Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Guide to Creativity and Innovation for Small Business



Creativity and innovation put you on the road to market leadership


You have to be extraordinary agile to keep up with today's constantly changing competitive environment. The best way to ensure lasting success is to make sure that everyone in your company is encouraged and rewarded for thinking and behaving creatively. Create a culture of creativity and innovation and you will:
  1. Continue to deliver products and/or services that are valuable to your customers
  2. Establish yourself as a market leader
  3. Build a more vibrant and engaged workforce
  4. Become an expert at identifying and acting upon great ideas
Action Steps
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done


Encourage brainstorming and idea generation

Innovation is essentially the introduction of something new - the concrete result of creative ideas. With the right tools, everyone can be taught to think creatively.
I recommend: Ten Ways to Spark Creativity will help you jumpstart the process. Go to Invention-Help.com for some simple brainstorming tools. Try a creativity coach: check one out at Kaizen-Muse Creativity Coaching.

Listen to your customers

Your customers are often your best source of new ideas. Ask them how they'd like your product or service improved, but also master the art of observing them. Look for trouble spots; they're your opportunity for innovation.
I recommend: Follow the steps in Turn Customer Input into Innovation.

Develop systematic methods for evaluating new ideas

Consider all ideas, even the ones that seem a little crazy. But make sure you evaluate them objectively before investing time and money bringing them to market.
I recommend: For step-by-step advice on assessing ideas, go to Planware.org. Also check out The Innovation Managers Check-List.

Protect new inventions

Great ideas breed copycats. First, do a thorough patent search to make sure you're not infringing on anyone else's territory, and then register your own patent or copyright.
I recommend: If you have an idea for a new product, see The Inventor's Handbook to find out whether your idea is patentable. Go to The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to do trademark and patent searches. Access patent application forms on this page of the USPTO site. File a USPTO trademark application here.

Reward success (and failure!)

Employees need to feel invested in innovation, so reward them for suggesting great ideas that fly and for "failing fast" with ones that don't quite get off the ground.
I recommend: Follow the University of Washington's Principles for Successful Employee Recognition.

Tips & Tactics
Helpful advice for making the most of this Guide
  • Customers can't always articulate their needs, so instead of asking them about your product or service, watch them using it and look for trouble spots.
  • Educate employees about the rules of engagement for brainstorming (i.e. no negative comments!).
  • If you've invented a new product, seek legal advice on patents and trademarks immediately.
  • Great innovation breeds copycats, so stay one step ahead of the competition by innovating continuously, not just once.
  • Prototype new ideas as quickly as possible to give them form and substance.


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