Essential reading for system change super-heros

Volans recently released a new report on ‘breakthrough’ capitalism.  This inspirational report is a toolkit for anybody wanting to understand and shift the existing staus quo towards a future that makes sense. This is one where we live equitably, within our planetary boundaries. It reminds us of Donella Meadows ways to shift a system and, additionally, highlights 7 high-impact areas where breakthrough change is emerging. These are: science (accepted one planet limits), activism (embedded in c-suite revolutionaries), institutions (create inter-generational wealth), access (prosumers build own, better futures), finance (positive externalities), economics (economies as living systems), and culture (works for majority – not wealthy minority).  It is a call and guide to anyone looking to lead radical change….  http://www.breakthroughcapitalism.com/breakthrough_report.html

Lighting up tomorrow: Nesta showcases breakthrough energy innovation

One out of five people in the world has no access to energy.  That is about 1.3 billion people with no lighting for working, studying or socialising out of daylight hours, no power for irrigation, manufacture or computing and no heat for beating wintry evenings or making dinner. Two out of every five people have no access to modern energy and rely on open fires for cooking and heating – with all the health implications of smoke and environmental implications of forest destruction. Grid extension, even if desirable, could reach less than 40% of these people. And all of this is contextualised by the need to transform the exiting carbon intensive, climate damaging energy system.

A myriad of innovations has sprung up that are aiming to provide smart renewable off-grid energy to these groups.  They cover not only products but incorporate new technologies, finance, business models and behavioural strategies. They have an ambitious remit – they look to solve multiple problems beyond energy through partnering with women entrepreneurs, education providers and others.

Nesta showcased some of these innovations at the launch of its new challenge – to support the UNDP in sourcing off grid solutions capable of providing off-grid power to cover the needs of an average war-returnee family in rural Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Highlights spanned a range of types of solution, at different stages of development, diverse scale and impact potentials and operating from and within multiple countries. The three global organisations that had ‘wow’ factor were:

Grameen Shakti: This remarkable organisation provides a myriad of household power and cooking solutions –   using solar, biogas and efficient stoves. It managed to gain thousands of customers due to its innovative finance model which allowed users to make purchases on micro-credit systems, run by a specialised revolving fund. Grameen Shakti reached its first landmark of one million Solar Home Systems installed in Bangladesh in November 2012. On average, GS installs over a thousand solar home systems per day, working with a workforce of more than 12,000 people. Trained technicians, mostly women, manufacture components in 20 technology centres, and install and service systems. Some of these technicians have become independent energy entrepreneurs. http://www.ashden.org/files/reports/grameen_case_study_20081105.pdf

D.light: This is the brainchild of a Stanford graduate who was involved in an accident in Africa with an overturned kerosene lantern. The organisation now designs, manufactures and distributes solar light and power products in over 40 countries, through over 6,000 retail outlets.  They aim to transform the lives of at least 100 million people by 2020.  The particular genius of the d.lights lies in their affordability and ruggedness.  They allow people to replace kerosene lanterns for less than $10. The cost savings for customers can be significant, as families may spend 10 to 25 per cent of their monthly income on kerosene oil. For a typical farmer or shopkeeper, d.light products will pay for themselves in two months. http://www.dlightdesign.com/

Azuri: The high up-front costs of solar have been the major factor prohibiting wider uptake of small solar systems in emerging markets. To overcome this, Azuri combined mobile phone and solar technology to provide solar-as-a-service by which the user pays for the usage of the solar product by purchasing weekly scratchcards. The Indigo scratchcard is validated using SMS from a mobile phone and a one-off passcode entered into the Indigo unit which provides lighting and mobile phone charging. It cuts weekly energy spend by 50% or more. Also clever is their escalation process which provides opportunity for customers to ‘grow’ their energy use through modular additions. Indigo was first developed by the Azuri team within the Cambridge University spin-out, Eight19 Ltd. http://www.azuri-technologies.com

Within the UK, the following organisations stood out:

Firefly: This organisation which offers a solar and storage solution, started its life providing temporary power for Festivals in the UK. They provide a potential case study in leveraging business with a strong commercial niche to extend its platform to cover broader social needs. For example, their technologies could provide a useful solution for times when temporary power is required after natural disasters, during times of war, in refugee camps, etc. http://www.fireflysolar.net/

