The theme for the afternoon, as indicated by the title, was Leading Innovation & Problem-Solving. The session included a case study and conversation from both inside and outside of sport, as well as exploring the skills and tools to ‘develop the muscle’ of innovation both individually and collectively.
“If the rate of change within an organisation is slower than the pace of change within its external environment – it will die” – Jack Welch, former CEO & Chair of General Electric
Performance in Practice – Part I: Insights on Innovation in Sport
Guest: Scott Drawer, Head of Sport, Millfield School
When do you know you are getting innovation right:
What is creativity, research & innovation?
Creativity:
The science of creativity (Kaufman 2016):
Study: what are some of the commonalities of the most successful scientists in the world?
Innovation = Ideas + Impact
Confusion is often caused by misunderstanding symptoms and causes. Creativity is a symptom of innovation not a cause.
3 necessary (but not sufficient) conditions for innovation:
Designing for innovation:
Failing is your first attempt in learning – celebrate the process vs. the outcome. Closing doors is almost as important as opening them.
Learning from Others’ Failures: The Effectiveness of Failure Stories for Managerial Learning
Research:
Where does research fit in the innovation process?
‘Knowledge alone is not impact.’
Conclusions:
Performance in Practice – Part I: Insights on Innovation, Creativity & Problem-Solving
Guests:
Scott Drawer, Head of Sport, Millfield School
Jonnie Noakes, Director of Teaching & Learning, Eton College
How do we create a culture of learning?
What holds back innovation:
Where to put the resource: find people who are innovative or develop their skills to be innovative?
Session 2: Leading Innovation & Effective Problem-Solving
Can you develop it and, if so, how can you develop it?
Rivers of thought:
Edward de Bono – when we step into an environment, what we do is absorb quickly and begin to form ideas, developing ‘rivers of thought’.
IDEAL Model for Problem-Solving:
Taking us back to a process of innovation. Can be obsessed with creativity as a concept vs. the process of creativity.
Identify problems and opportunities
“The first and most important step towards innovation is identifying the problems you want to try and solve” – James Dyson.
Two types of innovation:
Traps to watch out for…
Define the problem:
Key traps to avoid at this stage:
Exploring possible strategies:
The more options you have, the better your chances of coming up with a game-changing idea.
5 Strategies:
Questions to help us apply these techniques:
Group insights: what are the key qualities of those who are good innovators?