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"Why, despite your company's arm waving about the importance of innovation, are your employees still not putting forth new ideas?" This was a question posed by the Harvard Business Review (April 2010), and here was their answer:
"It turns out they're afraid to. After surveying hundreds of employees ranging from managers to stock clerks, Feirong Yuan of the University of Kansas and Richard Woodman of Texas A&M found that worries about 'image risks' (unfavorable social impressions) significantly diminish workers' innovativeness. People whose roles don't explicitly call for innovation believe that coworkers will think negatively of them if they try to come up with better ways of doing things. In some cases they're even afraid they'll 'provoke anger among others who are comfortable with the status quo.'
"But leaders can have a big impact on this problem....Perceived organizational support for innovation significantly reduces workers' view of the social riskiness. The key is to create a sense of psychological safety: Provide an environment in which differences are tolerated and people feel free to approach problems in new ways."
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