Many blockers of innovation live in a company’s human resources department. Some HR people don’t have the right mindset for recruiting and nurturing employees who will be able to drive an innovation agenda.
Others fail to match talent with position and end up placing the wrong people in key jobs. Still others adopt a rigid culture or lack of leadership that ends up snuffing out innovation where it should be encouraged.
This ends up impeding the biggest catalyst a company has for driving innovation: Its employees. “People are the secret sauce in any innovative organization, from the smallest start-up to the largest corporation,” explains John Manley, CEO of the Business Council of Canada and former Deputy Prime Minister.
So how can a company ensure its HR department and other drags on innovation don’t snuff out innovative ideas?
It all starts with a company leadership’s commitment to fostering innovation.
Research by consulting management firm McKinsey, reveals that the biggest challenge to innovation that business executives face is making top talent available to work on innovation projects. An additional 40% don’t believe that they have the proper talent for the innovation projects they pursue.13
More than 70% of executives cite innovation as one of the top drivers of growth, yet most executives are “generally disappointed in their ability to stimulate innovation: some 65% of the senior executives surveyed were only somewhat, a little, or not at all confident about the decisions they make in this area.”
That major disconnect between business strategy and execution is attributed to the fact that creating a culture of innovation in a company is difficult.
“Even starting to build an organization in which innovation plays a central role is often far more frustrating than most executives ever imagine it to be,” the report states.