ADI IGNATIUS: I am Adi Ignatius.
ALISON BEARD: I’m Alison Beard, and this is the HBR IdeaCast.
ADI IGNATIUS: All right, Alison. So every organization wants to innovate, right? Not just once, but over and over again. And judging from the conversations I have with CEOs, most feel they cannot accomplish this. They look inward, they wonder, am I smart enough? Am I clever enough? Can I compete with genius founders when actually it’s not so much about individual brilliance, but about creating an environment where good ideas can be surfaced and tested and ultimately put into action?
ALISON BEARD: Yeah, I think we know from research that a lot of the best innovation comes from the front lines as well as R&D departments. But then, how do you harness those ideas, create effective experiments, and ultimately scale the ones that work? And if you’re a leader, how are you overseeing all of these disparate efforts, and then prioritizing the ones in which you really want to invest?
ADI IGNATIUS: So today’s guest has been drawing the playbook for innovation for much of her career. Linda Hill, professor at Harvard Business School wrote the book Collective Genius about a decade ago and has just published a new one, Genius at Scale: How Great Leaders Drive Innovation. She’s going to explain how to create a system and build a team that can innovate, and then cascade the new thinking throughout the enterprise. Here’s our conversation.
So you’ve written a book about innovation. I would say this is a time when some leaders are in survival mode, a lot are uncertain about AI. How should leaders be thinking about innovation right now?
LINDA HILL: I think innovation is really an imperative, and it is about survival. It is not about anything extra. Because nowadays, we have to be able to adapt and respond to whatever is happening out there in the world, and it’s a very uncertain world.
ADI IGNATIUS: Talk a little bit about the misconceptions surrounding innovation. I feel you’ve been spending much of your career trying to deflate some myths about how innovation happens.
LINDA HILL: Well, this is the second book we’ve written about innovation. The first one was called Collective Genius. And there we tried to understand what do leaders do that create organizations that can innovate time and again. And one of the things that surprised us is, leading innovation is not about having a vision and telling people Follow me to the future. Instead, it’s about creating the right culture and capabilities to get people to want to co-create that future with you.
So leadership is not about followership when it’s about innovation, it’s about co-creation and that requires a different mindset, different behaviors, and a different skill set. After we finished that work, we then begin to understand and spend more time looking at organizations and what were they finding most difficult about really innovating. And particularly now with emerging technologies, how do you get people to adopt these technologies to create value, as well as how do you create an organization that can innovate time and again.
So we ended up focusing on what people told us was their problem. Maybe we can come up with innovative solutions, but we can’t scale them. They never become reality. We really focused in on how do you scale these innovations? And that means really building not only organizations that can co-create, but also partnerships and sometimes whole ecosystems able to co-create.
ADI IGNATIUS: So if genius requires a collective approach, are most companies even set up to deliver on that?
LINDA HILL: Genius does require more collaborative approaches or collective approaches, and most organizations are not. There are three pieces to the puzzle of what you need to do to innovate. You have to be able to collaborate, which is really about dealing with difference. You have to be able to experiment and learn, and you want to be able to do that in a pretty efficient kind of way, because you cannot plan your way to an innovation. You can only act your way to one. So I think that’s the other myth that we can plan it all out. But no, that’s not what you’re trying to do. You are trying to create some discipline.
If you look at any single innovation, I suppose, you might find an individual genius can have an aha moment. But we are really interested in building organizations that can innovate routinely, making innovation a capability in your organization, not something that you happen upon and you do right once.
ADI IGNATIUS: It sounds like that’s partly about process, partly about the skills at the top. What does leadership need to look like to deliver on that?
LINDA HILL: All of the leaders we have studied and we’ve studied a lot all around the world, different industries, government, not-for-profits. All of the leaders we have studied have been visionaries. But one of the things we know about visionaries is can visionaries make space for other people? Sometimes they can take up, if you will, the whole room. So they figure out how to behave, how to carry themselves, how to create the space where people will be able to work with them.
