Innovation needs collaboration needs kindness

As Australia’s resources boom fades, it’s clear that we need to seriously innovate to lift productivity and create new products and services for the digital age.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has set the scene with the recent Innovation and Science Agenda announcements.

But for Australia to become a nation that truly innovates…and reaps the economic and social benefits from those innovations…we need to learn how to genuinely collaborate with each other.

…working towards a common goal, working positively with each other, supporting each other’s ideas and contributions…

Does that sound like the Aussie way to you?

‘Going straight for the jugular’ is perhaps a more accurate description of the way support for new ideas and innovations are handled in our culture.

But for an ‘ideas boom’ to turn into real innovations and real inventions…to turn into jobs and prosperity for Australian communities…we need to foster a supportive culture where people with ideas and innovations are supported positively and treated kindly with constructive and productive assistance.

There is a reason why design-thinking methodologies encourage positive reinforcement of ideas rather than squashing contributions before they can be added together to form coherent and multi-faceted prototypes.

Working together on ideas and rapidly forming the teams necessary to produce innovative products and services – this is the new competitiveness of nations.  We need to enable collective intelligence to operate by default rather than it being the exception.

Recent reports have highlighted that we seem to have enormous research capability but very poor ability to commercialise.  There is lots of talk about the availability of risk capital and the need for more incubators.  These are vitally important – but it’s more basic than that.  The most powerful force of support is finding people that believe in you.

People are fragile.  If we heap negative criticism on each other then the systems effect is clear – we will restrict the flow of ideas and the number of people willing to brave the innovation and entrepreneurial journey.

Thoughts on Brexit

Could a percentage of the surprisingly high Brexit ‘leave’ vote across the UK be understood as individuals and groups reaching their limit of tolerance for rule-making by groups of people that they don’t feel connected with and don’t understand?

There is a sense of disempowerment if individuals and communities don’t feel they can influence their local environment.

That sense of disempowerment can quickly lead to social instability and unrest.

In the modern age, multi-tiered bureaucracies and compliance regimes are becoming so complex that citizens and groups of people that operate as corporate entities are struggling to understand and keep pace.

Every system that individuals and families have to negotiate – the education system, the health system, the social welfare system, the justice system – are challengingly complicated and de-humanising to deal with on many levels.

The picture is similar with the myriad of complexity facing corporates such as start-up companies and residential corporate bodies.

For existing established companies, whether for-profit or non-profit, and even for government organisations, the complexity is a growing overhead that hampers sustainability and effectiveness.

In most cases, each of the individual rules and rule-domains (such as health & safety) are well-intentioned and coherent in themselves. But it is the accumulative effect of these complex and sometimes counter-productive regimes which causes the problem.

In the age of the internet, where each individual can explore the depth of human knowledge and experience across any field of human endeavour, rule-making and representation models need to be much improved to maintain community support and the expectations of self-empowerment in communities all over the world.

Are the EU and the multi-tiered governance structures of each member state on track to make those improvements?

Could the UK outside of the EU mechanism lead the way towards a more balanced and inclusive human society?

That’s the key challenge facing every nation and our world as a whole.