Therefore: Another UK based innovation is a Gravitylight, designed by Therefore to replace kerosene lamps. This is worth noting for the simple beauty of its solution – using gravity to effect enough force for a small amount of electricity to be generated. To turn the lamp on, you lift a weighted bag up, and ‘voila!’, as the bag slowly descends, LED illumination. This was crowdfunded on Indiegogo and is currently undergoing trials. http://www.whiteboardmag.com/crowdfunding-a-radically-new-gravity-light-for-africa/

Eiggbox: This interesting organisation is the initiative of a community on the island of Eigg, off the coast of Scotland. The organisation is an integrator i.e. it takes all the readily available technical solutions and creates a business model that allows it to take them to market.  It operates off multiple renewable technologies – wind, solar and hydro. http://www.hi-energy.org.uk/Renewables/Communities/Eigg-Electrification-Project.htm

Both the UNDP challenge and these examples focus on emerging markets and areas in Europe that are rural or devastated by war.  It would be interesting to see reverse innovation within established energy markets that look to transform existing systems from carbon hungry to renewable. Perhaps these ideas could inspire UK-based inventors and remove the need for expanded fossil fuel or nuclear solutions in Britain?

This is part 1 in a 2 part series covering the event Exploring Breakthrough Energy Innovations supported by 6heads and hosted by Nesta on 8th March 2013.  For further details see http://www.nesta.org.uk/areas_of_work/challengeprizes/assets/features/undp_prize

 

Tasting the Future – Fields for Transformation Event Series

‘Leadership has focused primarily on getting things done…by focusing…on the intellectual and pragmatic aspects of our work, we forget that a movement can only be successful when people have genuine relationships in which they feel valued and empowered’ (Zimmerman et al. (2010) Movement Strategy Centre)

The Tasting the Future team has been working together for three years. Our biggest area of learning has been about the need to shift not only what we do but how we do it. 
 
Our workshop series has been designed to share what we have learned during these years and we invite you to contribute your experience to the field.
 
The Tasting the Future core team would like to invite you to a three month enquiry to explore Fields for Transformation. Our question for this series of workshops is:  What shifts in our own work practices and relationships will better support the movement towards a sustainable food system?

This active enquiry will consist of 3 full-day workshops held in London in March, April and May 2013.  The workshops are a connected series and the cost of attending all three workshops is £100.  The workshop outcomes will also feed into the Tasting the Future assembly to be held on the 20th May.

 
The three workshops are: 
  1. Fields for Transformation - at the level of movement building, societal and personal transformation, what can we learn from Field Theory, as put forward by biologist Rupert Sheldrake?  How can we apply this thinking to our work and personal practice? The workshop will be led by Linda Mitchell and Sarah Whiteley
  2. Skills for Transformation - what skills do we need to practice that will help to build relationships and put into practice the change we wish to see?  What creative skills and practices can strengthen our work together?  This workshop will be led by Niamh Carey,Alison FreemanDraeyk van der Horn and Liane Fredericks.
  3. Mindfulness for Transformation - how can we sustain our involvement in this work? How can we develop a new approach to leadership through our own personal practice? Inspired by the work of Jon Kabat-Zinn and others, we will explore how an approach of personal awareness and mindfulness can positively strengthen our relationships with others. This workshop will be led by Rachel Lilley.

You can signup here: http://fieldsfortransformation.eventbrite.co.uk/

A challenge and an invitation…

We are looking for people interested in breakthrough energy innovation to participate in and/or support a challenge from UNDP and Nesta….
 
The challenge: To develop replicable, small off-grid energy solutions.  This is initially for the millions of returning post-war refugees to Bosnia/Hertzogovinia, but this solution could then be extended to other places. More information here:http://www.nesta.org.uk/areas_of_work/challengeprizes/assets/features/undp_prize
 
It offers energy innovators an opportunity for profile, seed funding and an established growth platform.
 
The invitation: We are holding a launch event on 8th March at Nesta from 11-1pm. Please RSVP if you are interested in breakthrough innovation and energy - http://www.eventbrite.com/event/5475974788/eorg 
 
Please do spread the word!  
 
If anyone needs further information or would like to put forward an innovator, introduce and expert or get involved, please feel free to contact me on nicola.millson@6-heads.com
 
Any help/recommendations/introductions much appreciated! 
 