So one of the conversations I just had with a CEO who’s very visionary, he said that he had to learn how, frankly, to be quiet, to be patient, when he’s very urgent. He’s got lots of solutions and lots of things he wants to say. So he literally ended up saying to his organization and to his team, “I’m not going to speak anymore for the first 20 minutes,” because he needed to manage himself in a different way if he wanted people to be willing to share what we refer to as their slices of genius. Too often, we don’t use the talents and passions of the people who are around us, and we can’t afford not to use them given the nature of the challenges and opportunities we’re trying to address today.
ADI IGNATIUS: All right, well let’s talk about how to extract that. I feel like companies frequently say we need to reach out to the leadership team, or maybe the entire employee base, because the good ideas are going to come from there are going to come from the people maybe who are on the front lines, but they have trouble actually eliciting these good ideas that should be there. So how do you do that? How do you get the good ideas?
LINDA HILL: First, I have to feel like it’s worth it for me to share my ideas, to share my slice of genius with you. So what are the conditions you create that I am actually going to feel like I want to do that? Because innovation is hard work. It’s emotionally and intellectually difficult work.
So you as a leader have to create the space where people feel willing and able to do that work. It’s not surprising to me that there’s so much attention paid to purpose, the purpose of the organization, because people want their work to be meaningful. Why should I take risks trying to work through a conflict with someone who has a very different point of view of mine that has a very different point of view than me? Or, in fact we’re going to experiment and learn, we’re going to have missteps and failures. Why should I do that unless the work is meaningful? So one of the most important things for a leader to do is to create that sense of purpose, a shared sense of purpose.
The other part of it, though, is making sure that the people I’m going to be working with are people that I fundamentally trust because again, why I’m going to take risks with people that in fact I don’t trust. So what really you see these leaders do is they think about building the social environment, the social connections amongst people. So they’ll be willing to take on this meaningful work that is going to be hard work.
And if I think I can trust you, I’m much more prone to want to do this kind of work with you than if I don’t think I can trust you. And one of the things that’s very important about whether I trust you is also whether I think I can influence you and that you actually respect that I have something to offer. Now, that may seem like very obvious stuff, but you talk to many people in the organizations, they don’t feel valued, they don’t feel valuable, they don’t necessarily feel that they can have influence.
ADI IGNATIUS: So let’s say listeners are persuaded, how do you learn that skill, if you don’t have it naturally, that skill of listening, empowering, staying quiet as your example from earlier. How do you learn that?
LINDA HILL: Well, what I see is that one of the leaders we studied, he’s a Rhodes scholar, he’s a brilliant surgeon, he’s a pioneer in robotics. One of the things that he did is he got a sparring partner. He found someone, a CEO, he found someone who had a very different sort of point of view about the world. He’s an optimist, this other person’s a pessimist. He’s big picture, that other person’s more detailed. And he became a sparring partner and he actually sought this individual out to give him feedback to see if his intent was matching his impact. And when it wasn’t, that sparring partner, even though he was reporting to this CEO, said to him, “No, your impact wasn’t what it needed to be in that particular instance.”
When this particular leader also had to learn, how do I actually lead virtually? How do I do this when I’m looking through a camera? He hired a coach and that coach looked and he moved his face this way, that way, moved his hand certain ways, asked the coach, “How are you perceiving me?”
So it’s very difficult to figure out how you’re perceived if in fact you don’t have feedback, because leadership is always about an emotional connection. It’s always emotional and you are trying to figure out how do I create the experience for others when they’re with me, that they’re going to be willing and able to take on this hard work of innovation?
We shouldn’t assume that we all know how to do this stuff, particularly given all of the anxiety people legitimately have right now, that we might need some assistance. But having someone near you who can give you that feedback is important.
There’s another mindset that I want to bring up that another leader brought up with us, and that is, he said, you know what Linda? My job is to convince everybody that there’s nothing called business as usual, nothing called business as usual anymore. And consequently, everything we do is a working hypothesis. There’s not certainty.
