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Know When to Take Action

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I often work with people who try to wait for the stars to align in perfect formation before taking action on a project or initiative. They feel as if everything must be just right or else there’s no reason to begin. While the expression “timing is everything” is somewhat true, there will never be perfect alignment. Instead of waiting for perfection, we must have the confidence to execute, even if a few components are less than certain. Considering how fast the world moves today, we can’t sit on our hands and wait for everything to line up, because this will never happen—things are in constant motion. Urgency is real, and it defines what an organization does both right now and in the future. With the rate of change today, delay and hesitance are our worst enemies as climatic shifts can take place in the blink of an eye.

In this rapidly changing world, always being prepared to work with the next shift is the new norm. We can’t procrastinate or “put innovation off ” for a rainy day. Innovation is a constant transformation, a fluid state—and it needs to be nurtured to succeed. There’s a significant danger in thinking you’ve “completed transformation” into an “innovative company,” as if it’s a one-time, singular event or something that only takes place when change is afoot (then again, if you’ve been reading closely, you know change is always afoot). This flawed view of what innovation is and how it works can lead to stagnation, just as success can.

As Andy Grove, former CEO of Intel famously said, “Success breeds complacency. Complacency breeds failure. Only the paranoid survive.”38 We don’t want future generations looking back in the rearview mirror at all these changes—which will be slow paced to them—and see us sitting there twiddling our thumbs. What’s happening now will one day seem like one archaic system that was replaced by another archaic system, just as those from a couple of centuries ago look archaic to us.

For example, most people were far from thrilled about cars when they first became available to the public. States passed all sorts of laws to impede their progress, including Vermont, which required that someone walk in front of a moving car while waving a red flag.39 If you think gridlock is bad now in some of the world’s biggest cities, imagine if every car needed a person to usher it through the streets. Other cities took an even more radical approach and banned cars altogether. Then there were groups like the Farmers’ Anti-Automobile Society of Pennsylvania that suggested state laws involving an elaborate system of sending up roman candle rockets as cars drove through the night, whose drivers were also supposed to pull over and cover their cars in blankets or some type of camouflage when passing horses in an effort not to spook them.40 I don’t think any of those made it into law.

It’s funny now, but who knows what people will be laughing at in the future, considering our current era as just another quaint time period. Commuter drones, for example, are already being developed by Boeing and Airbus, and dozens of other companies are joining the competition.41 Someday soon, you may see your next-door neighbors seamlessly carpooling together on drones while you’re stuck in traffic, puttering along the highway, late to work. Sounds hard to believe? Take it from Henry Ford, who all the way back in 1940 said, “Mark my words. A combination of airplane and motorcar is coming. You may smile. But it will come.”42

For leaders and managers, part of the job description must now be to relentlessly communicate today’s urgency across all functions in the organization. You must be radically transparent with everyone, including yourself, about the challenges and opportunities of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and how your organization is affected by it. No matter if you are a board member, top executive, middle manager, or shift supervisor, it is your job to get everyone on your team to pay attention and take change seriously. Whenever you have an audience—whether it’s your boss, a bureaucratic committee of some kind, or the entire employee community—you must reiterate that no one can afford to continue the status quo, regardless of how comfortable that is.

Consistently showing your teams that you are serious about innovation will have a tremendous impact on your organization, but proving that it’s necessary for survival will be even stronger. Managers and leaders should be measured on ensuring that innovation is seen as a constant priority throughout the organization. In doing so, their companies will remain relevant and meet today’s, and the future’s, opportunities and challenges.

Fearless Innovation

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