Creating A Culture That Supports Scalable Innovation

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Summary

Creating a culture that supports scalable innovation means embedding practices, values, and environments that encourage continuous creativity, adaptability, and sustainable growth as organizations expand. It involves fostering an ecosystem where bold ideas can thrive without losing the organization's core identity.

  • Prioritize psychological safety: Create an environment where employees feel secure to take risks, share ideas, and embrace failures as learning opportunities.
  • Break down silos: Facilitate collaboration across teams and departments to encourage the exchange of diverse perspectives, leading to breakthrough solutions.
  • Celebrate and operationalize values: Turn organizational values into measurable behaviors, integrate them into decision-making processes, and recognize individuals who embody these principles.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Anne White
    Anne White Anne White is an Influencer

    Fractional COO and CHRO | Consultant | Speaker | ACC Coach to Leaders | Member @ Chief

    6,365 followers

    Far too often, I see leaders and companies move on from innovation, believing it's only necessary during the startup phase. In reality, it's what keeps companies alive and thriving. As companies grow, it's easy to fall into routine and let creativity fade. But innovation must continue-even as you scale. An older HBR article I came across this morning highlights how breakthroughs in management can create lasting advantages that are hard to replicate. Companies focused only on new products or efficiency often get quickly copied. To stay ahead, businesses must become "serial management innovators," always seeking new ways to transform how they operate. This idea remains as relevant now as it was back then. The benefits of sustained innovation are undeniable: •Competitive Edge •Increased Revenue •Customer Satisfaction •Attracting Talent •Organizational Growth and Employee Retention Embrace the innovation lifecycle-adapting creativity as your organization matures. Sustaining creativity means creating an environment where people feel safe to push boundaries. Encourage your teams to think big, take risks, and use the experience of your organization. Here are three strategies that I’ve seen work firsthand: Make Experimentation a Priority: Mistakes are part of the process—they help us learn, grow, and innovate. As leaders, share your own experiences with risk-taking, talk about what you've learned, and celebrate those who take bold steps, even when things don’t go as planned. It sends a powerful message: it's okay to take risks. Promote Intrapreneurship: Many of the best ideas come from those closest to the work. Encourage your people to think like entrepreneurs. Give them ownership, the tools they need, and the freedom to explore. Whether it’s through ‘innovation sprints’ or dedicated time for passion projects, showing your team that their creativity matters sustains momentum. Address big challenges, ask tough questions, and let your people feel empowered to tackle them head-on. Break Down Silos: True innovation happens when people connect across departments. Create opportunities for cross-functional interactions-through gatherings, open forums, or spontaneous connections. Diverse perspectives lead to game-changing solutions, and breaking down silos opens the door to that kind of synergy. Innovation doesn’t happen by accident. It requires dedication, a commitment to growth, and a willingness to challenge what’s always been done. To all the leaders out there: How are you ensuring your teams remain creative and engaged? What strategies have you found that create space for bold ideas within structured environments? —-- Harvard Business Review, "The Why, What, and How of Management Innovation" #Innovation #Leadership #ContinuousImprovement #Creativity #BusinessGrowth #Intrapreneurship #CrossFunctionalCollaboration #ImpactLab

  • View profile for Elaine Page

    Chief People Officer | P&L & Business Leader | Board Advisor | Culture & Talent Strategist | Growth & Transformation Expert | Architect of High-Performing Teams & Scalable Organizations

    29,907 followers

    Most people say they’ve transformed culture. Few actually have. I was once told that in large organizations, culture change is like turning an aircraft carrier: slow, painful, and barely perceptible. That might be true if you settle for surface-level change. But I didn’t have that luxury. At a healthcare company with 80,000 employees, I wasn’t hired to run HR. I was brought in to reimagine it - as Chief People Innovation Officer, tasked with transforming how people experienced their work across hundreds of locations, acquired entities, and entrenched silos. And we did it. Not with strategy decks or slogans. We started with people. 1. Real research, not just surveys We didn’t open a “best practices” playbook. We had thousands of real conversations. We asked: What connects you to your work? What breaks your spirit? From that, we found the common thread: the drive to deliver extraordinary care. That insight became our EVP, not a brand line, but a rally cry. 2. Our Employee Value Prop became the operating system Most companies treat EVP as a marketing tool. We used it to rewire decisions across the employee lifecycle. We hired for values, not just skills. Rebuilt onboarding to connect every hire to purpose. Challenged policies that didn’t reflect who we said we were. The EVP wasn’t a campaign. It was our blueprint. 3. Innovation, everywhere To build a culture of innovation, we democratized it. We launched: A company-wide Innovation Challenge to surface bold ideas from the frontlines. An “Everyday Innovation” platform to spotlight small wins. A design-thinking toolkit for managers so innovation lived in every unit, not just HQ. 4. Results that mattered Cost-per-hire dropped. Quality of hire rose. Trust and purpose scores spiked, so did patient satisfaction. Retention improved. The biggest win? Leaders stopped asking if culture mattered. They started asking how to scale it. 5. The right partners push you beyond the expected We didn’t just hire consultants. We brought in provocateurs. Thinkers from outside healthcare who challenged our assumptions. One of them now runs their own venture, Fauna. That’s the ripple effect of great thinking. Here’s the truth: Real culture change doesn’t come from town halls or t-shirts. It comes from aligning strategy to people, and people to purpose. It’s hard, messy, nonlinear work. But when done right, it redefines what’s possible. Not just for the organization, but for everyone inside it. If your EVP is buried in a slide deck, you’re leaving transformation on the table. Want to bring it to life? DM me so I can share more of the story, or better yet, reach out to the folks at Fauna. They were with me every step of the way. Maybe its time you tried something new.

