Traits of innovative teams
Optimize innovation in your organization. Learn four characteristics of successful teams.
Sep 27, 2018 • 3 Minute Read
Successful startups have the power to disrupt—and write the future of—entire industries.
At their epicenter? Innovative teams.
Building teams that reflect these four must-haves is a must-do if you want to innovate at the pace of your competition, and, ideally, ahead of the pace of change.
Dive deeper on each winning characteristic to see how to foster the kind of innovation that will move your team forward at breakneck speed.
Laser focus
Innovative teams defy distraction and remain highly focused on their work.
How? They start with the “why.” Methods and mechanics come only after you establish a clear reason why you are trying to achieve your goals. That clear sense of purpose greases the wheels of innovation.
Stripe is an example of a now multibillion-dollar startup fueled by focus. Founders John and Patrick Collision had a clear aim: to simplify online payment processing for small businesses. Identifying the “why” early on gave every person who joined their team a common purpose. Ask one of their developers why they’re building a particular feature; they should be able to explain how that feature keeps the focus on their mission.
If everyone in your corner can’t answer the “why” for your organization, start with putting their purpose in focus.
Ownership of their work
Mutual, vested interest in everything the team produces is crucial to continued innovation.
Feeling a sense of responsibility for outcomes helps team members commit to bringing ideas forward early and often—rather than waiting on others to pitch cutting-edge concepts.
Leaders can build this sense of ownership by communicating the value of ideas as equal to the value of an employee’s time. This is highly visible in smaller organizations, where it is entirely the responsibility of everyone on the team to chime in with their suggestions in order to achieve the goals of the organization; everyone needs to have a stake in your success.
Lifelong learning
Each day is a day of learning on an innovative team.
That applies to the practice of developing new skills and learning from others’ experiences in equal measure. When individual team members commit to both upskilling and sharing their insights with others, the team collectively learns. When a team collectively learns, there’s a multiplier effect. You might think of this as crowdsource learning.
Although the challenges technology leaders face in implementing solutions for skill development are significant, leaders of innovative teams know that building learning into your team’s day-to-day is possible, and made easier with the right tools. Technology learning needs to meet the learner where they are for them to stay engaged and excited about moving forward, and it needs to give them a clear path to their intended outcome.
Trust
None of these traits of winning teams materializes in the absence of trust.
Innovation necessarily comes at the risk of failure. With high degrees of trust, however, potential failures are nothing to be afraid of. Rather, failures become learning opportunities for the entire team to grow from.
To help take the fear out of failure, superstar startups use a positive term for them: pivot. When something isn’t working, turn in a different direction. Pivoting is totally acceptable—in fact, it’s expected that innovative startups will need to pivot to find the best fit for their offering. With trust, pivoting can help reset energy and motivation levels. In organizations where there is no room for failure, innovative ideas never see the light of day.