Posts Tagged ‘innovation’

3 Ways To Help Your Organization Think Big

Tuesday, March 5th, 2013

I was speaking to a CEO group lately and asked them to share something they would do to completely impress a customer in the following scenario: You run a grocery store. You can do whatever you want to get the customer to move from satisfied to loyal – to get the customer to tell his friends about you and commit to coming back. What couldyou do?

Notice I didn’t say what “would” you do – I ask, what couldyou do? I was just asking for possibilities. Possibilities are limitless – they allow for greater thinking, inventing and imagination. I didn’t want a plan, I wanted to see how big they could think. And I wasn’t impressed by the responses.

Virtually every response was something already done, or, something that would not have a profound effect on the customer. So my question was, if CEOs can’t think big, why do we expect it from our employees?

What are the things that an organization can do to help employees learn how to think big, invent possibilities and move from good to great? Here are some thoughts:

1. Have all employees submit 2 “great” ideas a week. Make a requirement of all employees to submit 2 unconventionalideas each week on how the organization can create loyal customers (or operate more efficiently, change more seamlessly, hire the best employees, create a more powerful culture… you decide the issue). By asking for unconventional ideas, you give employees permission to dream, invent and push the limits. If the focus is only on solving instead of inventing, employees play it safe and the ideas remain small.

2. Host a monthly creativity event. Empower employees to define how the monthly event will be run and what it will ask employees to do. The goal is not only to deal with a company challenge or opportunity, but to do it in a think-big way. Create a culture that thrives on creative and innovative thinking in all it does. This encourages greater “go-for-big” ideas anytime ideas are needed.

3. Study what other big-thinking companies do. Choose a company whose approach is big (Zappos in customer service, Google in workplace environment, Southwest Airlines in workplace culture, Sam Adams in employee engagement, etc). What do think-big companies consider? What moves them to think and act this way and how can it be developed in your organization? One of the great things about today’s technology is that we have access to the brilliant things others are doing. Challenge or assign to your team to identify companies who focus on greatness or are think-big companies. Review what they find and look for immediate applications in your organization.

Today, we don’t pay employees to “do” a job. Instead, we pay them to think about the best, most efficient and most profitable responses to each event they encounter in the workplace. In short, we pay them to think. So imagine the impact on the business if they moved from just thinking to “big thinking” – of continually looking for better, more significant and more profound responses.

Challenge your employees to not only pack their brains when they pack their lunches. Challenge to always think big in each event they encounter. This is how the good companies became great – they make it easy and expected for their employees to think big. Imagine what a think big approach and attitude could do for your business.

Need help getting employees out of small thinking to big thinking? Contact me to learn more about the Fire Up! programs and our unusual and effective greatness approach to workplace teaching and coaching, and how it is activating big thinking in our clients. More information atFireUpYourEmployees.com.

Two Great Questions To Get Your Employees Thinking

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Most employees are great about showing up on time every day. Significantly fewer show up fully present – ready to make a difference with customers and the business. Many employees don’t pack their brains when they pack their lunches because many managers don’t ask their employees to think at work.

Sixty-five percent of employees do just enough not to get fired, according to statistics presented in Marcus Buckingham’s book, First Break All the Rules. His work with the Gallup Organization looked to define what degree employees are thinking and engaged in the workplace. This means more than half of employees don’t actively think their way through the day – they just follow the rules, do what they are told and little more.

Most managers do not take advantage of the thinking power of their employees. They seem content to have their employees simply do their jobs; they do not actively tap into their ideas, thinking and creativity. This wastes one of the most significant assets of the organization – the intellectual capital – the thinking power of the employee.

So how do you get an employee to think? Get in the habit of asking every employee these two questions every day:

1. “What if…?”
2. “What are two ways to …?”

Here are some examples:
• What if we allow employees to work more flexible hours, what would that do to performance?
• What if we eliminated two of our products or services; what would the impact be on customers?

• What are two ways to improve our marketing to our customers?
• What are two ways to attract great candidates to our company using social networking?