  • HOW TO CREATE SAFE SPACES FOR UNSAFE IDEAS You hire brilliant people and tell them to innovate. Then you make it impossible for them to do so. Most companies develop an immune system that rejects new ideas like they're some kind of virus. Here are the five innovation killers you need to spot and eliminate: KILLER #1: DEMANDING CRYSTAL BALL ACCURACY You want detailed business cases for projects that are inherently uncertain. The fix: Create different approval processes for exploration vs. execution. Exploration projects get smaller budgets and you measure success by what you learn, not what you earn. KILLER #2: BEING SCARED OF EVERYTHING Your processes are designed to avoid any downside risk, which also kills any upside potential. The fix: Separate "experiments you can't afford to mess up" from "experiments you can't afford not to try." Different projects, different comfort levels with risk. KILLER #3: MAKING INNOVATION FIGHT FOR SCRAPS Innovation projects have to compete with your proven money-makers for resources. The fix: Set aside dedicated innovation resources. 10% of engineering time, 5% of budget, just for projects where you don't know what'll happen. KILLER #4: JUDGING EVERYTHING ON QUARTERLY RESULTS You evaluate innovation projects on the same timelines as your day-to-day operations. The fix: Innovation gets measured by learning cycles, not calendar quarters. Success is about insights you gain, not deadlines you hit. KILLER #5: THINKING FAILURE MEANS SOMEONE SCREWED UP You define success as "execute the original plan perfectly." The fix: Success becomes "figure out what works as fast as possible." Changing direction gets celebrated, not punished. The framework that can transform your innovation culture: EXPLORE → EXPERIMENT → EXECUTE EXPLORE PHASE: Small budget, big questions. Win = quality insights. EXPERIMENT PHASE: Medium budget, specific hunches. Win = fast validation (or fast failure). EXECUTE PHASE: Full budget, proven concept. Win = flawless delivery. Different phases, different rules, different ways to win. Companies don't lack innovative ideas. They lack innovative environments. QUESTIONS TO DIAGNOSE YOUR INNOVATION IMMUNE SYSTEM: ❓How many good ideas die in approval meetings instead of real-world tests? ❓What percentage of your "failed" projects actually teach you something valuable? ❓How long does it take to get approval for a $10K experiment vs. a $10K efficiency upgrade? ❓Do your best people feel comfortable pitching risky ideas? If your best employee came to you tomorrow with a risky but potentially game-changing idea, would they feel safe pitching it? *** I’m Jennifer Kamara, founder of Kamara Life Design. Enjoy this? Repost to share with your network, and follow me for actionable strategies to design businesses and lives with meaning. Want to go from good to world-class? Join our community of subscribers today: https://lnkd.in/d6TT6fX5 

  • View profile for Jackson Lynch

    Chief HR Officer - Consigliere - Talent Sherpa - Best-Selling Author - Podcaster - Keynote Speaker - Executive Coach - Talent Builder

    20,290 followers

    Culture doesn’t scale on its own. Growth often dilutes it. Fast. Here’s how to make sure your culture stays strong as your company grows. Define the non-negotiables. Too many companies confuse perks with culture. Culture isn’t kombucha taps and offsites. It's the values, behaviors, and decisions that stay consistent even under pressure. Identify the few things you will never compromise on. Then operationalize them in hiring, promotions, and feedback. Promote culture carriers, not performance-only heroes. When you scale, you’ll feel pressure to keep up with talent demands. That’s when companies start promoting based on output alone. The problem is, culture isn’t transmitted through slides. It’s transmitted through people. If the loudest voices don’t embody your values, your culture won’t survive growth. Create rituals that reinforce what matters. Culture is memory. Memory needs rituals. Whether it's how you open a meeting or how you celebrate a win, your growth moments need cultural fingerprints. Without rituals, everything starts to feel like a transaction. And that’s when people disconnect. Teach your managers to be cultural stewards. Most managers are promoted with zero training on how to model and reinforce culture. Yet they’re the front line. Equip them with clear behaviors to model, phrases to use, and decisions to make. Otherwise, you’ve left the culture in a black box. Use growth to re-recruit your best people. Fast growth makes people feel like passengers instead of co-creators. This is where culture dies. Re-recruit your best talent by giving them stretch opportunities, clarity on their future, and a reminder of why they joined in the first place. Culture doesn’t scale itself. If you're not intentional, growth will quietly trade your culture for efficiency (or chaos). And once it’s gone, it’s incredibly hard to get back. Learn more by reading the Talent Sherpa substack at https://buff.ly/uPQ9i6S

  • View profile for Mark O'Donnell

    Simple systems for stronger businesses and freer lives | Visionary and CEO at EOS Worldwide | Author of People: Dare to Build an Intentional Culture & Data: Harness Your Numbers to Go From Uncertain to Unstoppable

    22,409 followers

    Last week, I walked into a client's office. Their values were beautifully displayed on the wall: "Integrity. Innovation. Customer First." But then I saw something interesting... A manager was shutting down an employee's new idea because "that's not how we do things here." This is what happens when values are just expensive wall art. The hidden costs? → Innovation dies silently → Good people leave quietly → Culture erodes daily But here's what changed everything: We took those values off the wall and put them into action: 1. Made them measurable Instead of vague "Innovation," we tracked weekly improvement ideas from every team member 2. Built them into decisions "Does this align with our values?" became the first question in every meeting 3. Rewarded the right behaviors Started celebrating people who lived the values, not just hit their numbers 90 days later? • Employee suggestions up 300% • Customer satisfaction jumped 40% • Turnover dropped to near 0 The lesson? Values aren't decoration. They're your operating system. And they only work when you do. What would happen if you took your values off the wall and put them into action today? ➕ Follow me, Mark O'Donnell, for more insights on building value-driven organizations that scale.

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