Agile Learners are ideal for Innovation

Agility holds a special interest for me. I named my consulting business Agility Innovation Specialists and constantly am looking to emphasize that agility is really important to managing innovation.

I came across an article written a few years back by the Korn Ferry Institute and I thought it was worth extracting the top line thoughts as important in my advocacy of innovation.

If you want to read more from their report here is the link.

My takeaways from this:

“Learning agility is a reliable indicator of potential for leadership roles.

Why? Learning agile individuals excel at absorbing information from their experiences and then extrapolating from those to navigate unfamiliar situations.

They are often described as flexible, resourceful, adaptable, and thoughtful—in short, an ideal fit for mission-critical roles”

For this report they analyzed looking at scores on the four factors of learning agility: Mental Agility, People Agility, Change Agility, and Results from Agility and came up with a finding that seven distinct profiles described approximately two-thirds of the high learning agility people. The discussion of these seven profiles I will leave for the downloadable report to outline.

What I did find interesting was this:

Learning agility: Knowing what to do when you don’t know what to do” – sounds so right for innovation.

“Learning agility is the ability and willingness to learn from experience and then apply that learning to perform successfully in new situations”

People who are learning agile:
> Seek out experiences to learn from.
> Enjoy complex problems and challenges associated with new experiences.
> Get more out of those experiences because they have an interest in making sense of them.
> Perform better because they incorporate new skills into their repertoire.

A person who is learning agile has more lessons, more tools, and more solutions to draw on when faced with new business challenges.

Achieving to instill these from my innovation capability work, coaching and mentoring would be ideal, it is a way to seek out and learn innovation. Agile learners are potentially ideal for what is needed to manage innovation.

Of course, each of the learning agility profiles has a specific combination of strengths and developmental needs but I do like these generalized statements, it does sum up agility for me and fit in what I believe innovators need.

In their introduction I would like to go back to this, as it really sums up the agile person:

“Learning agile individuals excel at absorbing information from their experiences and then extrapolating from those to navigate unfamiliar situations. They are often described as flexible, resourceful, adaptable, and thoughtful—in short, an ideal fit for mission-critical roles.

For me, innovation is a mission-critical role.

Many organizations regretfully don’t recognize this enough but part of my mission is to raise innovation awareness and its ability to transform, to extend, to grow individuals, teams, and organizations. Becoming innovative offers that greater potential to be sustainable in what you do as you constantly look to evolve and learn.

I wish more would see the importance of having agility within innovation.

 

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Share

2 Comments

  1. Ian Hatch

    Great Blog, I was wondering where you see innovation in the next 5 years? I recently retired from the US Military and wanting to get into a business that follows and imprints ways of innovation. What companies should I be looking at? My military career was very structured and not always adapted to out of the box thinking. I would like to stay away from companies that perform that way. Any advice you can give me is much appreciated.

    – Hatch

Comments are closed