The imperative to innovate is greater than ever, but what should bosses and executives do to amp up creativity? Over the last ten years, I’ve studied how the world’s best bossescreate wonderfully fertile environments that foster industry-shaking innovations. No two of these bosses are exactly alike, but my research reveals five actions the world's best bosses all take to generate exciting new thinking in their organizations.
They mostly do this by removing the anxieties that often prevent people from trying new things. Legendary film producer Roger Corman was known for letting his actors improvise in front of the camera -- even if that particular shot didn’t work. 58003 When employees do fail, these bosses usually re-frame it as an opportunity in disguise.
“You always get the sense,” talk show host and former Saturday Night Live writer Conan O’Brien said, “That the show is almost like a shark that’s constantly on a mission to find what’s new, what’s hot, what are people into now. And chomp its teeth into it.” Such proactive novelty seeking was quite intentional, spurred onward by SNL’s legendary producer Lorne Michaels. As he remarked, “The show must change. I know it’s supposed to be ‘must go on,’ but ‘must change’ is important also.”
The best bosses eagerly jump on promising new ideas as soon as they arise. Initially Norman Brinker had planned to establish a friendly Mediterranean-themed restaurant combining features of fine dining and fast food. But then he saw the classic film Tom Jones and was mesmerized by a scene in which two characters eat a voluptuous dinner in an eighteenth-century English tavern. An idea came to him: that setting was a more enticing atmosphere for ordinary diners. So Brinker pivoted, abandoning the Mediterranean theme midstream and constructing the first Steak & Ale restaurant. The reason more entrepreneurial companies are usually the ones doing the “pivoting” is that bosses in more established businesses value stability over change. And that’s a losing formula.
When J. Crew CEO Mickey Drexler gives lectures to students, he doesn’t just deliver wisdom -- he uses the occasion to run an informal focus group. “How do you like your Ludlow jacket?” he’ll ask of a student wearing J. Crew merchandise. “Where did you buy it? Do you find it matches well with our chinos? How many of your friends have Ludlows?” Drexler is perpetually looking for nuggets of information and windows into ways J. Crew might improve what and how they sell.
They don't just want their employees to do it, they practice this behavior themselves. When Cincinnati Bengals’ quarterback Greg Cook was knocked permanently out of action in the 1980s, celebrated NFL coach Bill Walsh, then an assistant coach, devised an entirely new offensive scheme. Since the team could no longer rely on Cook’s raw athletic talent, Walsh’s new approach emphasized mobility, accuracy and intelligence -- all of which were strengths of the team’s backup. The risk paid off: Walsh’s new system -- the now legendary West Coast Offense -- propelled the team to its first pision title. The episode sent a message to all of Walsh’s subsequent hires: when it comes to new thinking, everything is fair game.
There’s no formula for pining the next great idea, but what you can do is develop a series of habits that increase your chances of an innovative breakthrough. You can set the stage for creative thinking, taking actions to make sure that when the next great idea swims past, you’re ready to bite. The world’s greatest bosses do this. So should you.
版权及免责声明:凡本网所属版权作品,转载时须获得授权并注明来源“融道中国”,违者本网将保留追究其相关法律责任的权力。凡转载文章,不代表本网观点和立场。
延伸阅读
版权所有:融道中国