INNOVATION CYCLE STEP 4: IF IT WINS, CELEBRATE IT; IF IT FAILS, SUNSHINE IT
If Sheilaâs initiative succeeds, make it clear youâre delighted. You might pat her on the back, offer her a glass of champagne, or take the entire team out to dinner. How you celebrate is up to you. The one thing you must do is show, ideally in public, that you are pleased she went ahead despite your doubts and offer a clear âYou were right! I was wrong!â to show all employees itâs okay to buck the opinion of the boss.
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The Netflix Innovation Cycle
If you have an idea youâre passionate about, do the following:
- âFarm for dissent,â or âsocializeâ the idea.
- For a big idea, test it out.
- As the informed captain, make your bet.
- If it succeeds, celebrate. If it fails, sunshine it.
âINNOVATION CYCLE STEP 1: FARM FOR DISSENT . . . Finally, one VP said to me, âYouâre so intense when you believe in something, Reed, that I felt you wouldnât hear me. I should have laid down on the tracks screaming that I thought it would fail. But I didnât.â
The culture at Netflix had been sending the message to our people that, despite all our talk about candor, differences of opinion were not always welcome. Thatâs when we added a new element to our culture. We now say that it is disloyal to Netflix when you disagree with an idea and do not express that disagreement. By withholding your opinion, you are implicitly choosing to not help the company.
INNOVATION CYCLE STEP 3: AS THE INFORMED CAPTAIN, PLACE YOUR BET⌠For each important decision there is always a clear informed captain. That person has full decision-making freedom. In Erinâs scenario, Sheila is the informed captain. Itâs not for her boss or any of her colleagues to decide. She collects opinions and chooses for herself. She is then solely responsible for the outcome.
Often a failed project is a critical step in getting to success. Once or twice a year, at our product meetings, I ask all of our managers to complete a simple form outlining their bets from the last few years, divided into three categories: bets that went well, bets that didnât go well, and open bets. Then we break up into smaller groups and discuss the items in each category and what weâve learned from each bet. This exercise reminds everyone that they are expected to implement bold ideas and that, as part of the process, some risks wonât pay off. They see that making bets is not a question of individualsâ successes and failures but rather a learning process that, in total, catapults the business forward. It also helps newer people get used to admitting publicly that they screwed up on a bunch of stuffâas we all do.
2. DONâT MAKE A BIG DEAL ABOUT IT
If you make a big deal about a bet that didnât work out, youâll shut down all future risk-taking. People will learn that you preach but donât practice dispersed decision-making⌠Reedâs reaction is the only type of leadership response that encourages innovative thinking. When a bet fails, the manager must be careful to express interest in the takeaways but no condemnation. Everyone in that room left with two major messages in mind. First, if you take a bet and it fails, Reed will ask you what you learned. Second, if you try out something big and it doesnât work out, nobody will screamâand you wonât lose your job.
3. ASK HER TO âSUNSHINEâ THE FAILURE
If you make a bet and it fails, itâs important to speak openly and frequently about what happened. If youâre the boss, make it clear you expect all failed bets to be detailed out in the open⌠Itâs critical that your employees are continually hearing about the failed bets of others, so that they are encouraged to take bets (that of course might fail) themselves. You canât have a culture of innovation if you donât have this. At Netflix, we try to shine a bright light on every failed bet. We encourage employees to write open memos explaining candidly what happened, followed by a description of the lessons learned.
Steps in Behavior Design:
Step 1: Clarify the Aspiration
Step 2: Explore Behavior Options
Step 3: Match with Specific Behaviors
Step 4: Start Tiny
Step 5: Find a Good Prompt
Step 6: Celebrate Successes