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POSITIVE TURBULENCE IS KEY TO ORGANIZATIONAL
RENEWAL
Use creativity to manage change and sustain healthy organizations
By: Stanley S. Gryskiewicz, Ph.D.,
Vice President and Senior Fellow, Creativity and Innovation
at the Center for Creative Leadership
In the 1950s the typical business organization valued nothing
so much as predictability and repeatability. In the name of
efficiency, companies were system-designed to maintain order
and reduce variability. In the environment of the time, this
"keep it the same and everyone will be happy" approach
made a certain kind of sense. Competition was nonexistent
and customers were content to receive whatever the companies
supplied.
Today's business climate is entirely
different. Social change, foreign competition, deregulation,
environmental issues, global economic forces, and mind-boggling
technology have turned the stability of forty years ago on
its head, leaving a new world that is unpredictable, and sometimes
terrifying. Turbulence that chaotic, bubbling, swirling,
frenetic environment that threatens to drown us all
is the spawning ground for personal, team, and organizational
renewal. Disruption, change, and chaos are inevitable facts
of economic life, but within them there is valuable information.
The challenge is to look turbulence in the eye and turn it
into a positive force. By creating positive turbulence, organizations
can promote renewal and not only survive change but prosper
from it. What is needed instead is to see in new ways, come
up with new approaches, and veer off into different directions.
Operating in a time of rapid and seemingly
relentless change, todays healthiest organizations have
the ability to continuously renew themselves and thrive in
a challenging environment. They are the ones that know how
to harness the turbulence all organizations encounter and
use it as a catalyst for creativity and innovation. They are
the organizations that will succeed in the long term.
For the past 25 years, I have studied
organizations that provide stimulating work climates. What
I have found is that sometimes creativity and innovation are
unplanned, even spontaneous, in their occurrence. However,
sometimes creativity, and any resultant product or process
innovation, is not random. Organizational structures can,
in fact, be put in place that provide for a more predictable
occurrence of innovation the successful implementation
of a creative idea, or an idea that is both novel and useful.
When employees are enveloped by a creative
environment, they are free to puzzle over new information
and creative ideas and implement successful and innovative
solutions, plans and projects. Given the fast-changing world
we live in today, companies need precisely this kind of supportive
climate to adapt and thrive in the long term.
Underlying the concept of positive turbulence
is the belief that creativity is stimulated by new information,
fresh concepts and broad perspective. By looking beyond the
status quo, the obvious data, and the current constraints,
organizations and individuals see things differently
and often discover new ideas or new applications.
"The way forward is paradoxically
not to look ahead, but to look around," explains John
Sealy Brown, the director of the Palo Alto Research Center
(PARC) for Xerox.
It is my experience, like that of Sealy
Brown and others, that outside the mainstream, on the fringes
of the industry, are the small blips which may be the introduction
of a major trend that will grow and represent meaningful change
over the next three to five years. These coming changes point
to a possible future direction of the industry and in turn
help the industrys visionaries plan for that future.
The principle of working the periphery
is a powerful one. It is on the periphery activities
outside the main work or focus of a team or organization
where one first comes in contact with the world outside the
organization's boundary. Innovation is most rapid on the periphery
of any system because that is where people have the opportunity
to explore new possibilities. When time is spent on the periphery,
one can distinguish the novel and exciting impulses from the
worn banal of the familiar. Organizations that do not pay
attention to the periphery can be slow to act and are overcome
by demands of change.
The first requirement for acting on the
periphery is a shift in thinking. Organizations that now consider
any deviation from standard operating procedure to be irrelevant,
excessive, or an unnecessary expense must begin to think of
such variances as portals into the future. Companies that
view a turbulent environment as an ominous whirlpool must
learn to see it as a reservoir full of new ideas and insights
into direction of the market place.
The second requirement is that, with
wide eyes and an open mind, organizations and their leaders
must actively and systematically extend the range of observation
outward, beyond the comfort of the known.
Instituting structures for Positive
Turbulence can be done on the individual level and on the
organizational level and can involve either internal or external
resources. Some structures which provide positive turbulence
include:
· Encouraging employees
to read outside their field of expertise.
One proven source of novelty is reading credible fringe periodicals
such as Fast Company, Red Herring, Upside, Raygun, Wired and
foreign journals. Remember, the mainstream publications of
today were once on the fringe of respectability. Books, articles
and websites from completely different fields . . . music,
science, history, technology . . . can also contribute new
ideas and offer new connections to your current work.
· Providing resources
for employees to attend conferences which only tangentially
relate to their field of expertise.
The concept of reading on the fringe also applies
to attending conferences or professional meetings outside
ones area of expertise. We are all experts in our fields,
but we need access to new impulses, new ideas which can be
applied to that field. Each year, budget for employees to
attend one conference that would offer a new perspective (in
addition to the more standard professional conferences).
· Creating ad hoc task
forces and cross-functional teams to resolve problems and
stimulate new ideas.
Working cross functionally
with teams comprised of members from manufacturing,
marketing, finance, human resources, design and so forth
is a natural source of positive turbulence which can improve
company performance.
· Bringing in outside
experts to present to staff.
Experts from the outside bring with them a perspective which
is not often heard within the organization. By definition,
these external experts are not shaped in their thinking by
the climate or culture or school of thought of the internal
organization. These experts may be within your field or from
unrelated fields.
These, and other tactics, can be introduced
and established in your organization, work group or team to
foster new thinking and creative ideas that will help you
steer safely through the turbulence of change.