Image

 

Looking for renewable energy innovators…

A solution to our centralised (inefficient), carbon intensive energy system is to start to develop distributed, off-grid renewable energy solutions.  We are supporting this initiative by the UNDP and NESTA to search for prize-worthy, renewable energy innovators:

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Bosnia and Herzegovina is now issuing a challenge to find a renewable energy solution capable of providing off-grid power to cover the needs of an average war-returnee family in rural Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Video about the challenge: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=s9LTLotHQkQ

The challenge is to design a sustainable, cost-effective solution for a standalone, off-grid renewable energy supply that can produce an average of 2,25 kWh and 120 litres of hot-water a day, to cover the needs of an average returnee family in rural areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina that will not cost more than €5.000.

The winner will receive a $20,000 cash prize. In addition, UNDP in Bosnia and Herzegovina will pilot the winning solution in a rural area for up to 50 returnee families in 2013.

Furthermore the winning solution might be replicated in other parts of the world to produce off-grid renewable energy for refugees and returnees. The market potential for the challenge prize winner is significant.

Deadline for entry: 12pm, Wednesday 1 May, 2013

Contact short-listed: 12pm, Friday 31 May 2013

Confirmation of the winner: Summer 2013

More information on: http://www.nesta.org.uk/areas_of_work/challengeprizes/assets/features/undp_prize

Good Luck!

 

Imagining a Sustainable Christmas Future: Tom from Futerra is inspired…

Originally posted by Tom Bristow on www.futerra.co.uk

For years the sustainability community has been looking at ways of moving Christmas away from the annual orgy of consumerism and waste that it currently is. That’s why it’s fun, around this season, to engage in a bit of blue sky thinking about how December might look in a future where families gather round the tree to enjoy not expensive gifts, but something more in line with the needs of the planet. Last Thursday, graduates from Imperial College treated us to a collection of neat ideas for a more sustainable festive season at their 6heads Christmas as Unusual event.

I was part of a Futerra team manning a stall for Sony, crowdsourcing ideas for their FutureScapes campaign to imagine sustainable technologies. A core concept of FutureScapes is called ‘Wandular’ – a communications device that people could keep for life, upgrading it as parts wore out or it needed new functionality. People were enthusiastic about the idea. Key insights were that the best way to make us form an emotional attachment to our tech is to associate the object with a special moment in life. This might be a favourite song from childhood, a special event or even a smell. Someone suggested beef. The future is technology that smells of roast dinner.

Futerra’s stall was next to a table full of what can only be described as ‘frankentoys’. The organiser,Communitoy, is a Brighton based charity that gives kids the opportunity to chop up old cuddly toys and use the limbs to sow together their own creation, just like Toy Story. Afterwards, the kids take them away. Intrigued, I jumped in, viciously depriving a large giraffe of its tail and head, and replacing them with the body of a snake and the head of a stuffed Elmo. The result was a gruesome creation, but one which I feel a certain attachment to, having made it myself.

The idea of Communitoy is that it gives children an opportunity to learn how to make stuff in a fun and easy way. From small beginnings, they might move on to making their own clothes, presents or circuit boards. This is very relevant to FutureScapes – we currently don’t have much control over what our devices look like or do. You can only imagine how much fun people of all ages could have at a technology ‘chop shop’.

There was also a 3D printer built by the Imperial College Department of Robotics, the first I’d seen in the flesh (see the photo of a 3D printed Yoda head above). A helpful undergraduate showed me how it could print off separate mechanical parts, which then fitted together to build a small machine. 3D printers could have the potential to empower anyone to create new technologies from the comfort of their sitting room. All you need is a bit of computer design know-how, and the printer will spit out whatever you want. This might be a new camera, antenna or chip upgrade for your Wandular.

Buying gifts at Christmas might not be going anywhere, but in the future technologies might empower us to make things ourselves, or to up cycle unwanted gifts into something entirely new. I’m not going to throw my Elmo/Giraffe/Snake away any time soon. Hopefully the 6heads will give us the opportunity to make more things in the future.

via Imagining a Sustainable Christmas Future.

