Innovation and Neuroscience for Organizations, Teams and Individuals
Steven Bushong
Former Disney Exec | Developing Successful Leaders and Teams | OnCon Top 50 Marketer
The “flash” occurred for me while I was re-reading Frans Johansson’s “The Medici Effect”, exploring innovation at the intersection of “fields, disciplines, and cultures”.? This ignited a series of neural connections in my mind, bringing together my work on executive and team coaching, leadership development, conversations with associates in Global Team Coaches, thoughts from Ann Betz’s course on “The Neuroscience of Coaching”, Annie Paul’s “The Extended Mind”, Boyatzis’s/Smith’s/Van Oosten’s “Helping People Change”, Goleman’s/Cherniss’ “Optimal” and Christensen’s “The Innovator’s Dilemma” (among many other books, articles and conversations I have experienced over the last year).
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Why Established Organizational and Individual Systems Resist Change
Christensen argued that value networks act as self-reinforcing ecosystems. These networks, encompassing customers, suppliers, and other stakeholders, create a web of expectations and dependencies that can stifle disruptive ideas.? Each player fulfills a specific role, optimizing their piece of the puzzle within the existing framework. This creates a powerful inertia – new ideas that threaten the established efficient flow of value are often met with resistance. Executives who have been successful, may be hesitant to question existing systems, processes and organizations. Existing suppliers may be reluctant to support a disruptive technology if it undermines their current products. Customers, accustomed to a certain level of service or product functionality, may be hesitant to embrace change.
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This resistance stems from a fundamental human aversion to novelty. Neuroscience show us that our brains are wired for efficiency. Our brains are wired to “pay attention” to that which is novel, but not necessarily pursue it.? To pursue something novel, requires extra energy.? In addition, through repetition, we build neural pathways that automate our thoughts and behaviors. This is essential for navigating the complexities of daily life. However, these same neural pathways can also become obstacles to change. When faced with a new idea, our brains ?“protect us” and instinctively activate the familiar pathways, leading to skepticism and resistance.
This individual neuroscience explanation aligns perfectly with Christensen's concept of value networks. Just as individuals resist change due to established neural pathways, organizations within a value network resist disruption because it threatens their established ways of doing business.
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The Neuroscience of Change: How We Break Through the Barriers
Fortunately, our brains are not static. Neuroplasticity, the brain's ability to form new connections and reorganize itself, offers a path towards overcoming resistance to change.
In "Helping People Change," Boyatzis, et.al . emphasize the importance of creating a safe space for exploration and experimentation. ?New learning requires the formation of new neural pathways, which necessitates a departure from established patterns. ?Much of the coaching work I and my associates at Global Team Coaches do is to support organizations, teams and individuals with actions that encourage this "neural rewiring".? This can include, and is not limited to:
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Possible Strategies to Explore
How might you begin thinking about and moving toward your change objectives?? Here are some possible strategies that can be addressed independently or with the support of a professional coach.
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For Organizations:
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For Teams:
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For Individuals:
Understanding both the neuroscience of change and the dynamics of value networks empowers individuals and organizations to overcome resistance and embrace innovation. By consciously rewiring our thinking and fostering environments that support new ideas, we can break free from the constraints of the past and unlock the potential for growth.
Here is an invitation to:
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Like most professional coaches, I and my associates at Global Team Coaches work to create sustainable value for you and your stakeholders.? What is your perspective? How are you addressing the conundrum of the need for change while being resistant to change?
Steven Bushong
Head of Procurement Mediterranean, Senior Director @ DHL ?? Profitability | Processes | Sustainability | Digitalization ?? Former Disney, Tenaris
5 个月Very inspiring article and suggestions for new reading. Your research confirms what came to my mind by empiric observation and intuition. I think the flow of exploring, observing, discovering, absorbing, implementing, measuring, adapting is essential to bring innovation. On the observing, arts in all essences, nature and foreign cultures are an immeasurable source of contaminating reflections for our routine to evolve.
Former Disney Exec | Developing Successful Leaders and Teams | OnCon Top 50 Marketer
5 个月Global Team Coaches, Bob Gibbon, Bryan Nadeau, (he, him) PCC, CTC, Harriet Dodd PCC, DeDe Esque (she, her), Caroline Gavin, Coaching for Performance and Wellbeing, Johnny Hammond ICF PCC, Nan Reed Twiss, PCC, CPC, ELI-MP, CTPC, CPQC, Alba Contreras Rodriguez, MBA, PCC, Luca Salvini, Kellan Beck BA, CEC, STC, PCC (she/her), Hazel Tan, Kate Freedman, PCC, Evelina Rog, Ph.D., ACC, Maja Golob