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Innovation Nurturing Innovation - Sun and Planets Spirituality AYINRIN
Innovation
Nurturing Innovation - Sun and Planets Spirituality AYINRIN
Felicity McCabe
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Summary.
Despite a multitude of initiatives in cross-sector collaboration and open innovation, businesses still struggle to support the development of game-changing ideas. The authors argue that the solution to this problem starts by recognizing an important truth: Innovation is about more than an idea—it is a long, collaborative journey. Innovation is more likely to succeed when it is a curated process in which an intermediary takes responsibility for sparking and sustaining collaboration among the people involved.
In this article, the authors demonstrate how intermediaries can support collaboration throughout the entire innovation journey. First, they provide opportunities for innovators to make connections. They don’t simply bring people together; they carefully select participants and curate the experience to generate the best results. Second, they help innovators develop relationships, using structured follow-ups and offering holistic mentoring. And third, they help entrepreneurs sustain their relationships and manage the team over time as the collaborations evolve and team members change.
Despite an avalanche of initiatives in cross-sector collaboration and open innovation, businesses still struggle to develop game-changing ideas and bring them to market. Many people argue that the problem is that we still don’t have enough new ideas, and we need to work harder at getting diverse people into the conversation. New, imaginative ideas wouldn’t hurt, of course, but that prescription misses an important truth: Successful innovation involves more than just letting a thousand ideas bloom.
As
studies of hackathons and other accelerated forms of innovation show,
all too often very little happens after the initial brainstorming phase.
The organizers of these initiatives tend to focus on facilitating the
collision of ideas and talents without planning for the long term. Those
taking part in the initiatives enter with every intention of making a
long-term commitment, but most are unprepared for or underestimate what
lies ahead.
The
reality is, innovation is more than generating an idea—it is a long,
collaborative journey. Daniel Epstein, the CEO of Unreasonable Group, an
organization that brings together a global network of entrepreneurs who
are tackling some of the world’s most pressing challenges with
investors, creatives, and business leaders, explains it like this:
“Business in the 20th century was oftentimes defined by having a
competitive advantage. Business in the 21st century will be defined by
having a collaborative advantage.” A considerable body of academic
research into social networks, psychology, creativity, and the
entrepreneurial process validates that point of view. It shows that
innovation is more likely to succeed when it is a curated process in
which an intermediary takes responsibility for sparking and sustaining
collaboration among the people involved.
In
this article, we draw on that research and on our own and describe the
crucial roles that intermediaries can play. We show how they can support
innovative collaboration throughout the innovation journey—from
providing opportunities for innovators to make connections, to helping
them develop those connections into relationships, and finally to
sustaining and refreshing those relationships as the collaboration
evolves.
[ Step 1 ]
Making Connections
Beyond
simply bringing people together and providing a structure for their
conversations, the intermediary must spark trusting relationships. A
good example of how to do that comes from Unreasonable Impact (UI), a
partnership between Barclays and Unreasonable Group. (We have worked
with all three of these organizations in various capacities, including
as mentors, academic advisers, and clients.) UI provides a network of
entrepreneurs with the resources they need to develop their ventures and
solve challenges that arise in order to rapidly scale.
UI
runs three programs each year that bring together a select group of
growth-stage businesses. Those programs typically last from five to
seven days, and include sessions that address entrepreneurs’ critical
needs, from understanding regulatory shifts to scaling up manufacturing.
Entrepreneurs also have the opportunity to connect, get feedback, and
share concerns. To date, the participants have built more than 300
ventures across 53 countries, generated more than $7 billion in revenue,
and hired more than 25,000 full-time employees.
To
understand the process better, and as part of Accenture’s research on
the power of cross-sector collaborations to address complex social
issues, three of us conducted a series of interviews and workshops with
28 collaborators. We found that UI’s success in setting up
collaborations can be largely attributed to two factors.
Careful selection.
Most
open-innovation research has focused on defining the most generative
framing for challenges and how best to broaden participation. UI takes a
different approach: It handpicks the projects and the people invited to
join its community. In addition to considering financials, the social
impact of businesses, and the diversity of the broader community, the UI
team makes sure that the venture founders it invites are aligned with
the mission, values, and beliefs of the UI community.
The
selection process is rigorous, and success isn’t the only criteria. UI
team members look for personalities they believe will contribute to the
community, and that means being able to collaborate well. One UI fellow
we spoke with says, “I just trust the Unreasonable community to be
people with the passion and heart to serve the community.”
Felicity
McCabe photographed circus troupe trainees in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia,
for her project 42 Feet, documenting their passion, endurance, and
ambition.