So, we’re going to try to collect as much data as we can to help us or evidence for the decision we’re thinking of making. It’s going to always be very incomplete and ambiguous, and if you will, data. We’re going to have to act and once we act, we won’t know whether or not we’re on the right track until we get feedback on the impact of our actions. And when we see that impact, we’re either going to have to say, looks like we’re moving in the right direction, or you know what, we need to pivot.
So I think that orientation of understanding the leader’s not the one who’s the expert, who has the answers, the leader is the one that creates the right kind of environment to make sure people have the capabilities and the tools they need to make the best decisions they can in very uncertain circumstances. And to honestly, honestly pay attention to the feedback they get about whether or not that decision really went the way they hoped it would.
ADI IGNATIUS: So, when I talk to leaders about the innovation, they usually talk about experimentation. You have to have this mindset of experimentation. But I talk to some who say, you can get caught in a trap where it’s experimentation paralysis, and at a certain point you have to simply act, but you don’t want to act. Where do you come down in terms of the proper approach to experimentation so that it’s really valuable and not a stalling tactic on the way to figure out a new strategy?
LINDA HILL: So what you’re sort of saying there is, really we have to be decisive. We’ve done a survey of about 9,000 executives, and they’ve told us that if you want to be an effective CEO or C-suite executive today, you have to be comfortable with ambiguity. You still need to be able to make decisions in the face of ambiguity. And that is not an easy thing to do. So going back to experimentation, the issue with experimentation is again, you have to pay attention to what’s the feedback, my being honest about what we’re learning from this experiment. That’s assuming you’ve designed an experiment that is rigorous and relevant, but once you get that feedback, you’re going to have to make decisions. And it’s not going to be black and white, it’s going to be maybe gray, right?
So in the organizations that can innovate time and again, we see that decision-making rights are very clear. Everybody knows who’s going to make the decision. And actually in many organizations we don’t like to be clear about who’s going to make the decision, because it makes people feel bad when they’re sort of told you’re not the one.
And two of the leaders that we’ve studied, actually three, they actually have had to help people. They’ve rewarded people for killing ideas. When your idea doesn’t seem to be working, people aren’t receiving it, we can be rather reluctant to let it go. So one of the leaders that we studied basically said, I will give you a bonus if you kill your own idea.
Also we see that our peers don’t like to tell us when they know something isn’t working, because they don’t want to hurt our feelings. A lot of people are polite and literally they have to learn how to say, “We’ve tried this Linda once, twice, three times, it’s not working. Perhaps we need to move on.” So, I think decisiveness is one of the things we actually see in innovative organizations, and they have very clear rules about how decision making is going to happen, who’s going to do it, who should be included, whose voices should be heard before the decision is made. One of the things that we actually learned again at Pixar, is that you don’t want one group to dominate. You don’t want the bosses to dominate, and you don’t want the experts to dominate. And the experts are particularly dangerous when it comes to trying to innovate.
ADI IGNATIUS: One of the things I like about the book is that it is almost journalistic, smart journalistic, in terms of there’re detailed stories, case studies, not in the classic sense, of companies that are going through innovation journeys. And I’d love to talk about a couple of them. So MasterCard, as you wrote, was a risk averse organization when Ajay Banga took over in I think 2010. Talk about what happened there.
LINDA HILL: Ajay, as you know, came in and he first talked about purpose. He came in and he decided, with the Board, that really MasterCard was facing an existential crisis. FinTech was going to overtake them and they needed to move from being a credit card company to being a tech company in the payment space, and now in the e-commerce space.
And he knew this was going to be a big shift for an organization that actually had, it was a very proud organization and had a lot of success, had recently just had a very successful IPO. And the first thing he needed to do, get people aligned, was around purpose. And he declared that the purpose was going to be financial inclusion.
And financial inclusion was going to be the way that he really developed a narrative about why they were going to need to become a tech company. Because if they were going to include those individuals and those medium and small business people who didn’t have access to the financial system, they needed to have very affordable solutions, and only digital tools would allow for those affordable solutions.
Then he laid out really very clearly what the strategy was going to be, three pillars. And he also said about those three pillars, we’re going to spend 50% of our time on the core business, but 50% of our time, and our resources, I should say, are going to really be spent on diversifying the business and growing new businesses.