Examples of Creative Organisations
For nearly three years, the senior
management team of a telecommunications companys Nortel
Networks Broad Band line of business has been practicing
the tenants of positive turbulence at their quarterly management
meetings. Caroline Paoletti, vice president, human resources,
reports that the team devotes 10-15 percent of each meeting
to positive turbulence by importing a variety of presenters,
readings, and video which provide the team with information
from the periphery. For example, venture capitalist spending
was tracked through the credible fringe periodical Red Herring
and venture capitalists spoke to the group to provide the
management team with an indication of where investments for
the future were being made and who was making them.
The use of these acts of positive turbulence
have caused the management team to be more reflective and
has changed how the team looks at their organization. "Positive
turbulence changed our culture, and our receptivity to novel
and useful ideas, says Ian Craig, President, Broad Band,
Nortel Networks. As an organization, we changed because
the information from the periphery indicated that we needed
to.
Swedens $7 billion insurance giant
Skandia has created a strategic planning unit which is staffed
with people representing three distinct generations. Staff
members range in age from their mid-twenties to their mid-sixties.
Skandia refers to this as the 3G (generation)
planning team. These generation differences spark dialogue
within the group which include discussions on medical realities
such as dying, the slowing of the aging process, the end of
disease, and the impact of these possibilities upon the younger
generation.
All these trends have implications for
actuarial decisions, future selling strategies, products,
market-niche decisions and even qualification procedures for
future customers. This dialogue provides the evidence for
the importance of a generationally diverse group to address
complex challenges.
Hallmark (greeting cards industry) brings
into its corporate headquarters in Kansas City each year 50
or more speakers (Lyn Heward, Vice President of Creation,
Cirque du Soleil; Guy Kawasaki, Apple Fellow; David Whyte,
story teller and poet) who have novel ideas to communicate.
The sole purpose is to provide stimulation to the worlds
largest creative staff more than 740 artists, designers,
writers, editors, and photographers who generate more than
15,000 original designs for cards and related products yearly.
Similarly, Bell Labs (communications
industry) brings in world experts to talk to their scientists
about the particular expertise they represent. The experts
must be renowned in their field, but, more significantly,
these experts must be knowledgeable in a field not represented
inside the Labs.
For example, several years ago, Bell
Labs brought in Roger Payne, a world expert in whale communication
with a Ph.D. in ornithology, to describe what he had discovered
about these large mammals of the deep. His major finding was
that whales sing to each other to communicate, but each year
they change their language patterns. Payne noticed this phenomenon
in contrast to birds, which keep the same pattern year after
year. Half way through his presentation to the Labs, a scientist
jumped up and ran out of the auditorium with an idea on how
to improve communications between submarines. Again, the value
of positive turbulence creating a novel stimulus for
people in order to make connections to problems or issues
they are trying to resolve in other settings.
Creative Leaders Needed
Of course, the role of the creative
leader is very important to the success of positive turbulence.
The leader must be committed to putting the right structures
in place, committing the time and funds to support them. Can
you imagine what it must be like to defend a budget for bringing
in speakers on topics unrelated to the companys expertise?
With commitment from leadership, the organization will believe
in the value of such an approach.
The leader must also beware of the possible
pitfalls. Too much turbulence without the right supportive
structures in place or a management which views creativity
as an end in itself can result in negative turbulence.
In such an environment, wheels spin at the sight of every
new opportunity and agreed upon strategy and goals are ignored.
In the examples above, organizations
discard useful paradigms and lead with novelty alone. Such
knee-jerk creativity is extremely hard on in-place systems
such as marketing and manufacturing.
We are each experts in our disciplines,
and we need the stimulation of positive turbulence to help
us break out and see what is on the other side
of the wall. The velvet ruts of routine and/or
success inhibit our ability to see beyond to new and useful
connections. The creative leader will assume responsibility
for providing positive turbulence both internal and
external within his or her organization.
Sources of Positive Turbulence
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External
|
Individual
|
Organization
|
| Conferences |
ventures |
| Travel |
alliances |
| reading
outside your area of expertise |
listening posts |
| repotted
careers |
professional networks |
 |
|
Internal
|
foreign
assignments |
diverse guest experts
|
| ad hoc
task forces |
sabbaticals |
| crises
|
cross-functional teams |
| affinity
groups |
corporate-wide trade
shows |
| role changes |
|
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What is Your Creativity Capacity?
What is your organization's capacity
for creativity, innovation and successful renewal? The answers
to these questions may provide you with insight into your
organization's capacity for innovation:
1.
What is your organization's ability to absorb new information?
High? Medium? Low?
2. What capacity does
your organization have to learn, remember and process information?
Is knowledge management practiced?
3. What motivation do
your people have to engage in novel interpretations? To seek
novelty and then make sense of it?
4. Is your organization
balanced with both innovators and implementers of new ideas?
Both are needed. One without the other results in either a
house full of ideas never implemented or a perfected redundancy
of the same ideas implemented continuously.
Stanley S. Gryskiewicz, Ph.D. is
Vice President and Senior Fellow, Creativity and Innovation
at the Center for Creative Leadership (CLC), a nonprofit educational
organization based in Greensboro, North Carolina, USA and
an IFTDO Member. The article is excerted from Dr. Gryskiewiczs
most recent book Positive Turbulence: Developing Climates
for Creativity, Innovation, and Renewal, (CCL and Jossey-Bass
Publishers, 1999). For additional information, visit CCLs
web site at
http://www.ccl.org under publications/new releases.
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