursday 24 March 2016

Google stimulates its creative spark


It is well known that large companies suffer the challenge of losing their innovative spark. Google, part of the world's most innovative company Alphabet, aims to keep its innovative spark by encouraging individuals to think innovatively.

They have the 10X thinking attitude that allows them to come up with BIG ideas. Rather than saying yes "but", staff are encourage to say yes "and" this is how we would make it happen. In effect removing the negativity and short-sightedness that is so rampant in a typical company's brainstorming sessions, and "away days". This is an approach to creativity that the Innovation Future Specialist has been promoting for a long time: anything is possible, you just have to figure out how to do it.

Another important aspect to keeping an organisation innovative is giving its people the time and freedom to pursue their own ideas, and to develop prototypes. Google allows them to use 20% of their time for this activity. That's effectively one day per week.

This is so important to being a creative and innovative organisation. Some organisations, many organisations, just do not get this. Unbelievably, I know of an innovation department that initially went along with a similar idea, but before the scheme even started the amount of time available for individuals fell from one day per week to half a day per two weeks! So it went from a proposed 20% down to a mere 5%! What sort of creativity would happen in an "innovation department" like that. Part of the problem, in many such organisations, is the attitude of management: traditional thinking only. Until management can see the need for 20% creativity time, their organisation will never be really innovative. For such organisations, "innovation" is nothing more than copying someone else. This negative approach kills all hope of being a leader of innovation.

See how Google do it:
What if you change your yes-but mindset to a yes-and one, asks Google Innovation head



Tuesday 22 March 2016

Monday 21 March 2016

Free Answers


Corporate Innovation Special Offer

So you want to be more innovative?

Here is just the ticket...

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Learn about innovation
Practice innovation
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See what the future holds and prepare now for success. Lead amazing innovations.

Experience an innovative learning experience and benefit from a unique service that goes miles further than conventional training: training with impact! 

Benefit from the course How to Innovate Effectively. Push your potential to realise your amazing innovations.

If you need week by week support to become an effective innovator then Innovation Coaching is perfect for you.

Do you want specialist advice, focused reports, and custom tools to stimulate the innovative abilities of your organisation? If so then Innovation Consultancy is what you need.

Benefit from innovative creativity and bright ideas. With this support you will benefit from a unique perspective and receive ideas that go way beyond what your own colleagues produced.

Spring Sale

Welcome to spring! Benefit from any of the above services with this 15% discount off all prices shown on the Innovation Future Specialist website.  To claim your discount simply include a reference to this page (bookmark it now), and make your purchase before the end of March 2016. (This discount may not be used with any other discounts or special offers.)


Friday 18 March 2016

Competition to save the North Sea industry

Ideas to save the North Sea Industry



Do we need a new financial model for socially beneficial innovations?

Here's what's holding back some useful innovations [Financial aspects].

What's stifling spine surgery innovation?



Innovation and PLC is it possible?

Advanced innovations within a PLC: is it really possible?  Alphabet, the parent company of Google, has a top rating for being well placed to be the world's most innovative company. However, as a public company it is answerable to shareholders that often only care about short-term profit. Big innovations often involve big R&D budgets [costs], risks, and patience over a period beyond the short-term. So innovation can represent a major challenge for a PLC, and perhaps this is what's happening here...

Google sells Boston Dynamics robot company





Thursday 17 March 2016

Bentley car innovation: The butler will see you now

Bentley innovation: A peek at their car for 2036.  It looks nice, as one might expect, but their innovative vision rating needs boosting.  Twenty years from now, cars should be much more exciting than just a holographic butler.



Amazing corporate innovation: AWS outstrips parent company profits

Here is an amazing story of corporate innovation.

Over 10 years Amazon Web Services (AWS) have innovated and grown into a business that may have overtaken the profits of its parent company, Amazon!

See also how its customers, like Tesco, have been able to use these cloud services to radically cut costs.

There's no doubt that the Internet cloud is here to stay.

Article: AWS celebrates 10 years


Free course: What is Innovation?


UK PLC still big on the innovation scene

It is reassuring to know that the UK is still a significant player in the worldwide innovation scene.

