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Informative Articles

Business success models for the 21st century.
We will discuss the following success models. •Geshe Roach’s experiences in a Wall Street diamond company as recounted in the Diamond Cutter. •ezboard.com, a customizable Web-based communities developed in 1998 by Vanchau Nguyen, Founder and...

Creating a Vision
Creating a Vision (reprinted from Semiconductor Magazine, March 2000) by Dr. Marilyn Manning CSP, CMC To sell your product or service, you need vision. To attract investors, you need vision. To market yourself, you need vision. Is this article, I...

It's Not What You Think
My work in organizations involves dropping habitual ways of perceiving in order to contact a fresh and subtle perceiving “under the surface” of what is going on. That deeper sense of perceiving allows the emergence of what I call the Engaging...

The 7 Principles of Business Integrity
If you have integrity, nothing else matters. If you don’t have integrity, nothing else matters. - Alan K. Simpson If I were to ask you which attribute is the most influential in regard to the success of a business, would you know...

The Defining Moment: The Straw That Stirs The Drink Of Motivational Leadership (Part One)
PERMISSION TO REPUBLISH: This article may be republished in newsletters and on web sites provided attribution is provided to the author, and it appears with the included copyright, resource box and live web site link. Email notice of intent to...

 
Innovation Management – Emotion, Habit And Culture Can Be Hard To Change!

Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation.

There are distinct processes that enhance problem identification and idea generation and, similarly, distinct processes that enhance idea selection, development and commercialisation. Whilst there is no sure fire route to commercial success, these processes improve the probability that good ideas will be generated and selected and that investment in developing and commercialising those ideas will not be wasted.

However, Franklin (2003) argues that even great ideas developed and commercialised brilliantly may fail to succeed due to cultural, emotional and habitual barriers. Even obviously cheaper, simpler and more effective ideas fail to take off.

Whilst there are systems such as the S-curve that help predict and determine the magnitude of these barriers and hence the risk of successful commercialisation, the very nature of them makes them very hard and pin down in any quantitative or qualitative analysis.

The strength of cultural, emotional and habitual barriers can be illustrated by the examples below:

a) 11 million people have died of AIDS in Africa. Yet there is a taboo against condom use.

b) The metric system is obviously a great system and used almost the world over – except in the United States.

c) The ATM – cash point machines –


Crews Get Handle On Wildfire North Of Los Angeles
Crews working through the night beat back flames and built containment lines around a two-day old wildfire that charred nearly 22 square miles of brush. The blaze was 62 percent contained Saturday morning and no structures were threatened, Fire Capt. Sam Padilla said. He said there were no open flames, which slowed the fire's spread.

Diplomat: 'Ghosts In The Room' Plague U.S., Iran
John Limbert, who spent 444 days as a hostage in Tehran, stepped down as head of the State Department's Iran desk on Friday. Limbert says that while the White House has made persistent efforts to change the tone of America's relationship with Iran, conflicts between the two nations are deeply ingrained.


initially failed to take off because people believed that they did not have the right to access money so easily.

d) Scurvy was prevalent for years and the cure – lemon juice – was known, yet was not recognised as a legitimate cure for centuries.

e) Sewage systems are only today being adopted in rural and poorer parts of the world.

These topics are covered in depth in the MBA dissertation on Managing Creativity & Innovation, which can be purchased (along with a Creativity and Innovation DIY Audit, Good Idea Generator Software and Power Point Presentation) from http://www.managing-creativity.com.

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Kal Bishop, MBA


About the Author: Kal Bishop is a management consultant based in London, UK. He has consulted in the visual media and software industries and for clients such as Toshiba and Transport for London. He has led Improv, creativity and innovation workshops, exhibited artwork in San Francisco, Los Angeles and London and written a number of screenplays. He is a passionate traveller. He can be reached on http://www.managing-creativity.com.

Source: www.isnare.com