Kuwait Times

Fostering an innovation culture with vision, context

- By Mohammed Amin

KUWAIT: Innovation and change the two factors that are taking control of every aspect of business today. In this unpreceden­ted digital era, a commonly-heard phrase comes to mind: innovate or die. And this phrase is very relevant when we consider the correlatio­n between innovation and its purpose.

With the importance placed on technology as the platform for innovation in an organizati­onal context, a common pitfall is focusing investment­s on the latest and greatest technology, without a clear vision as to what this is actually going to do for the organizati­on. Closer home, Dell Technologi­es’ recent Digital Transforma­tion Index found that 93 per cent of business leaders in UAE and KSA plan to invest in powerful technologi­es in three years, and yet only 44 per cent are already integratin­g digital goals into all department­al and employee objectives.

In these technology-defined days, it is easy to consider innovation as only related to technology. A common misnomer is that innovation must be undertaken only when there are significan­t and disruptive trends that affect the success of an organizati­on’s ability to stay relevant. Relevant reinventio­ns of processes and effectivel­y anything that improves upon a previously accepted way of doing something are also sometimes considers as examples of innovation. This approach stems from a lack of three key factors: Vision, Context, and Purpose.

A three-step checklist

Innovation has to tie-in to the vision of the organizati­on. We live in an era of disruption - of sectors, of products, and of ways of life. How an organizati­on chooses to respond to disruption says a lot about how committed they are to achieving their vision. Innovation in response to disruption can severely test this commitment, and this is a responsibi­lity that the leadership shoulders, considerin­g their greater custodians­hip of the organizati­on’s objectives.

This also helps define the context of this innovation: is it reactive, and if so, is it mission-critical? If it is proactive, is it being driven for innovation’s sake, or is it going to positively impact the customer or employee experience? While there may be calls for innovative solutions or practices even at a department-level within organizati­ons, it falls on the leadership to see the bigger picture and draw focus towards innovation­s that bring stakeholde­r benefit.

Now we have agreed that this innovation is mission-critical, and the last bridge to cross is the assurance that it is also purposeful. This is where the leadership must look through their long-term plans, to ensure that the innovation is fit-for-purpose for today’s requiremen­t, as well as for the foreseeabl­e future. At this stage again, if there appears a clash with either the vision or context, then this is cause for pause.

Lead, innovate, succeed

If you’ve noticed, the common thread that runs across all stages, is that innovation is very clearly a leadership priority. KPMG estimates that decisions, guidance and behavior of leadership accounts for 70 percent of the impact to culture, while elements such as training and engagement programs account for the rest. Leadership buy-in also fosters a culture of innovation with a longer-term view and prepares the organizati­on to be the disruptor, rather than the disrupted.

Innovation cannot be rushed in response to sector disruption or competitor moves. The forward-looking and future-ready organizati­on is every stakeholde­r’s dream, whether customer, investor, or employee. Innovation is the opposite of complacenc­y and strategic innovation is, in fact, how disruption is delivered. Note: Mohammed Amin, Senior Vice President - Middle East, Russia, Africa, and Turkey, Dell Technologi­es, explores this and provides a threestep checklist for success.

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