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Three Steps to Innovation

InnovateCreating something new – whether in terms of changing the status quo or something more modest like changing the way a business or organizational process works – cannot happen by thinking the same way about the same things. How do naturally creative people like artists, photographers, designers get their new ideas?  It seems they mash up images, sounds, objects in seemingly mundane places to generate new ideas. Managers can learn from this and here are three steps to innovation.

Immersion

Stop being yourself for a while – if this is possible – and put yourself in the shoes of your client or those you serve. Get to know as much about them as possible. Immerse yourself in their world if you can. Find out what their priorities are. You may find that what they need is not what you thought they wanted.

Look for New Questions, Not New Answers

Searching for answers assumes you have been asking the right questions. Go one step back and look for new questions to ask. This might require a re-think of basic assumptions about your business and your offerings. Are you in the right market? Are these the clients you should be serving anyway? Are your products compelling enough?

Prototype

Having an idea in your head and being impressed with it is not impressive. This is you being judge and jury all by yourself. Get a prototype, a pilot, a Phase 1 offering, whatever you want to call it and show it to your clients to seek their views. Let them comment and provide their inputs then use these to iterate to a new version.

Innovation is not always a quantum breakthrough; it is also an iteration from the ordinary to the extraordinary.

3 Comments

  1. Abdullah

    Thanks Asad Sb

  2. Asad Zaidi

    In some kinds of innovation, it may be possible that financial resources are necessary. But it is also true that sometimes innovation results because of a lack of financial resources! A lot of web startups that proved to be very innovative started on a shoestring budget. Thinking of a new way to reduce the time for an organizational process by say 50% is often the result of creative thinking, not money. So the short answer is: no, innovation does not necessarily require financial resources…

  3. Abdullah

    Is innovation also dependent upon the availability of financial resources as well

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