Team processes that breed innovation: Idea generation, problem-finding and critique strategies

Team processes that breed innovation: Idea generation, problem-finding and critique strategies
team processes for innovation

Executive Summary

In order for a work team to thrive and develop innovative, paradigm-challenging ideas, creativity must be properly fostered. Working towards that requires that you, as a manager, recognize that creative output is inherently risky and vulnerable – especially when the pressure is high and the need for a useful solution is paramount (Paulus, 2000). Unfortunately, when a team member feels risk, vulnerability, or pressure, their potential for innovation can be greatly reduced – they may freeze up and stop coming up with ideas, become afraid to share especially unusual ideas, or may feel unsafe raising concerns for fear of rocking the boat (Edmondson & Mogelof, 2006). These inhibitions can destroy a team’s innovation potential.

Social psychologists and Industrial-Organizational researchers have long studied the group dynamics and processes that promote and discourage creativity. Through a bevvy of experiments inside laboratories and in real-world workplaces, they have developed best-practice recommendations for managing groups that are creative, innovative, and mold-breaking. These recommendations run the gamut from large-scale changes to an organization’s culture, all the way down to precise brainstorming techniques that can be used in a single meeting to improve creative potential. Some of the leading recommendations for boosting team innovating, and the research supporting them, are described below.

 

Dr. Devon Price

Published

Dr. Devon Price is a social psychologist, writer, activist, and professor at Loyola University of Chicago’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies. Price’s work has appeared in numerous publications such as Slate, The Rumpus, NPR, and HuffPost and has been featured on the front page of Medium numerous times. They live in Chicago, Illinois.