strategy

Connecting Dots 54 ◎⁃◎ Innovation Politics

Ai Weiwei, @ The Design Museum, UK, June 2023

Connecting Dots is the monthly newsletter for global professionals leading innovation.

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Innovation Politics

Politics? No thanks!

Years ago, when I first led innovation, I noticed a disdain or dismissal of political dynamics. Over time, I learned it is often a defence against threats to self-image or denial of organizational reality. The wish to avoid innovation politics is understandable but not practical or effective. Thus, how can you better understand and constructively engage with innovation politics?

Why acknowledge innovation politics?

All organizations are political because organizations are human systems. Every organization has goals, as does each employee. Including yourself. Rarely, if ever, do the goals emerge in harmony. Most of the time, the work of leadership is to create a good enough harmony of varying and even competing goals to enable progress.

To deliver organizational change, one must work with the political system. Especially when the change comes in the form of innovation because it almost always shifts who has power, resources and rewards—tangibly or perceptively. 

Organizational politics are the self-serving behaviours that employees use to achieve positive results. In a healthy organization, there is harmony where the individual, the organization and society achieve positive outcomes in parallel.

Some people are naturally good political operators. Many learn through experience how to become effective political operators. Others stay political passengers, consumed by the agendas of others, often unknowingly or unwillingly.

How to constructively work with innovation politics?

A tactic I often used when leading or guiding innovation teams was to declare that 'we are above politics.' A statement you may instinctively interpret as über-political. You are not wrong. 

The point was to empower the team to chart its own political course. So that we might engage intentionally and thoughtfully with the people and political dynamics present in all organizations at all times.  

Many interpreted the statement of being above politics as a purity pledge to only live the mission of the desired end outcome. That was also not wrong as it provided an openly defensible way of explaining our work. However, embedded in that pledge is the prioritization of the organization’s highest political order.

Focusing on engaging with the highest order is a practical balance of long-term vision and pragmatic progress in the eyes of primary stakeholders week to week, month to month, quarter to quarter and year to year. Your top-tier stakeholders are customers, top executives or owners/investors and sometimes regulators. 

The goal of focusing at this level was to protect my teams from being ground down by mid-level politics. This is the cut and thrust of day-to-day organizational life primarily concerned with near-term outcomes and personal gain.

That is not to ignore mid-level politics, as they can easily undermine your work. The point is to know whose top-level 'yes' enables progress and mitigate against mid-level 'no' that can derail you. 

 

Three ways to practically work with innovation politics

Here are some practical ways to visualize and work with high and low political dynamics for the year ahead.

Support Map - Where to invest effort?

  • On cards or Post-Its name all your top stakeholders (whether you have direct contact or not)

  • Post them on a wall or whiteboard

  • Separate into three groups based on who has demonstrated support (green), neutrality (amber) and opposition (red)

  • If you don’t know, assume red until you see green or amber actions

  • If green isn’t your largest group decide if you focus on amber or red

  • If green is your largest group, focus efforts there to maintain momentum unless there are individuals in amber or red that can over-rule the green coalition 

Authority Matrix - How to get to yes? 

  • Rarely is there a singular decision-maker

  • Never do you want to go into a decisive meeting without high certainty of the outcome

  • If support or negotiating points are unclear do an authority matrix of stakeholders

  • List stakeholders and label them as:

    • Responsible for the outcome

    • Accountable for doing the work to get to the outcome

    • Support to provide an objective voice of reassurance or caution

    • Consulted to provide technical input or key enabling resources

    • Informed to anticipate or coordinate other activities post-decision

  • Whether formal or informal authority, what is the minimum requirement for each to say yes?

  • As a leader, your task is to do the work to find out what they need and to either provide it, reframe it, educate it or renegotiate it

Mitigation Plan - How to anticipate and overcome obstacles?

  • Organizations are optimized for current results so your innovation will destabilize the status quo 

  • The key is to be sensitive to those who have the most to lose

  • If you have a powerful stakeholder identified in your authority matrix, you need to work with them so their destabilization doesn't become destructive

  • Engage early, so even if the outcome isn’t in their interest they may accept it for having been heard

  • Engage frequently, so you have multiple opportunities for each party to learn from the other

  • Engage collaboratively, respect their right to have an opposing view or needs and find ways to reconcile without compromising the integrity of either party

  • Engage compassionately, try to understand their position at a human level and empathetically what it’s like for them to build mutual trust and understanding

  • Engage magnanimously, if they come on side be humble as they can always withdraw support if they feel manipulated

As you think ahead to next year, make a note for yourself to surface and engage your innovation politics early on. It's the best path to success for all.

