๐งญ Dojo Compass
Meta Category: Decision-Making, Innovation & Strategic Thinking
Sub-Category: Innovation & Execution
๐ก Dojo Signal
Many organizations mistakenly believe innovation belongs exclusively to technology companies or highly creative industries.
As a result, they either avoid innovation altogether or pursue ambitious breakthrough projects that consume large amounts of time and resources without producing meaningful results.
Innovation is not a personality trait.
It is not a gift reserved for a select group of companies.
It is a system.
The key challenge is not becoming innovative. The challenge is finding an innovation model that fits a company’s unique DNA.
Organizations that align innovation with their natural strengths create sustainable competitive advantages. Organizations that pursue innovation strategies that conflict with their capabilities often create unnecessary risk.
โ๏ธ Core Principle
The most effective innovation strategy is the one that matches the organization’s DNA.
Innovation is often described as creating something new.
In practice, innovation can involve improvements in virtually every aspect of an organization, including:
- Products
- Services
- Internal processes
- Customer experiences
- Marketing methods
- Information systems
- Office environments
- Decision-making systems
Not all innovation, however, should be pursued in the same way.
Innovation exists on a spectrum.
Organizations should choose where to operate on that spectrum based on their capabilities rather than chasing breakthrough ideas for their own sake.
๐ฅ Dojo Principle
Do not force innovation. Fit innovation to your DNA.
Many organizations fail because they adopt myths about innovation.
Common misconceptions include:
Myth 1: Innovation only belongs to technology companies.
Myth 2: Innovation requires exceptional genius.
Myth 3: Innovation demands enormous financial investments.
Myth 4: Innovation is too vague to become part of a business strategy.
None of these assumptions are true.
Every organization can innovate.
The question is not whether to innovate.
The question is how.
The most successful organizations choose innovation models that fit their:
- Culture
- Resources
- Risk tolerance
- Industry dynamics
- Operating realities

๐ Applied Reality
The Three Innovation Models
Innovation can be viewed as a spectrum representing the distance between an existing product, service or process and its future state.
Three broad approaches emerge.
1. Incremental Innovation
This is the most common form of innovation.
Organizations make small improvements that are often suggested by their immediate operating environment.
Examples include:
- Improving customer onboarding
- Refining internal workflows
- Adding product features
- Simplifying documentation
- Reducing response times
Incremental innovation is often:
- Low risk
- Low cost
- Easy to test
- Highly repeatable
Importantly, incremental innovation is rarely linear.
Organizations experiment, learn, adjust and try again.
Even unsuccessful attempts create valuable institutional knowledge.
2. Leap Innovation
Leap innovation involves significant changes that create substantial differences between old and new ways of operating.
These innovations often occur when organizations import ideas from different industries.
Examples include:
- Restaurants using robotics
- Retailers adopting subscription models
- Manufacturers incorporating AI systems
- Professional services firms adopting platform-based delivery models
Leap innovation carries greater uncertainty because organizations must answer several questions:
- Will customers accept the change?
- Can operations support the change?
- Will the investment generate sufficient returns?
Leap innovations require disciplined execution.
3. Radical Innovation
Radical innovation is extremely rare.
These innovations often:
- Have no market parallel
- Challenge accepted assumptions
- Create entirely new categories
Many radical innovations emerge accidentally.
Examples include:
- Super Glue
- Teflon
- Penicillin
Because radical innovation is unpredictable, organizations should not build entire strategies around trying to produce it.
Instead, they should create environments where unexpected discoveries can be recognized and developed.
Assessing Organizational Innovativeness
Every organization has a different innovation capacity.
Several factors influence this capacity.
External Factors
- Industry conditions
- Competitive intensity
- Market maturity
- Customer expectations
Internal Factors
- Corporate culture
- Leadership philosophy
- Available resources
- Talent levels
- Existing systems and processes
Organizations should periodically assess where they naturally sit on the innovation spectrum.
Innovation Is Dynamic
Innovation capability is not fixed.
As organizations mature:
- Their resources change.
- Their experience grows.
- Their confidence increases.
- Their knowledge compounds.
Over time:
Yesterday’s breakthrough becomes today’s routine.
Yesterday’s leap becomes tomorrow’s incremental improvement.
Innovation strategies should evolve alongside the organization itself.
๐ฏ Dojo Takeaways
1. Every company can innovate.
Innovation is not limited to technology firms.
2. Innovation is a spectrum, not a single event.
Organizations can innovate through:
- Incremental improvements
- Strategic leaps
- Radical breakthroughs
3. Innovation should match organizational DNA.
Do not pursue innovation strategies that conflict with your capabilities.
4. Small improvements compound over time.
Many major transformations begin with small experiments.
5. Innovation is a continuous process.
Successful organizations build innovation systems rather than waiting for breakthrough moments.
๐ฅ Dojo Closing Reflection
Many organizations spend years waiting for a breakthrough that never arrives.
But breakthroughs are often the visible result of hundreds of small improvements accumulated over time.
Innovation is rarely a lightning strike.
It is usually a discipline.
The organizations that consistently outperform their competitors are often not the most creative organizations.
They are the organizations that build systems that allow innovation to happen repeatedly.
And the most effective innovation system is the one that fits the organization’s own DNA.
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