The
Unreasonable team works to create what Harvard Business School
professor Amy Edmondson calls “team psychological safety”—that is, an
environment in which entrepreneurs feel comfortable sharing stories of
both successes and challenges. At Unreasonable, they believe that
equalizing the power dynamics between mentors and mentees is key to
achieving such a state, to the extent that they avoid using those terms.
Instead, UI describes relationships as collaborations and program
participants as fellows.
Curation of the experience.
UI
carefully manages its programs’ in-person experiences—from workshops to
team-building activities to community dinners. All the fellows and
mentors we spoke with mentioned “the magic” that happened over the
course of these events. UI retreats typically combine small-group
interactions with periods of reflective time.
Consider
how community dinners are held. Fellows are divided into tables of five
or six people plus a UI mentor. Each table is given a prompt; for
example, “Tell us about a decision you made that changed your life” or
“Describe an object that is meaningful to you.” Each fellow gets five
minutes to respond without interruptions. Fellows often share personal
and emotional experiences. As one participant recalls, “There was not
one dinner without some tears.”
The
programs include periods of time off for activities such as yoga or
quiet walks. The importance of having space for reflection is well
documented in organizational psychology research: It is how people come
to understand others with whom they have shared intense experiences and
discover whom they might be able to form relationships with.
Innovation
is more likely to succeed when it is a curated process in which an
intermediary takes responsibility for sparking and sustaining
collaboration among the people involved.
The
careful curation of the retreat experiences can help create a
foundation for strong relationships. Here’s one example: Two fellows,
one working on recycled 3D printing and the other on residential wind
turbines, discovered they had shared connections and interests at a
lunch during a UI program. They stayed in touch in the months following
the retreat, exchanging updates and advice and bonding over their
journeys as they developed their ventures. A year after they first met,
the fellows had a moment of realization at another UI event, where they
were demonstrating prototypes of their products. They recognized there
were opportunities to work more closely together to improve their
respective products—and possibly develop a new type of appliance. By the
time we interviewed one of them, they were applying for grants together
in order to turn their ideas into a more structured collaboration.
The
importance to relationship-building of carefully selecting people and
giving them moments of both intense connection and quiet reflection are
well-known. In fact, many corporations use this formula in
leadership-development programs. But in our experience, it is rare to
find those practices so carefully followed in the context of innovation
and the entrepreneurial process.
[ Step 2 ]
Developing Relationships
After
an idea forms and a relationship is made, the collaborators have to
define their shared goals, metrics, and targets and devise the processes
and structures they’ll need to make their idea a reality and support
the daily operations of a functioning business.
Creating
a road map for a collaboration is a complicated undertaking, and
getting an outside perspective can be incredibly helpful. Consider the
founder of a venture in last-mile distribution, who was working with an
entrepreneur developing biotech solutions. Their teams had started
working together to deliver health care products to isolated communities
during the pandemic. “You need time and space to get to know the
partners, do the right expectations management, and understand what
exactly it is you’re trying to achieve together, and that honestly needs
to be facilitated,” the founder explains.
Another
UI fellow echoes that sentiment. “A collaboration requires external
support, like a third-party strategist who says, ‘here’s how you guys
can align’ to help design and facilitate the next steps.” All the
fellows we spoke with highlighted the challenge of moving from a shared
idea and the early excitement of the collaborative encounter to
establishing a collaboration infrastructure (roles, leadership, project
management needs, and team dynamics) while refining the idea of the
product or service to work on together. The UI program provided them
with resources, connections with other fellows and mentors, and regular
meetings, which provided some accountability.
Successfully moving from the idea stage to implementation depends on two factors:
Structured follow-up.
The
importance of sustained direct support is still frequently overlooked
by the organizers of hackathons or open-innovation challenges, who tend
to focus on speed and idea generation. However, an increasing number of
intermediaries are recognizing the need to support innovators and
entrepreneurs beyond the original event.
One
example is the open-innovation project #WirVsVirus (in English,
#WeVsVirus), an initiative in Germany that brought together seven civil
society organizations in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. It kicked
off with an online hackathon that attracted 28,000 participants and
produced 1,500 ideas.
Felicity McCabe
What
set #WirVsVirus apart, as Johanna Mair, a professor at the Hertie
School in Berlin, and Thomas Gegenhuber, a professor at JKU Linz in
Austria, highlighted in a study, was that organizers planned from the
start for a six-month follow-up support program to help 150 teams
prototype and test the ideas they developed during the 48-hour
hackathon. In the follow-up program, participants were given
opportunities to connect with domain experts, investors, and potential
scaling partners, much as intermediaries provide. Teams participated in
weekly calls to share what they’d learned and the challenges they were
facing.
