Transformation and innovation are big buzzwords in today's corporate culture. According to a 2020 Garnter report, 60% of businesses mention that digital transformation is a topic of conversation in almost every board meeting. Where you focus your innovation efforts can be just as impactful as your methods of implementation. The end goal is the same: to implement changes that have a positive impact both within your company and in the industry as a whole. So, in this C-Suite viewpoint, we ask you to share your views on how specifically YOUR organization deals with transformation and innovation.

Have you documented your innovation goals along with a dedicated annual budget? Where and how does the process start... and what are the critical success factors that turn great "ideas" into actual implementation?

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Raul Moronta
Raul Moronta
CRME, CHIA, Chief Commercial Officer at Remington Hospitality

Purpose, Creativity & Inclusion - At Remington Hotels, our culture of innovation is rooted in 3 key principles: purpose, creativity, & inclusion. It all starts with defining the purpose, goal, and strategic plan of the organization. This becomes the foundation of any innovation. You have to be intentional about driving innovation and process change. This is particularly important in any organization where their main source of business is not the creation of new products and services. Evolution is part of any organization, and those who do so to stay ahead, as opposed to keep up, will not just survive long term, but thrive among their competitors.

Second is creativity. It might be overstating the obvious, however, you have to look at meaningful problems that need to be resolved. You have to evaluate the needs of the organization from a structure and resource perspective and find unique ways to solve them. Most times, the organization needs to resolve an issue or improve a process, however, it might not have allotted resources to do so. Focus on what you are ultimately trying to accomplish, and do not be bogged down with the messy middle or how the organization has dealt with it in the past. Isolate the issue from the current process. This will free you from prior prejudice, and you might come up with a completely different way to solve the same issue.

Next is Inclusion. The largest hurdle to every innovation process is the human element, so involve associates early and ask them to be part of the solution. That is why when we identify an issue, we form focused teams with their goal being to tackle the most urgent matters of the organization. Open discussions are held on a regular basis among the smaller teams and who then share their findings and recommendations with the wider leadership team for final decisions and approval.

Finally, you have follow through & measuring results. Each initiative needs to have a clearly defined goal and expected measurable results. Assign project champions whose responsibility is to keep the team focused on the objective and report results on a regular basis.

An organization which does not evolve is destined to shrink and eventually fail. Our CEO continuously reminds us that our goal is progress, not perfection. This has allowed us the freedom to try, fail, learn, and evolve in a safe and inviting innovative culture. 

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