Johnnie Moore

Slowing down to innovate

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Carman Pirie points to this articulate and thought-provoking ChangeThis Manifesto by Matthew May: Mind of the Innovator: Taming the Traps of Traditional Thinking.

May makes his argument really well with some very practical demonstrations. Some ideas particularly interested me. I enjoyed his experiment where he gave several teams a practical exercise but added a twist. He secretly gave the right answers to the lowest-status person in each group. And not one group ended up with the right answers because people didn’t really listen to the low-status person. I have a feeling a lot of innovation gets missed because someone who already has the answer hasn’t been noticed.

May also suggests that we (in the west at least) are better at some steps of innovation than others: we like designing and executing, but we’re not so good at a first stage (investigation, where we try to make sure we really understand the issue and are asking the right question) and a final stage, a sobre post-mortem (we’d rather just celebrate our success). Related to that, he talks about the wisdom of reflection, not rushing to the answer but allowing time for ideas to emerge. That makes lots of sense to me – I get very anxious in meetings where people kick off by saying its very important to take action.

May also notes Bill Gates’ practice of retreats:

Think Week is the now-legendary solitary sabbatical taken twice yearly by Microsoft founder and chairman Bill Gates. In his tiny lakeside cottage hideaway, he ponders the past, present and future of his company, of technology and of his industry. He takes long walks along the lake shore in contemplation to quiet his mind.

Funnily enough that’s pretty much what I’m doing here in Cable Bay (though I don’t think Bill need worry about any competitive threat from me). What I notice is that for the first few days of relative solitude I’ve feel a bit fidgety but now I feel like I’m thinking more deeply and clearly.

Share Post

More Posts

Fluke

There’s more potential in each moment than we realise

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

The brain

Also from Chris Corrigan quoting a friend quoting Emo Phillips: I used to think the brain was the most wonderful organ in the body. Then I realized who was telling

Johnnie Moore

What facilitation isn’t, for me anyway

Facilitation means different things to different people. Viv does a great job of explaining one view of facilitation she doesn’t subscribe to. Me neither. …the group participants sit back and

Johnnie Moore

Agility

Geoff picks up on Neil Perkin’s post on Agile Planning. Recently I have noticed the word ‘Agile’ showing up in the ‘Strategic Objectives’ of agency and corporate plans. Whilst it

Johnnie Moore

Staring, take 2

Ah maybe the living statues from the Apprentice (see entry below)were trying to emulate bright, happy children. As per Anita Sharpe’s interesting post on Worthwhile. “After finding that about one