#WirVsVirus’s
organizers went further than most by bringing in mentors who focused on
skill development and team dynamics from the get-go. Even during the
hackathon weekend, moderators performed a dual role: They provided
domain expertise and also helped people set up their collaborations,
structure the creative process, and manage team dynamics. They assigned a
Slack channel to assist teams in finding one another, and they helped
them stay on track by asking questions about the status of their
collaborations and probing into their challenges—technical and
organizational—because they knew that teams might be reluctant to ask
for assistance. The mentors made suggestions on project-management
issues as well as business and technology ones.
Holistic mentoring.
Many collaboration intermediaries tend to prioritize helping innovators
polish and sharpen their ideas rather than coaching the people
collaborating. They consider the creative idea to be essential to the
success of the teams and therefore a better focus for their limited
resources. However, research on cross-disciplinary teams has shown that
team dynamics need to be managed if collaboration is to be productive.
The intermediary can be most effective by embracing a coaching role and
creating safe spaces. That’s why entrepreneurial hubs like Impact Hub
London, part of an international network of more than 100 hubs and
320,000 entrepreneurs (or Impact Makers, as they are known) look for
mentors who can not only help with business and technical skills but
also, as its website puts it, “provide holistic support and motivation.”
Mentors
at Impact Hub London commit to assignments that last three to nine
months. As coaches, they provide reassurance and help collaborators
define a common language, establish expectations, and agree on roles.
Research has shown that all of these activities are critical to
successful cross-sector collaboration.
Mentoring
the collaboration is also at the core of the programs organized by the
Innovation Ecosystem (IECO) at Portugal’s Nova School of Business and
Economics. One program is Project X, a three-month innovation sprint in
which 85 students work with 11 corporate innovation teams from companies
in various industries (including automotive, telecommunications,
financial services, and energy) on 15 innovation projects. People from
IECO mentor the teams on the innovation methodology as well as team
dynamics, helping participants build trust and navigate the innovation
process. On one occasion a team member dropped out for personal reasons,
which seriously lowered the morale of the remaining teammates. Their
mentor stepped in to boost their spirits and help them redistribute the
workload. In another case a mentor’s intervention in conflict management
was critical when team members strongly and passionately disagreed. The
mentor suggested mechanisms for decision-making and conflict resolution
to help overcome the constant arguments that were paralyzing the team.
[ Step 3 ]
Sustaining and Managing the Team
The
experiences of two ventures we tracked illustrate how crucial it is for
collaborations to receive long-term support. In the first, which was
established during the Covid-19 pandemic, two UI fellows joined forces
to provide health care kits to rural communities in Asia. They were
working on tight timelines, and they felt that they didn’t have the
time, space, and capacity to set up dedicated roles and clearly define
responsibilities. That choice ultimately put the collaboration in
jeopardy.
By
contrast, in the second, two fellows started collaborating to develop
solar-powered electric vehicles and soon realized that the work was
getting too big for them to manage by themselves. They decided to
establish a joint venture in order to provide more structure,
accountability, and resources for their team. The two founders believed
that was the only way for them to scale up. The first collaboration
ultimately moved forward with different partners, but the second is
thriving today.
The
UI community had created a foundation for trusting relationships that
enabled the fellows to work in a flexible manner, keeping bureaucracy
and governance to a minimum. But as the collaborations scaled up, their
organizational needs became more complex, and addressing them required a
renewed focus on building relationships. While the fellows in the first
example were aware of the problem, they had neither the time nor the
resources to manage it successfully.
Again,
this points to an opportunity for intermediaries, which have the
legitimacy to guide collaborators through this stage. An intermediary
can help in two ways:
Providing reflective checkpoints.
By creating opportunities for collaborators to get together in
facilitated workshops, semistructured calls, or in-person retreats,
intermediaries can help venture teams negotiate shifting roles and
changing (or even new) relationships, reestablish alignment, and
introduce new governance structures. These checkpoints offer an
opportunity for reflection, allowing social entrepreneurs to step back
and consider what they’ve learned in a constructive fashion so that they
can implement those lessons.
Checkpoints
also help entrepreneurs manage their stress and emotions, as the
following stories of two social entrepreneurs outside UI demonstrate.
