Building a repeatable, scalable innovation capability often involves turning to well-established frameworks or standards—yet a standard alone doesn’t magically elevate performance. The real game-changer lies in how leaders shape, introduce, and sustain these systems.
Think of it this way: a standardised innovation management system (SIMS) is a detailed architectural plan. But even the best plan can be rendered useless by poor construction or a misalignment with local conditions. As the “innovation architect,” your role is to tailor the system to your organisation’s unique environment—its culture, business goals, and day-to-day realities—while ensuring that it fosters genuine creative thinking and has the capacity and capability to go all the way to commercialisation.
"As the innovation architect, your role is to tailor the system to your organisation’s unique environment."
Below, we’ll explore practical ways to design your innovation system. We’ll examine the natural tension between new standards and existing practices, the potential for dramatic shifts in thinking, and the importance of the diverse ‘actors’ (from frontline employees to senior executives) who will help you to shape the outcome.
When a new framework or standard is introduced, it often competes with established routines. People accustomed to their own ways of doing things may find the new approach confusing, unnecessary, or even threatening, particularly when we are asking for novel thinking and working with uncertainties.
But here’s the silver lining: tension can be productive. By encouraging open debate about what works and what doesn’t, managers can arrive at a newly refined system that truly fits the organisation. It’s less about imposing change from the top and more about using constructive disagreement to integrate fresh thinking with proven successes.
Sometimes, a new system can trigger a profound change in how your people collaborate, solve problems, and even define success. It’s as if you swap out the entire playbook overnight. This can be disruptive—but it can also unleash breakthroughs if guided correctly.
No framework exists in a vacuum. It intersects with the software tools you use, the people who implement it, and the culture that supports (or undermines) it. Understanding this complex web is essential. A top-notch standard can still fail if your existing incentives or leadership styles are not compatible.
In essence, innovation is a learning exercise, an ongoing cycle of trying something new, assessing the results, and adapting to minimise uncertainties. But how an organisation may ‘learn to innovate’ can differ significantly depending on context and practices. By understanding the tensions between the key characteristics of the uptake of SIMS, as ‘system architects’, you will be better able to fine tune your SIMS to achieve your organisations vison and strategies. Below is a simple four-quadrant lens that combines two key dimensions:
External vs. Internal InfluenceThese two dimensions produce four typical environments for SIMS:
No single quadrant is “best.” Most organisations thrive by mixing elements from each. Your mission as the ‘innovation systems architect’ is to choose the right blend based on your industry context, the maturity of your teams, and your strategic priorities.
"By collaboratively shaping the system, you shift from compliance to genuine commitment."
Beyond processes and training modules, the sustainability of your innovation framework rests on three pillars:
Culture: Does your company genuinely value curiosity, risk-taking, and ongoing learning?
Leadership: Do senior leaders model the behaviours you want to see (such as open-mindedness and willingness to learn from failure)?
When culture, leadership, and strategy align, you have the foundation for an innovation practice that can evolve alongside market shifts and technological disruptions. Without this alignment, even the most elegant standard will likely fade into irrelevance.
A standardised innovation management system can serve as an essential blueprint, offering clarity and consistency. Yet it’s your role as the innovation manager and ‘system architect’ to ensure that blueprint comes to life in a way that resonates with real people and real business challenges. By blending external requirements with internal strengths, and balancing structured approaches with open-ended exploration, you build a learning ecosystem where creativity and discipline reinforce each other.
In doing so, you don’t just implement a system; you shape a new organisational mindset. And that mindset, rooted in thoughtful design, informed debate, and a willingness to adapt, can be the difference between sporadic ideas and a self-sustaining culture of innovation.