The UK was the historic powerhouse of innovation: it created the industrial revolution!  Many people might not know this but the UK is home to a World Heritage Site (the Derwent Valley Mills, in Derbyshire), which includes what some argue is the world's first factory (the Silk Mill in Derby).

Of course, the UK was also home to some of the world's most famous scientists (particularly those around the 17th century), such as Sir Isaac Newton.

The UK has pioneered many of the world's first innovations.

So, it's good to see we still have a significant presence, as illustrated in:
Why the UK tech scene continues to lure foreign investment.



Driving and Sustaining Innovation

It is very important these days that any organisation that wants to thrive and survive has a serious attitude towards embracing innovation, and innovating effectively.

The well written article 4 Unlikely Ways to Spark Transformative Innovation is well worth reading.


Free course: What is Innovation?

Wednesday 16 March 2016

What is Innovation?

There is a whole lot of confusion out there about what innovation is.  You experience its benefits every day, so you do already know what innovation can achieve.   I still find it surprising though that many people, when asked, say that they do not know what innovation is.  In the 21st century, surely this is a bizarre situation when innovation is all around us.  
So, for the benefit of the public, business and any confused consultants, I have presented a simple, yet accurate, definition of innovation in the following quick free course.  This focuses on the outcome of innovation (not how to innovate).  It also includes some great examples of innovation that have benefited most of us: 11 "impossible ideas" that were turned into reality!
Learn what innovation is for free in just 10 minutes: What is Innovation?

Monday 14 March 2016

What is Innovation?

Free course: What is Innovation?
Innovation Future Specialist

Celebrate Failure?

You may have heard it said many times within an innovation context that failure is a good thing and that it should be accepted or even celebrated.

However, it is important to know why something failed.

The failure sometimes indicates how stretching, or pioneering, the attempt was; but it can also indicate an ineffective innovation process.

Perhaps we have to be careful of which failures we "celebrate" :-)

True or False?

Google [X] have celebrated their failures.

Do you believe this?  Click the link below to find out.

Innovation Future Specialist: True or False?

Friday 11 March 2016

Innovative Corporations?

Are all large corporations innovative, are they really innovative?

Poor innovative corporates

Well let's not beat around the bush with this one. Clearly all corporations are not innovative, or at least they are not innovative all of the time. Let's list a few failures that failed because they were not innovative.

Kodak took a major hit when it failed to innovate camera technology. As other, more innovative companies, introduced the wonders of digital camera Kodak was resting on its laurels and clearly missed the need to change from traditional film based cameras to digital cameras. The consequences for the company were not good. Even a basic Innovation Strategy would have prevented this huge fundamental mistake.

Similarly, many engineering companies worldwide and in the UK were caught out resting on their laurels. Rayleigh bicycles once had a good business but they failed to adapt and innovate. This put the company into serious difficulties.

There are many such examples. Some went the way of the dinosaur and became extinct and others just about survived through one means or another. You can still find references to the names of these companies today: some apparently survived (by name) but are they really the same companies [?].

It is so easy to become complacent when you are at the top and to think "why do we need to innovate when we are the great brand X?". However, the truth is every organisation has to innovate, and has to continue to innovate, for as long as it wants to survive.

Innovative corporations

Can you think of corporations that are innovative?

Here are some well know brand names (and a few lesser known names) that are, or were, associated with being innovative: 3M, Amazon, Apple, ARM, Baidu, BMW, BT Group, Google, IBM, MIT, Mercedes (Daimler), Microsoft, Samsung, Toyota, Tesla, Virgin, and Yahoo!.

Note: MIT is a university rather than a corporation, but it is so "innovative" that I thought it worthy of inclusion. Having said that it doesn't quite meet the definition for innovation though. See What is Innovation?

Now that is an interesting list because some of those are now considered innovative corporations, but some are no longer considered innovative.  Are some of them starting to rest on their laurels, and about to go the way of the poor innovators described above? Time will tell.

My award for most innovative corporation, by far, goes to a name not listed above. The most innovative corporation is... Alphabet.

Learn how to innovate effectively and how to stay innovative!