And he was very deliberate about that. So if you brought him a budget that didn’t have that kind of division, then he went back and said, you need to think about it differently.
But perhaps one of the more, I don’t know, critical decisions he made is he asks another manager, an entrepreneur who, they’d acquired his company to come in and help catalyze the change that needed to be made. And that individual, Gary, ended up creating a series of innovation labs around the world to help drive innovation. He really understood he needed to get other leaders engaged to help both change the culture to be more supportive in a very regulated business, more supportive of innovation, as well as bring in someone who could help them develop new innovation, really innovative solutions based on digital capabilities and bring those capabilities into the organizations. He really engaged a number of leaders to play these catalyst roles in moving the culture and developing these innovative solutions. What Ajay did is select leaders who knew how to bridge across the sort of be the bridge between tech and business, if you will, the future and the present so that actually these solutions got scaled. So that’s, I think, what’s really a critical part of that
ADI IGNATIUS: So the takeaways are having a sense of purpose, driving strategy based on that kind of true north, changing out the top leadership to make sure everyone’s aligned and make sure you have some of these skills he just talked about. A bit of genius maybe, in Ajay’s ability to kind of put his finger on the vision that they needed…
LINDA HILL: I think the one that I would just pull out a little bit more is, in Genius at Scale, we talk about three interrelated leadership roles. The first one is you do need to architect the organization to be able to innovate time and again, and Ajay worked on that a lot. The other is you need leaders who know how to bridge, who know how to work across organizational boundaries and also, I mean literally find partners even outside the organization to help them bring in the talent and capabilities they need. So these bridgers are really critical.
And then the last role that we talk about in the book is the catalyst role. These are the leaders who actually know how to create what we refer to as movements across all ecosystems to get some innovation done. So, if you actually get those architects in place, that’s good, but to move at the pace you need to move today, particularly with technology, you need these bridgers.
So I’ve been talking to lots of C-suite executives, and what they tell me is, we don’t have enough people in our organization who know how to bridge between the tech side and the business side. That’s the way they put it. We just don’t have people who know how to do co-creation across tech and business, and that shortage is slowing us down.
So I think what we also need are these leaders who understand about co-creation across organizational boundaries, or even across, like with electric vehicles, whole ecosystems that need to be put in place to support electric vehicles really becoming something that many of us are willing to buy and enjoy.
ADI IGNATIUS: So I would’ve thought that the catalysts, the bridgers, that that happens organically. But it sounds like you’re saying no, you actually have to be very purposeful about if it doesn’t happen organically, that you have to create the structure where these roles will be in play.
LINDA HILL: Think about it, Adi, too many organizations are siloed even to this day, when you ask anyone, what is it going to take for you to make sure that these investments you’re making in gen AI and agentic AI are really going to pay off? They all say almost immediately horizontal work, but we still haven’t learned how to work horizontally within our organizations, nonetheless with others outside our organizations, who have different priorities, different constraints, different working styles.
So, what you see in the Ajay Banga story is how they learn to work with startups, to learn and bring them in, to give them talent and capabilities. Then they learn how to build even a broader ecosystem, where they bring their clients to work with these startups and they facilitate those relationships to create different kinds of, I’ll call them coalitions necessary, to get change done if you want to start doing business in a country you’ve never done business in before.
So I think that those leaders who can have that big picture and think about, you can’t do this all. You need lots of bridges, you need lots of catalysts. I think that that’s what we are seeing is new, and it has to do in part with the speed of the emergence of new technologies as well as, I think, the sort of people have become very aware, maybe partly because of the pandemic, I don’t know, or the political issues going on, that you need to think about creating an environment, a broader ecosystem in which your organization is working so you can be successful. So that’s what we see. It’s just, it’s become tougher.
ADI IGNATIUS: So another example from your book, a fun one, you write about Osteria Francescana, an Italian restaurant that has twice been named the best restaurant in the world. What are some lessons that the rest of us can draw from their success?