One young social entrepreneur who worked on a health care venture told
us that she ended up having a breakdown and terminating her project. “I
wish at the time I had a space to share my worries on a regular basis
and get support from my peers as well as mentors,” she explained. By
contrast, the other entrepreneur, who developed a food-waste start-up,
described how her network supported her as her venture evolved through
multiple phases and team member changes. “I was lucky to have stayed in
touch with a couple of mentors I met in the different hackathons and
accelerator programs I participated in,” she recalls. “As I struggled
with team members’ engagement, conflicts, and what to do with the
idea—for instance, should I try to file for a patent?—I was able to
reach out to my mentors. Moreover, later I was part of a network where
we could share our experiences and best practices.” She lamented that
not every founder has the same sort of social network.
By
providing reflective checkpoints, intermediaries can help teams
negotiate shifting roles and relationships and reestablish alignment.
The
need for sharing and reflecting is why the social entrepreneurship hub
Casa do Impacto in Lisbon holds events like the Founders breakfast,
where it invites entrepreneurs to an intimate gathering to promote
informal connections and knowledge sharing. Similarly, intermediaries
like OpenIDEO, an open-innovation platform that one of us (Anne-Laure)
has studied extensively, always includes weekly calls when developing
communities of social entrepreneurs. They allow community members to
reflect on their experience, share their stories, and listen to others.
During
one workshop we facilitated as part of our study of UI, the team
membership of one venture had changed so much that most of them had
never actually met. Even though the UI fellows leading the collaboration
communicated well and had a trusting relationship, the people managing
the daily operations of the venture had not yet developed the same.
Participating in the workshop was for many the first opportunity they
had to build relationships and trust. One UI fellow told us at the end
of the workshop that it gave team members the “space to think about what
worked, what did not, why rushing it was not helpful, what was our
readiness level to make things happen, and in hindsight what we’d have
done different.”
Nurturing the ecosystem.
In addition to promoting collaborative efforts, UI aims to create a
community of social entrepreneurs linked to a wide network of mentors,
investors, and innovators. A thriving ecosystem will enable innovators
to scale up their ventures. Alumni of the programs stay connected with
one another and form connections with new fellows, sometimes becoming
mentors themselves. Potential investors build relationships with
fellows, sometimes providing capital for their ventures or helping them
secure funding.
That’s
what happened to 80 Acres Farms, an Ohio-based vertical farm using 100%
renewable energy. The cofounder of 80 Acres first met a team from
Barclays in 2019 through his participation in UI. When 80 Acres Farms
needed to raise funds to build its first commercial-scale production
facility, it secured Series A and B investment from Barclays Sustainable
Impact Capital, and the bank’s team acted as the sole placement agent
in the Series B $200 million capital round.
OpenIDEO
is focused on social and environmental issues and nurtures an
entrepreneurial ecosystem. After a few years of running one-off
challenges, in 2016 OpenIDEO initiated the Food Waste Alliance, a
network of 80 ventures, along with experts, investors, and other
stakeholders. The idea was to give entrepreneurs and innovators the
ongoing opportunity to exchange knowledge, prototype, receive feedback,
secure funding, and form collaborations. The OpenIDEO team developed an
online platform where venture founders can share weekly progress updates
and ask questions. Matt Ridenour, who led the Food Waste Alliance,
shared resources, invited guest experts, and encouraged participants to
share tools, guidelines, best practices, challenges, and even grant
opportunities. In-person events, including a series of pitch days that
paired funders and investors, were organized at the IDEO office in San
Francisco.
Rise
Products, a food start-up that upcycles organic by-products, was one of
the beneficiaries of that effort. Thanks to the funding it received
from another Alliance member, Rise was able to prototype a process for
transforming barley waste from beer brewing into flour for baked goods.
The two cofounders also participated in a conference organized by the
Alliance in San Francisco, where they met other entrepreneurs, including
some who would eventually start an upcycled food association that Rise
joined. Reflecting on the Alliance experience, one of Rise’s cofounders
says, “In addition to capital (funding opportunities, prototyping
facilities) and access (sharing of existing infrastructure and
knowledge), I’d say the most important resources were networking
(sharing of personal connections) and storytelling (sharing of
experiences). It helped us realize that we were not alone and that
people faced similar challenges.”
. . .
Although
Silicon Valley celebrates “moving fast and breaking things,” that
approach is unsustainable. Hackathons and open-innovation challenges can
and do generate promising ideas, but they all too often fail to achieve
greater impact because most new ventures get too little support for the
people dynamics of collaboration. And while some intermediaries,
entrepreneurship hubs, and accelerators offer more structured,
network-based support in the early phases of new venture ideation and
team formation, most provide little support in the medium to long term.
That gap represents a big opportunity for people who can provide this
support—and a path to reducing the persistently high failure rate for
new ventures.
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