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Increasing Innovation Among Your Remote Workers – Ideas To Try

Innovation

We collaborated with Dr. John Sullivan – an internationally known HR thought-leader from the Silicon Valley, who specializes in providing bold and high business impact; strategic Talent Management solutions to large corporations. Together with Michael Cox, he wrote an insightful article which we were allowed to republish. The original piece can be found on Dr. John Sullivan’s blog. 

After your firm eventually expands its remote workforce to over 50%, anticipate a boost in productivity. Also, expect a painful reduction in innovation unless you take the right proactive actions. Now you might initially think that this loss of innovation is an okay trade-off. Especially because of the dramatic overhead cost reductions and the numerous recruiting benefits associated with remote work. But that would be a mistake. The boost provided by widespread innovation may be the single most important strategic factor in pulling your organization out of its current downturn. Instead of treating this innovation loss among Working From Home (WFH) employees as inevitable. In this article, we present a series of ideas or actions that are designed to minimize or even eliminate that innovation loss.

First Understand Why “Coming To Work” Enhances Innovation

 

As recently as 2017, IBM, which for decades has been a publicly visible champion of WFH work, abruptly ordered its employees to begin “coming into the office.” Numerous organizations including Apple, Facebook, and Amazon had all previously adopted this “come to the office” strategy. Based, in part, on Google and Harvard data that revealed that when “watercooler talks” were encouraged among rapidly learning employees working on different teams that collaboration increased. And that collaboration initially helped to refine employee ideas. Next, this collaboration also increased the number of employees willing to work on the best ideas, and that directly increased the number of ideas that are implemented. As a side benefit, a subtle form of competitive pressure was created. This subtle pressure encourages each employee to continue their self-directed leading-edge learning and the need for new solutions intensifies. In leading-edge companies, it is no longer enough to marginally make your process more efficient so employees can avoid any embarrassment by having compelling ideas to share during every future “serendipitous meeting.”

Remote Work Has Inherent Innovation Roadblocks That Must Be Overcome

 

The well-established “come to the office” strategy has, through no fault of its own, ceased to be as effective during the pandemic. First, public distancing rules at work will drastically separately worktables and therefore purposely reduce the opportunities for collaborative conversations. And, at least initially, the continuous fear of catching the virus during their commute and while at work will be so distracting to employees that innovative thinking may literally grind to a halt. Although working at home will provide an environment that is free from fear. Having to rely on email and text communications will simultaneously reduce the excitement and trust levels that were previously generated with face-to-face meetings and collaboration. If you expect your working from home employees to generate even a fraction of your previous innovation levels, you will need to implement several innovation catalyst ideas.

Ideas To Try – Actions For Increasing Remote Worker Innovation

 

Unfortunately, there is not a single comprehensive benchmark solution that has been implemented by a major company. However, there are a series of individual actions that have proven to be effective when they were implemented alone. So, if it is your responsibility to boost remote worker innovation. You will need to put together the right combination of individual actions that best fits your company’s needs and culture. The easiest to implement actions are listed first.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Final Thoughts

 

By all accounts, the recent “forced experiment” where almost every professional was required to work from home was wildly successful. And because we are predicting that the problems associated with operating a virus-free office environment are so difficult to overcome. No one should be surprised when soon over 50% of all professional jobs will be done remotely. And unless a strategic plan is developed. You can also expect corporate innovation at these firms to decrease by as much as 20%. Simply because no one in HR found the time to come up with a data-driven approach to increase innovation among work-at-home employees.

Author’s Note: If this article stimulated your thinking and provided you with actionable tips, please take a moment to follow and/or connect with Dr. Sullivan on LinkedIn and subscribe to his weekly Talent Newsletter.

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