Shift your culture to achieve more creativity and innovation

We were engaged with a client where one of our recommendations was for the company to evolve their culture to be more creative and innovative. So we wrote a whole article about our past experiences with Organizational Culture.

If you’d like to chat with Dr. Jack about our team’s findings, you can email him at jack@groundedwithdata.com or click here to set up an appointment!

Culture Shifts

Academic literature has no shortage of research on organizational culture, from explanatory to testing specific relationships to testing theoretical models or presenting new, untested models. In our conversations with clients, we observe different leadership styles, but the most growth-oriented organizations are those whose observed leadership styles are consistent with transformational leadership characterized by Bass (1985). 

The central tenets of transformational leadership are to inspire followers through trust and respect by empowerment, idealized influence, intellectual stimulation, and considerations for individuals on the team (Bass, 1985), which drives efficiency, motivation, performance, loyalty, trust, and respect. Organizations should continue to embrace and develop the transformational leadership style to cultivate a culture based on creativity, innovation, problem-solving, learning, and client service.

Organizational Culture

Sensation seeking is a personality trait defined by the search for experiences and feelings, that are “varied, novel, complex and intense”, and by the readiness to “take physical, social, legal, and financial risks for the sake of such experiences” (Masson and Zuckerman, 2019 & 2009, respectively). Sensation seekers are also associated with heightened creativity. You can either hire a lot of Sensation Seekers to help spark creativity and increase employee performance in your business (which is a little risky), or you can focus on how to improve your organizational culture.

Yuniwati (2019) found that

1) Organizational Culture has a significant effect on Employee Performance, 

2) Sensation Seeking (e.g., sophisticated social cognitive mechanisms to make sensation seeking the basis for functional learning) has a significant effect on Employee Performance, 

3) Organizational Culture has a significant effect on creativity, 

4) Sensation Seeking has a significant effect on creativity, 

5) Creativity has a significant effect on Employee Performance. 

According to Song, Gu, and Wang (2019), three Human Resource Management [HRM] practices significantly improve creativity and innovation; namely, 

1) Creative skill-enhancing practices, 

2) Intrinsic motivation-enhancing practices, and 

3) Empowerment-enhancing practices.

Organizational Culture and Creativity and Innovation: 

Ndubuisit and Jamiu (2017) found that 

  • Transformational leadership is significantly correlated with creativity and innovation; 
  • Organizational culture is significantly correlated with creativity and innovation; 
  • Transformational leadership is significantly correlated with an organizational culture that drives creativity and innovation. 

Cristian – Liviu Vele (2016) discusses the relationship between transformational leadership and creativity, arguing that leaders should provide team members with the freedom and space to put their creative practices into place. Lindsey (2016) suggests that to foster creativity and innovation, an organization should use Kouzes and Posner’s five practices of exemplary leadership; specifically, 

1) Model the way, 

2) Inspire a shared vision, 

3) Challenge the process, 

4) Enable others to act, and 

5) Encourage the heart (Kouzes & Posner, 2011). 

According to Taha, Sirková, and Ferencová (2016), the strongest association between employee creativity and innovation is the feelings of psychological safety.

Client Service Culture: 

Hansen (2018) offers three suggestions for creating a client service culture: 

1) Make the Customer Experience Easy and Enjoyable, 

2) Always Strive to Be Better, and 

3) Acknowledge, Fix and Eradicate Mistakes.

Error Management: 

Wang, Guchait, Madera, and Pasamehmetoğlu (2018) discuss error management as a motivation tool finding: 

1) An error management culture has a significant positive influence on manager trust and group efficacy, 

2) Manager trust and group efficacy mediates the relationship between error management culture and employee creativity, and 

3) Manager trust and group efficacy were found to mediate the relationship between error management culture and employees’ organizational commitment.

Changing the organizational culture can be an extremely challenging task. It requires a clear strategic vision, reinforcement of new values, and reshuffling the power-reward system to fit the new strategy (Brown, 2010). 

For example, an organization may have a positive culture based on transformational leadership but should continue developing that culture by reinforcing positive behaviors and empowering team members to be creative and innovative, client-orientated, and embrace learning from mistakes (as long as they are original).

To learn more from the different research we’ve conducted and learnings from our lives, check out our articles on the Resources Portal.

NOTICE: If you would like to use or cite our research for your own purposes, please email Patti@GroundedWithData.com so we may provide you with the proper citation information