The seven stages of innovation grief
06:00I'm
writing this a bit tongue in cheek, but the point of this blog is very serious.
There are a number of phases that innovators go through, accepting what they can
about innovation based on what the executives and corporate culture allow.
Growing as an innovators is something like experiencing the seven stages of
grief, only it's often in reverse.
When
we experience grief, as when we lose a loved one, psychologists note that many
people progress through a number of stages. Those are: disbelief, denial,
bargaining, guilt, anger, depression and finally acceptance or even hope. That
is, at first we deny the issue, then we try to come to grips with it, then we
express anger, then we finally come out of the darkness and end up with some
hope. If you've never seen it, one of the best examples of the seven stages was
acted out by Tony Shaloub, who played the character Monk on television. He goes
through the stages in about 2 minutes (accelerated because of his psychological
makeup) Here's the clip: https://vimeo.com/5419363
In
the clip Shaloub first denies that his psychiatrist is retiring, then bargains
for his return, then goes through anger and depression, all in just a couple of
minutes.
We
innovators, especially corporate innovators are like this, but often in
reverse. We have these big expectations about what we can do, only to watch
them get watered down, constrained, managed, defunded and so on. Yet we are
supposed to push on with the same enthusiasm. It's true that we often start out
with hope, and end with denial and disbelief. Let's examine why this happens,
and more importantly look to Napoleon for methods to circumvent it.
The
five stages of innovation planning
As
good innovators, we should be planning
to disrupt an existing market or
industry, or create a new market or industry. This type of innovation has an
impact far beyond the existing corporate framework, creating new products or
even new industries. These plans will often be stymined because executives will
find them too risky, because the firm doesn't have experience outside its own
comfort zone.
So
the next option is to migrate or compete in
an adjacent industry - one where we can
partner with other experts to extend a capability or do
some open innovation that marries our
products and services with anothers to enter an industry or segment where we
don't compete today. This places a significant bet on a partner that we don't
control and may have other plans or motivations. Trying to mitigate one type of
risk, we simply transfer the risk elsewhere.
Once
that has been considered and rejected, we seek to do whatever we can to innovate
within our own footprint, discussing "disruptive" innovation in our own
markets or industries. But we are quickly reminded that disrupting the
cash cow isn't smart - either tone down the innovation in the existing footprint
or go innovate outside the footprint (which, of course, has already been
rejected since we know so little about markets or industries outside the
footprint).
Then,
innovators will consider adapting or adopting existing capabilities for new uses
within the industry or footprint. This seems like a real possibility, until we
discover that we really know very little about innovation beyond the product
itself. Channel, business model and customer
experience innovation, building on an existing product and
extending innovation beyond the product, seems interesting but we know nothing
about how to do it.
So,
eventually, we end up with incremental
innovation based on existing products, or, in other words,
product extensions. This is a completely viable innovation outcome. It just
shouldn't be the only one, but inevitably becomes the only viable outcome.
Innovation
Places and types
In
a perfect world, we'd consider places to
innovate and types of outcomes, and create
an interesting mix. We'd innovate in adjacent and completely new spaces,
because it's a rare company that wants to disrupt its own industry or business
model. In other words, we'd attack other companies' models or industries, to
keep them off-guard, which opens new markets for us and protects our nest eggs
from attack. We'd also keep up a constant drumbeat of innovation in channels,
business models, customer experiences, services and so on - to retain the value
proposition of our products by extending innovation in other means and
types.
Innovators
all know this, and live with consistent hope. We go through innovation denial,
giving up first disruptive innovation, then adjacent innovation, then other
types of innovation to settle into incremental innovation. It's no wonder that
so much innovation is simply incremental. It almost doesn't matter where your
starting point is, or what your original targets and expectations were, most
paths lead to the same place. Paul Hobcraft covered this in
his Snakes and Ladders posts a few weeks ago. The
Snakes are everywhere, causing you to fall back to the lowest common
denominator.
Environment
shapes Attitude
This
reality is the reason so many innovators are so often also fatalists. They've
seen the mountain, and even think they know how to get there, but the obstacles
placed in their way, by their own sponsors, executives, corporate culture and
others simply wear down their hope and initial enthusiasm. Ask almost any
experienced innovator and they'll be able to describe the proposed journey and
the almost inevitable outcomes. New innovators are full of possibility and
energy. Experienced innovators constantly seek ways to get a lot more done
under the radar, or before the barriers are raised. Experienced innovators skip
quickly past disbelief and denial. Anger they've got plenty of. They become
masters of bargaining, and still retain a lot of hope.
When
you stop to consider how important attitude, belief and commitment are to a
successful innovation effort, it won't surprise you that fatalism and inertia
are deadly. The best innovators never give up hope, never stop believing,
always overcome obstacles. But it can be difficult to remain optimistic when
your own organization is the culprit that builds the obstacles.
What
Napoleon can teach us
Napoleon
would make a great modern innovator. Of course he was a pretty good innovator in
his own time, in warfare and in governance. He had a couple of sayings that I
think would apply nicely to modern innovation activities. The first
was Audacity, always audacity. He meant that the winning
side was often the one that plunged in and took big risks. He was known for
dividing his army in the face of the enemy, doing crazy, audacious things that
no other commander would do. He grew from a lowly second lieutenant to
commander of most of western Europe by doing things others did not expect. I
think the same is true with most successful innovators. They have hopeful plans
and are audacious, doing things that others can't imagine.
Another
important Napoleonic aphorism was "if you go to take Vienna, take Vienna". In
other words, no half-hearted attempts. Make big plans and execute on those
plans, ideally before the decision makers and corporate culture becomes aware of
just how audacious your plans really are. If you want to bypass or overcome the
steps of innovation denial, move with audacity, make big plans and achieve them
quickly. Otherwise, the slowly moving corporate forces will introduce fear,
uncertainty and doubt which will cripple your efforts.
In
the world of corporate innovation, there are many possibilities but a few
certainties. One certainty is that the faster you move, the less time the
culture has a chance to develop antibodies against your plans. The second
certainty is that no matter how audacious your plans are, they will encounter
resistance and will be watered down. Therefore, go for the biggest opportunity
you can imagine.
The
third certainty is that innovation grief works in the opposite direction to
psychological grief. Innovators often start with hope, move to bargaining and
end with denial and disbelief. Move so quickly, with such force and
determination that you don't have to go through the steps.
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