Innovative management: A conversation with Gary Hamel and Lowell Bryan
October 25th, 2007 by binnur
The McKinsey Quarterly recently had a good discussion on the topic of innovation management (might require free membership to access the content). As Gary Hamel summarizes, the discussion is about the changes that are occurring with management practices and organizational designs.
How do you build organizations that are as nimble as change itself? How do you mobilize and monetize the imagination of every employee, every day? How do you create organizations that are highly engaging places to work in? And these challenges simply can’t be met without reinventing our 100-year-old management model.
Managing creatives, knowledge workers, freelancers, …, is not an easy process. It requires a careful balancing of freedom to explore and directing energies in a productive way that ultimately profits the firm and society. From Lowell Bryan:
These thinking-intensive people are increasingly self-directed. In fact, they’re directed as much by their peers as they are by supervisors. The management challenge is akin to urban planning. The art of it is that you must enable people to make thousands and thousands of individual decisions about how to live and work, but you have to create the infrastructure to make it easy for them to do so.
Insight from Gary Hamel:
The outlines of the 21st-century management model are already clear. Decision-making will be more peer based; the tools of creativity will be widely distributed in organizations. Ideas will compete on an equal footing. Strategies will be built from the bottom up. Power will be a function of competence rather than of position. In terms of the future of management, we’re at the beginning of what will be a fairly long journey. You can see some of the pieces starting to come together, but we’re not there yet.
And finally, Gary Hamel’s questions to the CEOs that are serious about innovation, which should be asked and compared at all levels of the organization:
- “How have you been trained as a business innovator? What investment has the company made in teaching you how to innovate?”
- “If you have a new idea, how much bureaucracy do you have to go through to get a small increment of experimental capital? How long is it going to take you to get 20 percent of your time and $5,000 to test your idea? Is that a matter of months or is it very easy for that to happen?”
- “Are you actually being measured on your innovation performance or your team’s innovation? Does it influence your compensation?”
- “As you look at the management processes in your company, do they tend to help you work as an innovator or get in the way?”
Enjoy the article.
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