Idea Management Software

Chris Seraidaris brought to our attention a good article on idea management from CMO, The Resource for Marketing Executives.  Here are a few highlights:

  • if you have more than 20 employees, you will need some type of technology to manage the ideas and respond to people who submit them.
  • using an idea management system tends to solicit ideas that are thought through more completely ... an average of 100 words versus the normal 10 or less captured on sticky notes.
  • paying for ideas is a bad idea (YES!!!)

It's a good pass-along article.

7 Types of Leadership Stories

"Through a story, life invites us to come inside as a participant." -- Steve Denning, author of the Springboard: How Storytelling Ignited Action in Knowledge-Era Organizations and Squirrel, Inc.: A Fable of Leadership and Storytelling

In his new book, "Squirrel, Inc.," Convergence 2004 keynote speaker, Steve Denning, describes seven types of stories:

Sparking Action. Leadership is, above all, about getting people to change. To achieve this goal, you need to communicate the sometimes complex nature of the changes required and inspire an
often skeptical organization to enthusiastically carry them out. This is the place for what I call "springboard story," one that enables listeners to visualize the large-scale transformation needed in their circumstances and then to act on that realization.

Such a story is based on an actual event, preferably recent enough to seem relevant. It has a single protagonist with whom members of the target audience can identify. And there is an authentically happy ending, in which a change has at least in part been successfully implemented. (There is also an implicit alternate ending, an unhappy one that would have resulted had the change not occurred.)

The story has enough detail to be intelligible and credible but not so much that listeners are but -- and this is key -- not so much texture that audience becomes completely wrapped up in it. If that happens, people won't have the mental space to create an analogous scenario for change in their own organization. For example, if you want to get an organization to embrace a new technology, you might tell stories about individuals elsewhere who have successfully implemented it, without dwelling on the specifics of implementation.

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Stimulating Conversation

"Even pudding needs a theme." -- Winston Churchill ... by way of Dan Wallace (thanks, Dan!)

Last week, we had some thoughts stimulated by John Seely Brown's comments about conversation. He basically recommended creating an environment where "serendipitous types of conversations" occur. We asked you for your thoughts and got great responses. Thanks to everyone who shared.

Responses:

From Jack Ricchiuto

Writing "Accidental Conversations" woke me up to the innovative power of freedom in conversations: The more unplanned a conversation, the greater possibility there is for unplanned outcomes.

(Ed. We found this quote on the description of Jack's book on amazon.com -- "We fall in love, begin our best adventures, and discover our most significant resources in informal, quite unplanned conversations. They are expressions of life’s infinite capacity for surprise ... However much we try to surprise-proof the world with our goals, beliefs, and plans, life sustains change as its prime constant.")

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Tool: Five by Five

This comes from Matthew Homann's blog the [non]billable hour: One of the ideas from my innovation weekend is a weekly forum I'll call "Five by Five." In weekly posts, I'll ask five people -- who are experts in their fields -- to give me five ideas on a given topic. Every week, the five people will come from a different (usually non-legal) discipline, but the topic will always focus upon the innovative marketing, pricing, and delivery of legal services.

What a great idea to generate ideas -- this could be expanded to innovation by inviting customers, suppliers, experts in other fields and so on. If you try it, let us know how it works!

Matthew also decided to create an innovation weekend for himself ... it's worth looking at.