The format of the question isn’t as important as the discipline to constantly ask employees what they think. Tap into the resources you fund every week with your payroll. You paid for their thinking, now get what you paid for.

Is Your Business As Clever as Dyson?

Monday, July 12th, 2010

For a reminder of how things do not always need to look or be as they have always been, click on the Dyson website.

See a vacuum that doesn’t look or act like a conventional vacuum. By understanding how consumers use a vaccum, and then solving its ineffective features, Dyson created something entirely new. They did not start with what existed, they started with zero and built it without preconditions.

Notice the Dyson Air Multiplier, a new type of fan. For years, fans have had blades. Why? Dyson’s reinvention of a bladeless fan that is more effective, smoother and safer started with a “consider everything” approach to a problem or inefficiency.

So how do you “Dyson” in your workplace? How do you consider issues in new and non-traditional ways to create a better product, process or service solutions?

To “Dyson-ize” your approach in the workplace, consider the following:
1. Select a problem, challenge or ineffective/inefficient service, process or product.
2. Create what I call a “creativiteam” – a team assembled from different areas of the business – to bring their diverse perspectives and non-preconceived notions about the challenge.
3. Allow the team complete freedom to brainstorm new approaches to the challenge. Remind them to consider everything.
4. Allow the team to meet with the frequency it requires.
5. Require the team to propose 2-3 ideas to address the challenge or problem, and rank their solutions from most effective to least effective. Present the ideas to management team.

The benefits:
1. All employees are regularly brought into creative problem-solving and they become owners in the solutions of the business.
2. Cross-functional teams encourage non-traditional solutions and better organization interaction.
3. The organization is constantly supplied with opportunities to reinvent and redevelop to stay ahead of the competition.

Capitalize on the creative genius in your people. Many times they do not “Dyson” because they are not asked to. The more you ask your employees to invent, reinvent and reconsider, the more they do it and the better at it they become. You paid for their creative input, be sure you ask for it.

Please pass this on to someone who can benefit from it, and contact me to help you fire up! your employees to be clever like Dyson.

My Employees Are Better Than Your Employees

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

The July/August issue of Fast Company has a story titled, “Build A Better Mousetrap” that introduces the winners of the 2010 International Design Excellence Awards. The article in the issue introduces the blending of left and right brain thinking that resulted in products that are not only exceptional, but design-rich and beautiful. They include flash drives in the shape of keys, a FitBit tracker that looks like a piece of jewelry but measures steps taken calories burned, a new family of design-appealing work chairs, a work light with the flexibility and grace of a heron’s neck, and other really outrageous stuff (it is worth getting this issue just to see the amazing blending of left brain practicality and purpose, with right brain beauty and esthetics – no easy feat).

So why bring this up?

These are products imagined by employees – fired up, passionate and engaged employees. Bored, tired and disengaged employees don’t dream up the combination of beauty and function. Miscast, aggravated or unappreciated employees don’t dream up products that get awards in national magazines. This is more a statement of the creative contribution, engagement and loyalty of employees.

It is not always management that invents, innovates and creates. Management never has all the answers or all the ideas. In fact, the reason why employees are so good at this is they are connected to networks of other idea generators. They are always thinking. And when they work in jobs that play to their best talents, are passionate about what they do and feel a personal connection to their management and teams, these employees share their best ideas; they willingly invent and focus on adding value and making a difference.

How employee-focused is your workplace culture? In my book, Fire Up! Your Employees, I present the 10 components of a powerful employee-focused workplace culture. Not all of these ten components of culture need to be in place, but the more of these the organization can include, the more connected and supported the employee feels. And the more this happens, the more present, thinking and innovating the employee becomes. This is what creates organizational greatness.

Never underestimate the innovation and idea potential of a highly engaged employee. Hire the right employees, connect them emotionally to what they do, and share your companies dreams, opportunities and challenges with them. When employees feel included and valued, they contribute their best. And they may just help you invent a better mousetrap. And who knows, it may be clever enough to earn its way into Fast Company.

Please forward this to someone who can benefit form it and contact me to help you build a powerful employee-focused workplace culture.