BY Gwen Moran
Even
iconic companies can disappear from the landscape if they aren't
constantly staying ahead of the customer. Remember when Blockbuster
franchises dotted strip malls around the country? Yesterday's leader can
become tomorrow's laggard without innovation and reinvention.
Why can't some companies reinvent themselves? Management
consultant and bestselling business author Jason Jennings finds that
the problem often boils down to four issues -- attachment, ego, control
and complacency. Lead your market by ditching those innovation killers
and following these rules:
Forget yesterday's breadwinner. Every product has a life span--don't hang onto your Big Idea until it's on life support, Jennings says in his new book, The Reinventors: How Extraordinary Companies Pursue Radical, Continuous Change (Portfolio/Penguin,
2012). Don't get attached to a product or way of doing business, he
says. Form an advisory committee with several trusted customers who will
give you feedback on what your business is doing well and what needs to
be improved. Then, act on their suggestions. Visit and read about
competitors and successful businesses in other sectors to see how
they're growing and changing and get ideas that you can apply to your
own products and services.
Check your ego at the door. Are you always the
smartest person in the room? Then get the hell out of there, Jennings
advises. When an employee contradicts you or presents different ideas or
solutions, listen and praise them for speaking their minds. Make it
clear that no one is punished for ideas, whether they work out or not.
Give credit, rewards, and recognition to employees who come up with new
ideas. A financial incentive and public praise within the company can
help them share in the glory of good solutions and inspire others to
come forward. Jennings says it's essential for owners to meet with each
employee one time, tell them their ideas are valued and invite them to
offer suggestions to the company's management.
Don't be a control freak. Entrepreneurs often have a
tough time delegating important responsibilities. The consequence is
simple: Delegate or die. Hire smart, creative people and give them
specific areas of responsibility. Resist the urge to micromanage--if the
task or project was done well, let it stand even if it wasn't done
"your way." New approaches might teach you a thing or two.
Never accept the status quo. "'If it ain't broke,
don't fix it' is one of the stupidest things ever said in business,"
Jennings says. You're telling your people to leave things alone until
there is a problem instead of actively looking for improvement. Instead,
train your managers to be open to new ideas at all times. If there is
an environment of indifference in embracing ideas or rejecting them
before they've even been heard, you are losing out on innovation
opportunities.
SOURCE: www.entrepreneur.com
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