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Showing posts with label Fareed Zakaria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fareed Zakaria. Show all posts

"Everyone Agrees" about Innovation (Whatever it is)

In an article this week in Time, Fareed Zakaria succinctly captures our national conversation about innovation: "Everyone agrees it's key to America's future" but "we don't really have a good fix on the concept."

Zakaria, the omnipresent commentator who works for both CNN and Time, has emerged as one of the most lucid and sane advocates for this buzzword we call innovation. He points out the ways the U.S. as a country is falling behind--and argues convincingly that innovation is "the only durable stength we have" in these troubling economic times. Both novel business ideas and new technology are crucial to innovation, he writes, and what's most important is the "ecosystem that encourages technological breakthroughs and their application."

Click on his picture above to see an interview last night for the Daily Show as he explains that while corporations are doing fine right now, the American labor force is not.

As the political game between two parties begins to pick up steam with Republican candidate debates, we find that "innovation," as Zakaria points out, is one of the few unifying forces in American culture right now. While researchers define innovation as "the implementation of creative ideas," national commentators tend to refer to it in terms of money--for research and development, for capital to invest in businesses, and for government programs that lead to new companies and products. Zakaria is particularly good at describing that ecosystem that fosters innovation, which includes the need for government investment (that fueled great breakthroughs like the Internet, the microchip and GPS)--and which Republicans are often less thrilled to publicly admit supporting.

Zakaria's new CNN series, Restoring the American Dream: How to Innovate, debuted last Sunday, and you can find great resources on CNN for better understanding the innovation conversation, including interviews with distinguished innovators, including John Kao, whose Innovation Nation is also a must-read on the subject, and author Steven Johnson in the video below.




I've previously referred to this conversation as the innovation imperative--the urgent need we have as a country and a culture, as organizations and individuals, to better learn how to be more creative and foster innovation. One imperative is a national and economic one, which includes creating the ecosystem and investments necessary to bring innovation here at home. Another is our own as individuals and in our organizations. I define innovation in that context as improving what's now and creating what's next. For our own innovation to flourish, we have to be constantly working on improving our current state of being--questioning assumptions, proactively seeking out better ways of doing things--and be constantly visioning and creating new strategies and possibilities for the future.

What have you been doing lately to improve what's now and create what's next for your own life, career or organization?

Scary to be an American? Part 2

My previous blog made the point that pessimism and fear--currently irrationally amplified by our divisive politics and media--is incompatible with creativity and change. Our midterm election may be over, but the belief that it's scary to be an American right now persists. And the truth is, wherever you might plug into the American conversation, even if you tap the more reasonable, harder-to-hear-amidst-the-shouting sources of information, it's hard not to be scared, which closes down our individual and collective creative solution-making ability.

For some hope, I had turned to Time magazine's cover story last week--the positive-sounding "How to Restore the American Dream"--but found myself again shaken by the dark "realities" it outlined. Fareed Zakaria, one of the more intelligent and solution-focused media voices today, primarily made the case that our mood is bad for good reason, with many accompanying graphs "charting the decline" of what was once the land of opportunity. The rational media may not scream fear but they do supply a torrent of facts about the economy and American decline that are just as scary.

Zakaria captures this troubling reality well in this video (below)--while at the same time making clear that we need to think differently in order to restore the American Dream. This is the great challenge for us as individuals and for American organizations of all stripes: To find a new reality, a different mindset--a more optimistic belief in being, as Zakaria says, masters of our own destiny. While we may not be able to escape the current cultural narrative (though unplugging from media would help), we have to realize it's not as true as it seems. Yes, unemployment is higher and it's harder to sell my condo, but most people I know have kept their jobs and are only "sour" when they tune into our public conversation.

When it comes to offering ideas and different thinking, one could argue, especially of late, that Republicans are the main political obstacle. This from this month's Esquire: Republicans "haven't had a new idea this century. Unless you count teabags and fear, which we don't." But it definitely takes creativity to cut the budget, and, amazingly, both Democrats and Republicans find common ground on innovation. Yes, perhaps more than any other policy point, both political sides join leading commentators like Zakaria in support of "Innovation" again and again. So the great news is that we as a nation have a real opportunity to come together to support creative ideas and investment in innovation right now.

But to have some room to do that, we can't let fear and extremism rule our airwaves and infect us individually. Last weekend's Rally to Restore Sanity made an attempt to change the conversation, and Jon Stewart's "Moment of Sincerity" is well worth viewing (below). Stewart makes the point that "we live in hard times, not end times," and rightly highlights the media distortion: "If we amplify everything, we hear nothing...the press is our immune system--if it overacts to everything we actually get sicker." "The 24-hour politico pundit perpetual panic conflictonator," he explains, is not reality: "The image of Americans that is reflected back to us by our political and media process is false. It's us through a funhouse mirror."

The truth, Stewart says, is that we work together to get things done every day. We do. But real innovation--taking the time and effort to create something new and then actually implement it--is not easy. As Congressman Jared Polis of Colorado says, "It's easier to stop bad things than to pass good things." Our challenge is to shift our mindset from fear-mongering noise to another even-more-valid reality of possibility. Most often real creativity and change come after crisis, or as new California Governor Jerry Brown just said in his acceptance speech, "Breakdown paves the way for a breakthrough." How might we help each other break through?