Behavioural Sciences

The most innovative companies all share these values

An employee works on his computer at the office of CloudFactory, a Canadian startup that based itself in Kathmandu, where it hires teams of Nepalese October 5, 2012. Not far from the world of regimented cubicles and headset-toting call centre operators, a quiet revolution is stirring in its slippers. While it's early days, proponents of so-called commercial crowdsourcing contend that a swelling army of global freelancers is already disrupting traditional outsourcing - from preparing tax statements to conducting research on pediatricians. Picture taken October 5, 2012. To match story ASIA-FREELANCE/       REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar (NEPAL) - RTR39016

Innnovative companies tend to share these 6 elements. Image: REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar

William Polk
Public Relations Manager, JLL
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There are few greater compliments for a company than being perceived as innovative – fresh thinking and doing things differently to stand out from the crowd.

While much of this innovation comes down to a company’s products and services to keep it at the forefront of the market in which it operates, it’s also about the company’s culture. And creating the right workplace conditions is paramount.

High performing workplaces
Image: Gensler

A new survey by the architecture, design and consulting firm Gensler, has revealed a statistical correlation between workplace design and how innovative that company’s employees believe it to be. The U.S. Workplace Survey 2016, comprised of 4,000 employees in 11 industries, found that companies with high scores for workplace functionality and effectiveness also have better innovation rankings.

Companies at the more innovative end of the scale tend to share the following elements:

1. High-quality design

Simply selecting a design someone thinks is innovative will not greatly increase the probability that innovation happens. “What’s really important is understanding how people attempt to innovate and how their current space creates barriers to that capability,” says Ed Nolan, Managing Director, Consulting at JLL. “Knowledge of the right behaviors that enable more innovation, as well as the behaviors that don’t, is critical when designing office space.” And that will vary significantly from company to company.

2. Time away from the desk

Areas such as cafes and open collaboration areas are strategically positioned in the floor plan to encourage what Nolan refers to as “serendipitous collisions,” also known as the water cooler effect. “There is a definite correlation in the manners in which people connect with each other that stimulates innovation,” says Nolan. If you’re locked down and anchored to your desk, those collisions are less likely to take place. “But the more collisions you have with others who aren’t on your team, the more opportunities you have to communicate, share ideas and innovate.”

3. Flexibility

Flexibility refers to providing employees with multiple choices of workspaces so they can match the space they choose to what they are trying to accomplish. This applies to both inside and outside the office. “Companies that are stimulating innovation are beginning to understand the creativity that can occur through interaction with people outside the firm,” says Nolan. Examples of this include co-working locations and business centers.

4. Balance

Innovative companies also embrace agile working to give employees the control to balance their workday and maximize their productivity. “Older work environments had an assigned desk or office as their prime workplace,” says Nolan. “We’re seeing a shift to more control for an employee to determine the right space that best meets their need, whether that means working on site, from home or at a third-party location.”

5. Amenities

While an on-site spa or complimentary meals might seem like great perks, companies should take an informed approach with amenities. Innovative companies offer amenities that are customized to their values and culture and meet established objectives, such as increasing retention, attracting highly skilled talent and/or improving conversion rates around bringing talent on board. “The amenities offered by a company should reflect their key objectives, and they should be regularly measured and assessed to determine if they’re helping achieve those objectives,” says Nolan.

6. Trust

Perhaps most important of all, innovative companies exercise trust with employees. “Some office construction or renovation conversations are too biased toward the physical design without recognizing how to provide trust,” says Nolan.

Lack of trust, possibly even more than the physical office space, can hinder innovation. “What’s really at the core of this is leadership granting control and believing that employees will make good choices about how, when and where they work, which will spark the innovation they are trying to achieve.”

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