Hitting all the moles: A tool to invent a resilient future

There is a classic game played at funfairs called ‘whac-a-mole’.  The aim is to try and hit moles that keep popping up from different holes.  The more you hit, the more pop up in different areas, more quickly.  Setting aside the implied cruelty to moles, this strikes me as an apt analogy for problem-solving in our complex world.

Taking a linear approach to solve the complex problems facing the planet often creates new problems.  A good example is the development of early biofuels which, although they looked to solve energy problems, created others problems in shifting land use and resulted in escalating food prices. A reductionist approach may also shift the problem to others areas instead of solving it. For example, burning small-holed fishing nets to prevent over-fishing, shifts the problem to income generation for dependant fishing communities. Moles popping up all over!

Yet, most of our institutional and social structures are organised to view or break problems down into constituent parts  and deal with them through silos labelled ‘government’ or ‘human resources’ or ‘operations’ or ‘financial services’.

How then, do we address these large, intractable problems – or even view them in all their complex detail?

Last night a small group of sustainability and innovation practitioners’ trialled a game invented by the International Futures Forum, which aims to do just that.  The purpose of the World Game is to harness collective intelligence to address complex issues.

The game is based on generating thinking from 12 different dimensions of a viable eco-social system. These are: climate, well-being, governance, food, community, habitat, water, energy, trade, biosphere, wealth and world-view.

We chose the challenge What needs to happen for us to live within Earth’s limits?

Across the different dimensions, a hearty discussion roamed around:

  • Decoupling habitat, ownership and wealth
  • Internalising externalities in pricing
  • Encouraging social enterprise
  • Supporting a mind-set shift towards true happiness
  • New governance structures to promote long termism
  • The value and practicality of localism
  • Regulating the earnings differential between top and bottom earners
  • Relatedness to Gaia theory
  • Building truly ecologically integrated homes

Many of the points were contentious and discussion was heated and entertaining. Although there is no clear answer, the themes touched on included:

  • Diverting human effort
  • Revealing the inter-connectivity of things
  • Reprogramming and empowering society around ‘public service’ and its relatedness to happiness
  • Normalising new corporate models which truly serve society

The IFF game forced us to broaden our thinking across multiple areas and through combining initial solutions, to take a more interconnected view.

A good tool to encourage systemic thinking and therefore, towards constructive complex problem-solving.

No moles were injured in the playing of this game.

Thank you to the creative and fun-spirited game participants:

Patrick Andrews, Julia Bindman, Louise Carver, John Gilbert and Rachel Millson.

For more information and to download the IFF World Game game see: http://www.internationalfuturesforum.com/world-game

For a bit of harmless fun, try:

http://www.addictinggames.com/action-games/whackamole.jsp

Transforming Towards the Firm of the Future

Giles Hutchins is a 6head friend and mentor.  In the guest blog below, he looks at the need for new thinking towards greater resilience for the firms of the future.

Giles’ book ‘The Nature of Business‘ is now available from greenbooks.co.uk/natureofbusiness. You can hear more from Giles and get a signed copy of his book at LSE, (Thai Theatre, New Academic Building, Lower Ground Floor) on 24th October from 6:30pm. 

Due to a ‘perfect storm’ of economic, social and environmental factors, our business landscape is becoming more and more volatile.

The pace of change, too, is increasing. To succeed in business we must be agile, creative, alert, spontaneous and responsive – often operating in completely new ways. Today’s rapidly changing business environment calls for businesses that thrive in rapidly changing environments: businesses more akin to living systems. These ‘Firms of the Future’ can learn and adapt; they aren’t structured and silo’ed, which stifles learning and agility. These firms are also bottom-up, decentralised, interdependent, multifunctional, emergent, self-organizing units–not the centralised, top-down, hierarchically-managed monoliths of the 20th century.

Put simply, the business models and management approaches that served us well in the past, are no longer fit for purpose in a business context where dynamic change is the new norm.

Professor Michael Porter said a few months ago when addressing business leaders in New York: ‘The old models of corporate strategy and capitalism are dead.  We are witnessing a paradigm shift from hurting to helping’.

Organisations that are able to ‘let go’ of old business paradigms, having the courage to embrace new ways of operating whilst dealing with the pressing short-term issues of today, shall be the ones who can weather the storm, adapting to seek out opportunities in these volatile times. Other organisations, fearfully clinging to practices that are no longer fit for purpose for the times within which we now operate, shall struggle to cope with the level of change ahead.

