Moving from the “pain of a new idea” to collaboration and innovation

478349741 b7f77712ec 300x245 Moving from the pain of a new idea to collaboration and innovation

Collaboration involves people or organizations working together toward an intersection of common goals. Innovation is about a new way of doing something; about making changes in your thinking, processes, products, and/or organization.

We know collaborative thought and action can lead to new ideas and innovation. Yet, still we are reluctant to use a collaborative approach as the fuel for innovation. Why? Maybe it’s because launching a new collaborative can be messy. And, if collaboration leads to that new idea, it’s been said “one off the greatest pains to human nature is the pain of a new idea”. Well, maybe that’s all just too much to deal with.

On the flip side of our human nature, there seems to be a collective mood out there for collaboration, for inclusiveness, for new innovative ways of working together to address complex situations and uncertainty.

Don Tapscott is a well-known writer about organizational transformation and the role of technology in business and society. Recently, I re-read parts of his book Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything, in which Tapscott gives insight into the ways organizations are using online collaboration (and Web 2.0 social media tools) to create innovation. He provides a range of case examples; including organizations that:

Traditionally, media is about telling others your message, controlling the message; it’s “broadcasting”. Online collaboration and Web 2.0 is all about conversations. At the heart of good conversations is “letting go”, connecting and engaging with others. It’s through connection and engagement that innovation is spawned.

What story can you share about how people in your organization overcame “the pain of a new idea”?

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Photo credit: siebe!

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