LINDA HILL: So one of the things that Massimo and Laura, who are the couple who have created this whole global network of both Michelin rated restaurants as well as soup kitchens, called Food for Soul. And they see these as very interconnected because for them being in the restaurant business is about what they call the slow food, fast car movement. That is getting both embracing tradition but also innovating.
So one of the things that they really worry about is how do they develop chefs who have their own identity. So none of his restaurants are named after Massimo. All of them have their own names and actually our restaurants that really suit the local environment. And so, if I’m going to Tokyo, I need to be a chef, I’ll work for a while in Modena at the main restaurant, but then I’m going to go off to Tokyo and I’m going to create a restaurant there that reflects on what I’ve learned from Massimo and Laura. Not only about the food and how you do restaurants, how you create a really world-class restaurant, but also how do you get to know the community and figure out how you can serve the needs of that community, help with the unhoused.
So whenever a chef goes into whatever city location they go into, they actually have this sensibility about we want to become a part of this community. And part of that is making sure that we source local food, we source locally, and develop relationships with the suppliers in a particular region, but it’s also about understanding what the needs are of that community and figuring out how we can serve those needs. So they develop chefs who are really values-driven chefs about all that they do, and that shows up in all of the work.
ADI IGNATIUS: You talk generally about great leaders as being wayfinders and not pathfinders. I like that distinction, but talk about what that means to you.
LINDA HILL: Well, I have to tell you, whenever you are writing the epilogue of a book, by that time as an author, you are tired. And, we wrote that epilogue over, I don’t know how many times, probably our poor editor wanted to kill us. Just couldn’t get it right.
And one day I was reading, and I have co-authors, so believe me, this is this piece. So I was reading about explorers, the explorers that went to, who discovered America, or the continent or whatever. And it struck me that one of the problems we’re facing right now is all of us are searching for leaders who can help us find the path. We need vision. Let me be clear. And if you have vision and you know the vision, then go ahead, tell people that vision, get them to follow you.
But nowadays, many leaders don’t have vision. They know the problems and the challenges, but they don’t have a vision. So what I realized in reading this about these explorers were, you know what we need is we need wayfinders, not pathfinders. People who know how to use whatever tools they have. Back in the day, I guess it was the currents and the moon and the stars and all of that, right?
And now we have these wonderful, we have gen AI, we have all these other more sophisticated tools, but we still need people who have the courage, and also some sense of their values or purpose to help them navigate, who can help the rest of us find our way. I guess it’s experiment and learn our way to where we want to be.
So I keep asking about, how can leaders take us to the future? And for me it’s like, no, they’re not going to take us to the future. How can they help us shape the future that we all want? And that is more co-creation than take us to the future. Because anybody that tells you they know what the future looks like, they don’t, there’s just too much going on to figure that out.
ADI IGNATIUS: So what specific advice would you give to a C-suite leader who feels the innovation pipeline is stalled, they want to do the right thing, they want to be a wayfinder, they don’t know how to fix things. What advice would you give?
LINDA HILL: I think I would start by really assessing what do you think, and this may not be the kind of answer you want, but what is the culture of your organization? What are the capabilities? Be honest about that, and think about, this is not going to be fixed fast. These are not fast fixes.
But I think leaders need to really first do an assessment of, what is our culture, what about our culture actually facilitates innovation and what are the barriers? And then, I really do think it’s about looking at the capabilities of the organization. And we know there are certain muscles that have to be there, the muscle to collaborate, which we refer to as creative abrasion. The muscle to experiment and learn, which we refer to as creative agility. Can you actually do that kind of experimentation and learning, again efficiently? And then this muscle of how to make decisions, create a resolution.
So I think that I would start by doing an assessment whatever way you want to do it. It can be crude to whatever and begin to work with people, have other people help you figure out, where should we start? What do we need to work on?
ADI IGNATIUS: And then what does the day-to-day work of the leader look like once you take these steps.
LINDA HILL: The day-to-day work, it depends on what you’re going to work on. So, if it’s about how do I encourage people to actually embrace difference and work through conflict, then you need to role model that. And you need to show that you can do that yourself. Because people do follow the example of a leader. And too often leaders don’t necessarily encourage or amplify difference, they minimize it.