It requires great courage to break rank from a paradigm that is so ingrained in our business mindset; to transform in the face of pressing short-term pain.

The years ahead to 2020, in this Decade of Creative Destruction & Reconstruction, shall bear witness to the wheat being separated from the chaff – organisations who ‘get it’ adapting and evolving, and those that do not perishing or being acquired. Bold ‘Firms of the Future’ do not try and tightly manage change, they empower a culture of collaboration to unlock the creative potential of their own workforce, their partners and the communities they serve, initiating positive virtuous cycles of collaboration, innovation and value creation for all stakeholders. The result: more value, bigger margins and higher well-being.

As Dawn Vance, Nike Director of Global Logistics at Nike succinctly puts it:

‘Organizations have 3 options:

1.       Hit The Wall;

2.       Optimize and delay hitting the wall; or

3.       Redesign for Resilience – simultaneously optimizing existing networks whilst creating disruptive innovations and working collaboratively with partners’.

It is this ‘redesigning for resilience’ which drives the transformation from a Firm of The Past to a Firm of The Future. The Firm of the Future is one that:

1. Drives transformation through values-based leadership and stakeholder empowerment using the catalysts of education, innovation, inspiration and collaboration;

2. Encourages synergies across its business ecosystem, engaging with multiple stakeholders in an open, transparent way; where common values create connections enabling mutualism;

3. Harnesses the power of social networks and the ‘pull’ media; uses crowd sourcing, co-creation, open source collaboration platforms and transparent branding for differentiation;

4. Evolves ecological thinking for innovating and new ways of operating and generation value for every stakeholder within the community it serves; where waste equals food and nature inspires the people, processes and products.

The pressure for change is increasing all the time. Well publicised forward-thinking organisations are already making headway on their transformational journey – Unilever, Puma, InterfaceFLOR, General Electric, Patagonia, Procter & Gamble, John Lewis Partnership, and Marks & Spencers, to name a few. Visionary business leaders of today are already making the first steps on this transformational, emergent path for themselves and their businesses.

And it is a journey rather than a destination. Transforming towards a Firm of The Future is not about designing the right business model and implementing it, it is about understanding the ethos, ethics and environment that will allow the organisation, individuals and wider stakeholder community to best flourish, adapt and evolve. It’s an emergent journey, a journey that encourages diversity in approaches and outcomes, one where it is good to make mistakes, even fail, as it generates learning to move forward in a more resilient way.

Giles: Leadership for the future is all about diversity, creativity and co-creation…and love

This is a guest post from Giles Hutchins. Giles is a founder of BCI, can be found at The Nature of Business and is a dear friend of 6heads.  It  has two parts – a short film clip with various ideas and a blog on the importance of values based leadership.

http://youtu.be/mWJkhxrrnH4

Organisations need to continuously adapt if they are to survive and thrive in an increasingly volatile business environment.

Ensuring successful adaptation against a backdrop of increasing uncertainty and complexity means leadership becomes less about directive structured approaches seeking predictable outcomes and more about empowering others to make effective and timely decisions.

The ‘new norm’ of dynamic non-equilibrium in business requires a shift in conventional management thinking from over-reliance on top-down, hierarchical, risk-based approaches to managing within complexity. This style of management juggles and combines varying styles and techniques. It encourages bottom-up ideas and thinking to flourish; establishing an all-pervasive values-led work ethic whilst guiding and coaching.

Complex, adaptive, resilient businesses of the future recognise that change emerges unpredictably, and that over-arching bureaucratic mechanisms no longer assist emergent organisational evolution. The role of leadership is to actively participate in enabling and facilitating local change, by encouraging effective communications with clarity of understanding of how to act and interact. Each and every one of us plays our part in leadership of the future by helping others to co-create towards positive outcomes.

Leaders of the future unleash human potential by instilling trust through authenticity, clarity of purpose and openness to continual learning. Leaders are the learners, the ones who seek ‘personal mastery’ (as Peter Senge puts it) whilst remaining interconnected to the collective whole. Leaders are people who understand who they really are, aspire towards greatness and inspire greatness in others (not egoic greatness but soulful greatness). Leaders become teachers, taking time to assist and empower others to lead themselves. The quest for optimal leadership is about encouraging a creative tension — balancing personal mastery with openness and a deep sense of belonging amongst a diverse community of stakeholders.

