Many organizations are starting to see the need to innovate. However still many of them still have the (strong) opinion that they can only innovate themselves, so innovate from within. Open innovation, crowdsourcing and the use of any other outside expertise is a bridge too far. The reason for this attitude is really a cultural heritage.
The management of an organization often shares the same attitudes on how the business should be conducted. In sharing these management attitudes, you can see them as collective attitudes, collective beliefs. Together they form the culture in your organization.
This culture heavily influences the thinking and thus the actions, both internally and externally.
Recent research on companies that are among the most successful innovators points to one common denominator – the right culture.
“Innovation is no longer about money, it’s about the climate:
are individuals allowed to flourish and take risks?”
William Weldon, chairman Johnson & Johnson
Below you will find examples of limiting business attitudes and energizing business attitudes.
Limiting attitudes about business
Most attitudes are based upon experiences, habits from the past. “That is the way things get done over here’. They were suitable for the 20th century, but with the huge speed of change and challenge, these attitudes are ‘out of date’ now.
Below you will find an example of how your current attitudes might look like. Of course you will have been using different wordings and context, but in essence there might be a lot of similarity. I have used different categories (underlined) to cover some main business subjects.
Changing your attitudes
These attitudes have served you well in the past. However, in order to cope with all the new challenges and to claim your leading position, it is clear that new attitudes need to be developed. Below you will find an example of the proposed new attitudes, which will serve you perfectly. Of course you need to develop your own wording, subjects etc.
“Culture
isn’t just one aspect of the game, it is the game.”
Lou
Gerstner, U.S., former IBM CEO
Energizing attitudes about business
The 21st century with all its changes requires a radical overhaul of the old habits, the old attitudes. To cope with all the challenges a different mindset is absolutely necessary. For ease of reference, the same numbers of the attitudes are used. So, the new attitude number 1 is the more effective alternative to the old number 1.
“Corporate culture is the strongest driver of radical innovation across nations.”
Journal of Marketing, Tellis/Prabhu/Chandy, 2009
So, isn’t it time to bury the‘not-invented-here syndrome’?
GROW YOUR PEOPLE, GROW YOUR BUSINESS!
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