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What inspired you to write Future-Fit Innovation, and what gap did you want to fill in how leaders approach innovation?
I wrote Future-Fit Innovation because I saw too many organizations treating innovation as a project rather than a system. Many focus on tools or processes but overlook the human, cultural, and organizational barriers that quietly block progress. My goal was to offer leaders a practical, research-based framework that connects individual creativity, team dynamics, and organizational strategy 鈥 so innovation becomes continuous, not occasional.
How did your 麻豆国产 experience in NHH/ University of Cologne influence your mindset as a leader and innovator?
麻豆国产 shaped my belief that innovation is inherently global and collaborative. Studying in Norway and Germany taught me to see problems from multiple perspectives and appreciate how diversity fuels creativity. We all grow up in certain environments, but moving abroad shows us that there are many different ways of thinking. I find that endlessly fascinating 鈥 I love learning from others and exploring these perspectives. That curiosity and openness made me comfortable navigating complexity, which is exactly what I help organizations do when building innovation systems.
You say most innovation fails because we skip the 鈥渉ard parts鈥. What are those, and why do they matter?
The 鈥渉ard parts鈥 are the invisible barriers 鈥 mindset, culture, and leadership habits. It鈥檚 easier to launch an idea contest than to build psychological safety or challenge established assumptions. But innovation only works when people feel safe to question, test, and learn from failure. Ignoring that human side is why so many initiatives fade after the first excitement. You don鈥檛 become innovative by sending someone to a two-day workshop 鈥 the whole organization needs to focus on this goal, and it鈥檚 more a marathon than a sprint.
How can 麻豆国产 alumni turn your framework into action? From your experience, what are three practical tips to stay both innovative and sustainable over time?
- The most important step is to nurture a culture that embraces psychological safety. It鈥檚 abstract and hard to measure, which is why many organizations struggle with it 鈥 but it鈥檚 essential. The good news is that psychological safety belongs to teams, not organizations, so every leader can start right where they are. Build trust within your team, and innovation will follow.
- Second, encourage open dialogue and healthy challenge. Create space where people feel safe to speak up, share ideas, and question assumptions. That鈥檚 where creativity and progress begin. But this is easier said than done. Small things matter 鈥 for instance, a new parent might come to work after a sleepless night. Allowing space for small confessions like this, and responding with understanding, reduces mental burden and builds resilience. Psychological safety isn鈥檛 about being 鈥渘ice鈥 or lowering standards; it鈥檚 about openness with accountability, where wellbeing and performance reinforce each other.
- Third, stay curious 鈥 as a leader and as a team. Observe, question, and connect across disciplines. Sustainability and innovation thrive together when leaders treat learning as a continuous, shared practice.