This collective-individual harmony may challenge the current prevailing view of individualism, yet it is a natural evolution to it. While it is imperative to have a wholesome, ambitious view of oneself, this self-improvement strategy goes hand-in-hand with a sense of interconnectedness, belonging and sharing that comes with community. If an organisation’s vision and culture encourages inspiration, empowerment and interconnectedness the need to manage, monitor and control falls away; the cumbersome governance mechanism of hierarchical management being replaced by governance through values enabling people become the change they wish to see.

We may need leadership to inspire us and give us courage especially in volatile times, yet we each have a unique blend of talents and a special dynamic within the diverse community we serve. It is up to us to unlock our creative potential, to evolve and utilise our talents, and it is also up to us to help others to unlock their creative potential in their time of need, and in so doing helping them help themselves and others. The more we open up to our environment, the more we tune in to the interconnected nature of business life, sensing and responding in the most optimal way. Each day challenges us to ‘walk-the-talk’, each day offers us opportunities to learn, grow and evolve.

Andy Wood, CEO of Adnams, puts it well when he says: ‘The job of a leader is to sprinkle water on to talent and allow it to grow’.

Create the conditions conducive for co-creation and it will naturally flourish. Self-empowerment and collective orientation overcome challenges by perceiving them as opportunities. It is the role of leaders to refocus their attention from management to empowerment – encouragement through coaching, rather than management through fear.

Emergent leadership (as referred to by Fritjof Capra) encourages an environment of continual questioning and new approaches to problems. This culture needs to spread beyond the organisation to the stakeholder community, to improve resilience of the whole and the parts.

Diversity is a measure of health in a natural ecosystem. Increased diversity within the ecosystem improves the ability for that ecosystem to adapt and survive disturbance and unpredictability.

Leadership approaches that encourage diversity, by fostering the right balance of co-operation and competition find the harmonic of creativity and productivity, ensuring the organisation (and its wider business ecosystem) is best able to adapt in volatile times.

A key aspect of effective leadership is establishing the right organisational culture; a culture that fosters diversity, and encourages creativity, while ensuring the diverse stakeholder group live and breathe the values inherent in that culture. The culture is the psyche of the organisation. This psyche constantly senses and responds in ways much like a conscious person constantly improves through self-reflection and personal mastery.

For an organisation to have a healthy, harmonious culture it needs a mission that unifies its diverse stakeholder community. That mission needs to be one that deeply resonates with the individual and collective psyche.

To maximise shareholder returns, or to become number one in a specified market, or to grow revenue by x% are not heart-filling business missions from which strong cultures are born. They may be measures of success, but not missions. If solely financial goals are held up as the mission with nothing deeper, then the culture will not have the depth needed for the journey ahead. The psyche of the organisation will only resonate with its stakeholders in a shallow way and the values and behaviours that flow from that may not be strong enough to bond diverse stakeholders in turbulent times. Put simply, once business puts ‘maximisation of shareholder returns’ as its core mission it becomes incomplete and corrupted, sowing the seeds of its own demise whilst seeking superficial, short-term highs.

As organisations become values-led the working environment becomes more emotionally and mentally healthy, where business goals are met without sacrificing personal values and integrity – in fact quite the contrary, work acts to reinforce personal integrity by providing a rich experience for individual and collective learning. The more working environments become values-led and life-enhancing the more alive the organisation and the more aligned we become to the true nature within and around us. This helps unlock the creative potential within us, enabling us to individually and collectively re-connect with our authentic selves and so perceive business challenges as opportunities for life enhancement. The challenging business environment becomes a sea of opportunities.

Leadership of the future is less about the theory of an idealised leadership model and more about the practical ability to navigate a journey of authenticity and inspiration; energising and equipping oneself and others to make the right choices for the situation at hand.

Are you an unnovator?

Microsoft recently revealed new software which allows users to get clear cut outs of items within pictures from photographs or off the web.  They proudly illustrated its capabilities using a Llama.

As you know, Microsoft is one of the world’s biggest companies with access to significant resources and many of the world’s best brains. But is this the best they can do around innovation? And is this really innovation at all?