So you need to amplify the differences in your organization, those slices of genius. And when you do that, there is going to be conflict. So the first thing I would say day to day for you to do, is work on your capacity to deal with conflict. Many, many leaders and just all of us individually don’t know how to work conflict, real conflict. Because people actually are passionate about their ideas. They’re not going to let go easily.
So what we talk about is there are six dilemmas you have to be able to manage, but one of the most, if you’re going to be able to lead in the way that encourages the kind of culture you need. What you need to understand is how your own actions are impacting whatever the culture and the capabilities are.
But I do also want to emphasize, are you building the right leadership talent? This is not about you. Going back to the example we talked about with Ajay and MasterCard, do you have a cadre of leaders who can be bridges and catalysts for the organization? I mean, just think about, I don’t know anything about it, but I’ll mention it. Microsoft is now we’re trying to work with OpenAI. Those are partnerships where somebody has to be able to bridge across. Someone else in the organization needs to be able to think about what’s the regulatory environment we need to actually use these technologies in a responsible and effective way.
So it’s not going to be just about you. So I would say the other thing, what should I start with day to day? Maybe the better answer I could give you about that is, really look at your leadership talent. Do you have the architects, bridgers, and catalysts that you need? And if you do not, then I say look at yourself and see why don’t you. Don’t blame it on me. Why don’t we have more bridgers? Because they’re not rewarded for bridging, they’re not rewarded for working across those silos. They’re not rewarded for learning how to work with people outside the boundary of the organization. So you need to look at what you’re doing that is actually not encouraging people to develop these leadership talents we need if we’re going to be able to scale innovative solutions with any speed.
ADI IGNATIUS: I’d love if people are listening to this and say, yes, I want to innovate at scale. That’s me. What’s something they can go do right now to start that process?
LINDA HILL: So I guess what I would start with is think about your own capacity, for instance, to deal with conflict. Your own capacity to live with the missteps and failures of trying to experiment and learn, your own capacity to make decisions when in fact you have very incomplete or ambiguous information.
And to the extent that you’re not good at those three things, it’s going to be real hard for you to build an organization that is good at those three things. So I think I’d start with your own leadership. And as you know Adi, the reason why I found myself on this journey of looking at innovation is because one of our former deans said to me, “Linda, I keep hearing that we don’t have leaders who know how to lead innovation. Would you please go find out what that means?”
And so, it turns out that a lot of the innovation work did not look at the role of the leader. We didn’t have a lot of understanding about what leaders need to do. So, in looking at that, I think the other piece I’d put with it, why I’m saying start with yourself, is that many of the people who are listening are people who are quite talented, are stars.
Stars actually have more trouble learning to lead, because they think they have the answers, they have the solutions. And that’s not what this is about. This is about, in fact, being more of a social architect of an organization or a partnership or an ecosystem. And that’s a different mindset and requires a different set of skills.
And one of the things we hear, and it sort of frightens me in some ways, is most senior people, they don’t like to lead in situations where they don’t have formal authority. But fundamentally, being an architect, a bridger, or a catalyst, that is about leading without formal authority. You can only invite people to want to work with you. By definition, if you’re partnering with someone who’s outside your organization or an ecosystem, which is often multi-sector work, you are not the boss. Quite the contrary.
So, how you learn to operate when you are not the boss, and when you don’t have that kind of control, and instead you’re nudging people along, you’re pulling, because you cannot push, that’s a different stance. And so, I think where to start thinking about are you pulling or are you pushing? Maybe I’ll start there, to get people to do the kind of work they need to do for your organization to flourish. Maybe that’ll be real simple. Push and pull.
ADI IGNATIUS: Push and pull. Linda, as always, it is great talking to you. Thank you for being on IdeaCast.
LINDA HILL: Thank you for having me. It really has been my pleasure.
ADI IGNATIUS: That was Harvard Business School professor Linda Hill, author of the book, Genius at Scale: How Great Leaders Drive Innovation.
Next week, Allison looks at the phenomenon of AI workslop and how it might be bringing your team and organization down.
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