Innovation, New Ideas and How The World is Changing

Experience or potential? Which would you rather have?

In last Thursday’s Innochat session about “Innovation and Experience” one of the questions posed was: How important is experience to the ability to innovate?

An additional question came up during the chat:

I tackled these questions earlier in the year. They way I framed it is: Does innovation get easier the more you do it?

My response is the following: innovation isn’t a matter of age or experience; it’s a matter of attitude, perspective, persistence and determination. Certainly having experience helps you avoid mistakes; but innovation rarely happens the same way.

It’s important to know what not to do and maintain a beginner’s mind. These two characteristics are where potential lies. In other words: you’re practicing an innovation mindset if you have experience but also approach each situation with a beginner’s mind.

For example, I have experience in the different types of innovation approaches (R&D, breakthrough, sustaining, disruptive) but I don’t like repeating what I’ve done before. Rather, I avoid previous mistakes (experience) and approach the situation as if it were new; which it is.

If you look at this from an organizational perspective, most organizations don’t get better at innovation over time. They get better at optimization (experience / sustain / reduce errors), but suck at disrupting themselves (beginner’s mind).

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