Innovators are, above all, problem solvers. They don’t sit in front of a workbench and say ‘I wonder what will happen if I add this widget to this whatsit – Oh look a self-sealing-stembolt!’ (There are people who do that – they’re called research scientists and 99% of the time they are just proving that widget plus whatsit = deadend. That’s a valuable part of the process of understanding our world and when it does lead to something that works it can be earth shattering but it’s a very inefficient way to innovate.)
Innovators see problems in the world around them all the time. They see the status quo as something to be challenged and improved upon rather than something to be accepted and put up with. They see a need, have an idea of how to combine matter and energy to fill that need AND they are also able to implement it. Inventors create stuff – innovators make things change.
A great way to kick off your innovation process is to attend my one day workshop, Frameworks for Innovation. This highly interactive and intensive course can also be tailored to suit your particular needs.
My role in the innovation process can include:
It’s impossible for business change to be wholly confined to systems and processes – people are always involved too and therein lies the key difference between project or programme management and change management. The first two are primarily concerned with delivering tangible changes while the later is focussed on enabling the people impacted to accept, adapt and take ownership of their new environment.
Resisting change is a part of being human, we all opt for the familiar and secure over the unknown and high risk most of the time. Change = Risk. Individuals are naturally risk averse or risk seeking to different degrees and that’s something that a change manager can’t do anything about. So to manage change effectively we need to use other, more accessible levers.
In order for change to achieve the desired results each individual involved must
AND
This is the Gleicher formula (usually written as: D x V x F > R where D = Dissatisfaction, V = Vision, F = First steps and R = Resistance) which is one of the fundamental theories of change management.
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