If imagination is the ultimate renewable resource and the single most important human attribute that will allow us to innovate out of the global challenges facing the species – wouldn’t it be good to focus imagination on things that really matter?

Recently, for a 6heads webinar, we defined innovation as ‘new and creating value for society’.

While I’m sure society has a range of interpretations of value, we set-out a number of things that we called ‘unnovations’. We defined them as offering no real value to people or the planet.  This list included a toupee for babies, a self-rotating ice-cream cone and, controversially, bottled water.

The demand for bottle water has grown exponentially in the last few decades to more than 200 billion bottles of water consumed globally, per annum. The bottled water market is expected to reach $65.9 billion this year*. But in a world facing extreme survival challenges, popularity or commercial return shouldn’t be enough to make something ‘valuable’.  There are a few reasons why bottled water falls on our list of ‘unnovations’:

  • It deflects water from rivers required to maintain natural environments (which serve people in numerous ways – from agriculture to purification to aesthetics).
  • It incorporates valuable resources in the machines, people and packaging used, which could perhaps be used to create other more necessary items or, in the case of the oil used for packaging – not used at all.
  • It adds to carbon challenges through transportation all around the world.
  • Bottled water, unlike tap water, is not necessarily monitored by authorities or treated and may contain chemicals, hormonal disruptors or other contaminants that could impact health of consumers over time.
  • Once consumed bottles are discarded, primarily for landfill.

But this blog is not intended to stop you ordering bottled water (although that would be a good unintended consequence). It’s to encourage you to take all your creativity and apply it to developing solutions that really matter.  Imagine if, instead of kick-starting a micro-finance industry that has transformed the lives of billions of people, Yunnus had chosen to waste his talents designing a new flavour yoghurt. Delicious yoghurt, I’m sure, but it’s like asking Einstein to rather count pennies or Michelangelo to paint houses.

Maybe you don’t feel like you could be a Yunnus or a Einstein or a Michelangelo, however, any of us can be more useful and thereby impactful in the world through making the conscious shift from unnovation to innovation. Here are a few ideas** -

  1. Don’t encourage unnovators. Don’t get taken in but the next “new new” thing. Ask yourself ‘so what’ before you buy. Realise that its about trade-offs – do you want a great big fuel-consuming vehicle so much you’re prepared to sacrifice the beautiful Canadian wilderness or pristine Antarctic to oil-seekers?
  2. Do what matters.  You spend most of your life at work. Why not work on something worthwhile?  Your life is your legacy – make it count.
  3. Do what you can. To quote Kermit “it’s not easy being green”. But, even a small decision can make a big difference.  This could include:
    • Innovating around your ‘inputs’ to incorporate products that are positively impactful on the planet (e.g. as a builder using carbon positive cement, as a home owner using Method washing liquid, or buying organic and local ingredients for food production). A major American airline recently started using Eleather on its seats.  This is not only an environmental win as it uses discarded leather in its production, but also a commercial win as the seats last longer than those covered in conventional leather.
    • Innovating around your process to rethink the way you do things. This could be as simple as using less water and energy or creating less waste.  However, you could also consider renting instead of buying  (e.g. Christmas trees – see the Little Christmas Tree company), looking for modular solutions (e.g. removable in parts, carpet from Interface, Xerox copiers) or looking for collective solutions (e.g. Zipcar).
    • Innovating around your business model to incorporate the new thinking around shared value and inclusivity and environmental care. Whether it’s as simple as reviewing your suppliers to understand environmental risk or as complex as launching a shared value emerging market new product.

We are facing multiple challenges that threaten our future – climate change, water scarcity, food scarcity and population growth.  We have sufficient human ingenuity to develop truly innovative solutions, to identify game-changing opportunities and to create a sensible future.

We need less cut-out llamas and more real innovators.

*Sources: BBC, PR Web, Wikipedia

** These are my ideas – what are yours?  Sharing is caring…

***Companies mentioned:

Eleather: http://www.eleatherltd.com/

Method: http://methodhome.com/

Little Christmas Tree: http://www.thelittlechristmastreecompany.co.uk/

Zipcar: http://zipcar.co.uk

Interface: http://www.interfaceflor.co.uk

Xerox: http://www.xerox.co.uk/

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