A Culture of Innovation

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One of the best things about the work STUDIO.WHY does is that you are always getting to know new people and organizations: the office, the way they work and their culture. From a large accounting firm to several schools, from a large county office to commercial organizations, everywhere is different. What is striking is that nowhere is a culture the same, which is precisely what makes a company so unique. Precisely in this area, you can make a difference as an organization. Because we believe that if you want to keep up with the changes around you and make innovation succeed, the only innovation that really matters is creating a culture of innovation.

If an organization does engage in innovation at all, it often focuses on creating a new product or service that generates revenue for the organization. But research by Mr. Volberda, professor of Erasmus University, shows that innovation is only 25% technological and 75% social innovation. But at the same time, the biggest cause of inability to innovate appears to be organizational culture, as high as 51%. Thus, it can be concluded that it is important to create an innovative organizational culture. This helps organizations grow, but in reality this proves difficult to achieve. For this to happen, it is important that we define a unified perspective on how we interpret and use these terms. We describe that in this article.

Everyone innovates

In recent decades, innovation has become increasingly important. Whereas for a time many organizations focused on optimizing their core business, now many companies are trying to make the shift to what will take them further, aka: trying to innovate. The definition for innovation that is commonly used is:

“The development of new products and services that create value for customers, supported by a sustainable and profitable business model.”- Tendayi Viki – The Corporate Start-up

This is a clear explanation for innovation. In practice, many companies approach innovation as a project assuming that innovation has a beginning and an end. We see innovation more as an ongoing process. We believe that organizations must learn to look at innovation differently for it to be successful. We shouldn’t think of it as a project but as a process which continuous presence. Just as constant attention is given to optimizing the core business, it should also become just as normal to constantly create new elements.

Development can be on more than just a product or service. Innovation can take place on many different elements, for example: developing new ways of collaboration (forms of work), developing a new language around a particular topic or accelerating adaptivity by organizing decision-making power differently. By this kind of process also falls under innovation.

Patience as the holy grail

Another important element is that when innovation is started, it should not be assumed that a successful innovation will have been made by next month. On average, it takes a company 3 to 5 years to become a thriving business. Innovation also has a long-term life-cycle, yet it is often assumed that a new product or service is conceived within a month. This is not how it works in practice. It is not a eureka moment that you can plan in advance. It’s a process of trial and error, discovering as you go along what works and what doesn’t. Therefore, it is important to be patient. But it goes beyond patience. We believe you need to trust those engaged in innovation. This is a fundamental value for innovation to succeed within your organization. You have to trust your people and the innovation process in an authentic, genuine way. Another fundamental value associated with this is take responsibility. Should something happen once in the process of innovation-for example, a mistake, failure or negative effect-and yes, this is going to happen-you resolve it as a team. You are 1 team with 1 task, namely: to provide the best possible value for your client in your own way. You are jointly responsible for that, and that also means taking responsibility when things don’t go so well for a while.

Culture eats strategy for breakfast

In our opinion, culture plays a crucial role in an organization. When your culture is not in order, it directly affects your organization’s strategy and results. Historically, culture is defined as “the way we do things around here” door Lundy & Crowling (1996). The more extended definition of culture, more precise corporate culture is:

“Culture is the pattern of beliefs, values and learned ways of coping with experience that have developed during the course of an organization’s history, and which tend to be manifested in its material arrangements and in the behaviors of its members.” – Brown 1995,1998

So, it shapes the behavior and attitude of people: what is encouraged, discouraged, accepted and rejected. A good example is how do you cope as an organization with people who are running late in meetings all the time? Do you accept this, do you speak to people with a cautionary tone or do you actually joke about it. There is no right or wrong but it does determine what the normal course of events is. Because culture is a relatively vague concept, we can say that there are a number of elements of very important value:

  • Culture is something shared by people.
  • Culture is carried by people.
  • Culture is learned.
  • Culture is neither immediately visible nor directly influential.
  • Culture has an enduring, stable and difficult to influence character

Creating a culture of innovation

By combining culture and innovation, we ensure that an organization becomes agile and adaptive. An innovation culture consists of combining the following three elements:

  • The constant development of new elements (products/services/work forms/ect.) within your organization
  • Employee development inside and outside your organization
  • To be a physical meeting place where knowledge and development from outside can be implemented and where experimentation is allowed with how new things should find their place within the organization.

Being an innovative organization doesn’t just happen. You create the right culture step by step to move toward the so-called Innovation Excellence. We believe in creating the right mindset so your organization can move step by step toward Innovation Excellence.

Why does STUDIO.WHY focus on innovation & culture?

So precisely because culture is invisible, intangible and difficult to change, we think this is one of the most important elements to focus on when you want to innovate an organization. Culture goes hand in hand with what mindset the people in the organization have. And the mindset determines what visible behavior the organization expresses. What STUDIO.WHY wants to accomplish together with various organizations is the following:

Challenging the status quo by building an ecosystem of subcultures with entrepreneurial creatives. You can only challenge the status quo if you have a mindset in which you can see opportunities in the status quo.

We build with the employees of an organization or a department different subcultures to create a personal culture what works for them. There is not a ready-made recipe for this, but rather the goal is for everyone to discover their own role and added value in a team, creating a fine, lucrative culture. There are so many more layers and information behind this way of working that we want to share, that we are dedicating our own blog to this.

It’s not about the innovations, it’s about the innovators

To develop an innovative organization, the most important thing to keep in mind is that a long-term approach will have the most impact. In doing so, you need to focus on your people in your organization, the innovators. If you have good innovators running around, the innovations will subsequently arise. Therefore, we focus on training the behavior of people in organizations so that there are more innovators within organizations. To explain in a metaphor, we are not the cab driver who successfully takes you from A to B but we are the driving instructor who teaches you to drive yourself so that you can go from A to B as well as C, D and so on. Focus on your people and make sure they can express that development in your organization.

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Challenging the status quo by building an ecosystem of subcultures with entrepreneurial creative minds.

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