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How To Be Competitive In a Post-Covid World

Staying competitive post-pandemic will require a different approach from the one businesses took before the crisis.

by
Pete Newell and Ali Hawks

In times of crisis, societies innovate out of necessity. When the crisis is over, the urgency to act wanes, and we come to operate under a new version of  “business as usual.” But are all the new ways of doing business necessarily better than the old ways? And, more importantly, which new systems are only Band-Aids for persistent and serious injury?  

Unfortunately, these are questions many of us don’t want to think about. The answers are complicated and the results will be inconvenient. We’ve already been inconvenienced.  Sifting through new procedures may overshadow the hundreds of small workflow innovations currently occurring in your company. If not captured, these will get lost in the melee of returning to business as usual. 

The  businesses that think everything will go back to “the way things were” are operating on a going-out-of-business strategy. Customer behaviors will have changed irrevocably; old markets will close, new ones will open. The pace of technological change will continually increase, as it did before the pandemic. The businesses that will thrive in this new environment are those that will continue to leverage the tools and processes they adopted during the crisis. They’ll be the ones to capture new opportunities and drive their recovery faster than the competition.  

Here’s how to prevent the backward slide into “business as usual,” retain the right crisis-driven innovative processes, and insure your organization can adjust to a world with new business rules.

Roadblocks to innovating in established organizations

First it’s important to understand why innovation is or is not taking root in your organization.  

Drawing from years of enterprise-level diagnostic work, we’ve identified the six most common innovation bottlenecks:

— Most organizations lack an end-to-end innovation system. 

— Innovation happens in silos. 

— Senior leadership buy-in and support are not enough on their own to drive innovation. 

— Middle managers are not able to capitalize on high levels of support from senior leaders.

— Personal judgment -- not validated data -- tends to drive decision-making. 

— Data exists in abundance, but is not coherent, defensible, and in many instances is not the right data required for decision-making. Too little time is spent properly curating problems or creating pathways for getting solutions into the hands of those who need them. 


Pathway to continued success

With a bit of due diligence, your company can avoid these sticking points and remain competitive post-pandemic. The key is to start now, in the heat of the battle, by capturing the changes your organization is making -- and the processes by which the impossible is being accomplished. Laying those changes out in a framework that mirrors how innovation flows through your organization will help you understand how they relate to one another and your organization's mission. It doesn’t matter if it's a new collaborative software platform or a new sales process. And assess every change for its effectiveness in the future.  

To maintain the innovation momentum that kicked in during the COVID-19 crisis, take these six steps

Staying competitive post-pandemic will require a different approach from the one businesses took before the crisis. Businesses possess the way forward already: make the most out of the processes that are already serving  your company during these uncertain weeks. Odds are that necessity has already pushed you to adopt some winning tools and techniques. But first you’ll need to do the work of recording, understanding and assessing them. 



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