Recognise This! – A strong culture already exists in your organisation. It’s up to you to shape that into the culture you want, not the one that “just happened.”

Yesterday I wrote about creating a culture of creativity, as Danny Boyle did to create and direct the Olympic opening ceremonies. How does that translate to the workplace or the more common phrase we often hear of creating a culture of innovation?

What to Do

In CIO, Frank Wander, founder of the IT Excellence Institute and a former Fortune 250 CIO, recently shared 3 best practices for doing just that in terms of what you should always, sometimes and never do:

“Always recognise that IT’s culture is your responsibility, and innovation is an outcome of the culture…

“Sometimes work outside the office to find a quiet setting in which to think…

“Never build a culture of blame. Innovation is often about trying and failing. If failure leads to blame, you’ll create an innovation short-circuit.”

This is at the heart of creating a culture that is open to innovative ideas (even if they may sound silly at first), sharing, helping, contributing together in an environment that’s supportive and where failure is not only tolerated but encouraged as a path to success. (Check out this great post from Dan McCarthy on famous failures.)

What Not to Do

Sometimes, avoiding the pitfalls is as difficult as following the path to success. Indeed, this is no less true when creating a culture of innovation.

Today in his Workplace Mojo blog, Matt Monge wrote about “culture killers,” namely:

Doesn’t this all really circle back to transparency? You say what you mean and do what you say. Easily said, but not always as easily done, especially when you’re trying to instill these beliefs and approaches in your own team of leaders to filter down.

The best approach is for the senior leader to model the desired behaviours, then consistently, frequently and in a timely way recognise and reward those who do so as well. Equally important, leaders must be willing to coach and, if necessary, remove leaders who demonstrate the “culture killers.”

If you want to find out how Intuit created and sustains a strong culture of innovation through strategic recognition, join me and Intuit Senior Compensation Business Partner Jennifer Lepird for a webinar on Thursday, August 2nd, 1:00pm Eastern/ 10:00am Pacific/ 5:00 pm GMT.

What are your recommendations for what to do and what not to do in creating a culture of innovation?