How Does Your Business Become Innovative?
Innovation is a buzzword in today's business world. We all want to be the
next great innovator to change an industry or the world. The reality is that
innovation is inherently hard to achieve—but it is possible. Here are five tips from Seament to make your business more
innovative.
1. Question your current products – Pretty much the
definition of innovation is creating something that goes beyond the norm. The
only way to do that is to question the
norm—including your company's own norm. If you aren't able to sit down with a
critical eye to your own products, you cannot turn any of them into next
generation leaders. Look at your best performing products and ask how they can
be even better. Look at your underperforming products and ask what about them is
holding them back. Could a small change turn them into winners?
2. Focus heavily on usability – Often, the
products hailed as most innovative are not really that much better than their
competitors, in concept. They do
basically the same things. The difference is that they are easier to use. This
could be anything from a more ergonomic garlic press to a database that someone
can use without training. As an example, Apple's products really do not offer
more functionality than their competitors, but they focus on a slimmed down and
minimal user interface that makes them easy for anyone to use. That's why they
dominate the market.
3. Hire innovative staff – You don't need
to come up with every idea yourself, and chances are good that you won't. If
you focus hiring practices on getting staff who are creative, outside-the-box
thinkers, then you will have a lot more ideas surging through your company for improving
your products/services or offering innovative new ones. Even just a few very
bright minds on staff can make a big difference, especially if they are given
creative control where needed.
4. Give employees freedom and trust – Even the most
creative employees cannot innovate if their ideas are stonewalled. In most
companies, it's not that creative ideas fall on deaf ears – it's that
organizational structure makes it hard to run with anything creative and
outside the current plan. To really focus on innovation, you will need to give
employees more freedom in their work, make it easier for new ideas or projects
to take off with less bureaucracy, and trust that employees will complete their
work objectives without overly controlling policies.
5. Know your industry's problems – A lot of
innovation comes of simply noticing a problem that everyone else is having, and
giving that problem your full attention.
In Seament's own history, the above tips paid off and transformed the way
cement is delivered to ports. How can you change your industry?
Labels: Seament