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Learn more about Brett’s leadership development practice for global executives with innovation responsibilities.


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Connecting Dots 46 ◎⁃◎ Innovation Superheroes

Blue River / 2006

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Hello,

Welcome to Connecting Dots.

The goal of this newsletter is to help develop society’s most innovative leaders.

This month we head to high alpine mountains to understand the archetypes that make a great innovation team.

Onwards,

BM

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Innovation Leadership Archetypes

What is your self-image as a leader?

Many innovation leaders see themselves as a superhero. Someone unafraid to take on dangerous challenges with a worthy goal—a saviour whose full powers are hidden and typically come with inconvenient side effects. It’s a role and archetype that attracts idealization and demonization in equal measures when their superpowers become known.

Yet, unlike fighting crime and evil mutants as a heroic loner; innovation is a team task. Therefore, the singular superhero image is limited in its real-world applications.

A better self-image is as a member of a mountain climbing expedition—a team comprised of multiple archetypes. To tackle highly risky, technically difficult and emotionally demanding tasks you need a team made up of mutually supportive and diverse capabilities, behaviours and motivations. As well as different forms of authority, resources and responsibilities. These differences are united by a common goal and a willingness to venture out into the unknown.

My ideal expedition team features five innovation leadership archetypes:

The Optimist

A dreamer who is driven by novelty and disinterested in formal rules or regulations. They see opportunities others don’t and tell great stories. A cultural catalyst, they inspire you and activate your curiosity to explore. They build enthusiasm to get started but tend to lose interest in organizing and thinking through consequences.

The Realist

A natural organizer who brings people together towards a common goal. They take someone’s vision and can break down how to make it real. Always thinking two steps ahead, they continually evaluate options and map out the best route as conditions change. You gain reassurance from their presence. While they are excellent at orchestrating, they rely on specialists to progress through demanding terrain.

The Survivalist

A generalist who works well in ambiguity and maintains superhuman resilience in extreme conditions. They’ve seen the best and worst of what’s possible. One might say they’re grizzled or hardened, but they never lose their spark for adventure. Resourceful, unflappable and excellent at reading situations quickly. They are a bit stuck in the past but help you from repeating avoidable mistakes.

The Specialist

A helicopter expert who flies in for specialized operations and then flies out as you carry on your way. Highly skilled with specific technologies they are here for you in the here and now. They don’t get emotionally attached, it’s the work that motivates them. Always have their number at hand but only call when it’s really necessary as their time and attention are sought after and given to those who need it most.

The Strategist

Your eyes and ears calling in from basecamp. They can’t see what you see but they give you a wider perspective. So you can see what you can’t. They love thinking two steps ahead and devising new options for you, especially as conditions change. They can be abstract or overly intellectualized, and get touchy if their recommendations aren’t taken up, however, at their best they help those in the field make great decisions by combining strategy and reality.

Leadership Gym

In practice, you may neatly fit into one archetype or see yourself as a blend. You’ll notice each archetype has clear strengths and also some traits that might derail them if they are not self-aware or supported by people whose strengths are your weaknesses.

Archetypes are a form of self-image and a way to see how others in a team might respond to your role and contributions. It’s a helpful way to emphasize one’s strengths and visualize development areas. As well as a way to see you and your colleagues as a team of superheroes on a shared innovation mission.

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Learn more about how to develop more innovative leaders through psychodynamic leadership development.


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Connecting Dots 45 ◎⁃◎ LDR-GPT

Andermatt, Switzerland / March, 2023

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Hello,

Welcome to Connecting Dots the newsletter that helps you lead innovation more successfully.

This month I share a live example of how leaders work with fear activated by technology.

Onwards,

BM

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LDR-GPT

Two weeks ago I participated in a Listening Post day with over 100 organizational psychology peers at INSEAD the global business school in Fontainebleau France. The goal of a Listening Post is to share, hear and reflect upon what is in the collective mind. It starts with the simple question of what is confusing people or giving them enthusiasm in life. 

As this event was at a business school it was of course about leadership and the interwoven experience of work and life. Participants came from a wide range of countries, industries and personal situations. 

The goal of a Listening Post is to see what collective themes emerge intellectually and what reactions they trigger experientially. It starts by asking what is on people’s minds about work, life, society and beyond to identify themes. 

As the day went on I was not surprised that next-generation artificial intelligence was on the minds of many people. Both from long-term practitioners working with artificial intelligence and those new to the topic with the popularization of ChatGPT or GPT4.

However, I was surprised by the intensity of the reactions. There was profound anxiety and distress evident in how people were thinking about, perceiving and experiencing these innovative technologies. The best word to summarize the reaction was annihilation.

An intense emotion, annihilation is the total destruction of something caused by an external force. The negative projections on the technology shook me. It was not the tech itself but the idealization and demonization of what it means and the fantasies of what it might cause at deeply personal levels:

  • Annihilation of job

  • Annihilation of competence

  • Annihilation of identity

  • Annihilation of control

  • Annihilation of safety

  • Annihilation of family

  • Annihilation of community

What struck me is that these people are the ones in charge. Many are advanced technical experts with deep applied experiences working with the technology. Yet the techno-anxiety was profound. Being responsible for the benefits and costs of new technology and its innovative applications was overwhelming.

I share this vignette as an illustration of the reactions activated by innovation. It’s what leaders need to negotiate and navigate within themselves and with others in their teams, their organizations and society at large.

Individually and collectively innovation activates fear. Often people blame fear as the reason for innovation underachievement. But that overlooks the reality that fear is a normal reaction to any potential perceived loss. This is a logical reaction given innovation’s creative destruction must destroy something for someone.

The sophisticated leader engages with fear, and the unsophisticated ignore fear or have delusional dreams of eliminating fear. Yet there is a big difference between being aware of fear to work with it and being consumed by fear to be disconnected from reality by it.

The goal isn’t to eliminate but separate hot emotions from cold reactions. A lot of innovation arguably moves too fast or is too pushy. It doesn’t allow people to see possibilities, process implications, integrate into programs and work through to make something new a reality.

Neurotic impatience is a defence against taking responsibility for the work and working through the emotional responses of others. Let’s look at someone exceptional at delivering innovative change in the face of fear—Raymond Loewy.

Loewy was one of America’s most innovative business leaders between the first and second world Wars. He coined the phrase MAYA—Most Advanced Yet Acceptable.

In that phrase, he accepted technical progress outstrips our capacity to make sense of it and that we need to respect it. The task of leadership is stress testing to discover what’s possible and what is the most advanced possibility society, an organization or a team can accept. 

It is the innovation protagonist’s job to observe and sense what are the most advanced yet acceptable ideas you can progress. Also, to be very sensitive and respectful to how confronting technical progress can be, even for highly innovative and enthusiastic professionals. 

During the day of the listening post, because there wasn’t a compression of time, as participants worked through their fears related to technology the benefits and creative mitigation of risk emerged. It became generative, optimistic and inspiring.

It was like a smouldering fireplace filling the air with smoke in the morning. By expelling the smoky fears we didn’t run from the room but rather opened windows to let them dissipate. As fresh air entered the space it vitalized the group and enabled the leaders to move from anxious fear to constructive optimism. 

The point is, as a leader to expect and work with the fears that emerged from new possibilities brought about by innovation. The fear isn’t “bad” but part of the normal process of people working through what it means, what they can do and how they can drive constructive change. 

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Leadership Gym

As a leader, receiving and working with other people's projections is challenging. Especially when they are negative and amplified by fear. To work with these hot reactions start by working with your own responses.

The feel-think-act triangle is a helpful tool to do so. If you just feel and act, you are just as consumed by fear as others. If you interject think between feel and act you can better process for yourself so you can act rather than react. It can happen in fractions of a second so you can deduce if what you feel and what you think are reconciled or if one is overwhelming the other.

Intellectually the feel-think-act triangle concept is easy to grasp. In practice, you “sharpen the blade” by applying the triangle in highly emotional situations where you sense and help the team work out what is Most Advanced Yet Acceptable.

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Learn more about how to develop more innovative leaders.


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