Seed, scale, structure: new innovation in IOs report

Seed, Scale, Structure - Innovation in International Organizations
It is easy to implement new organizational structures on paper, but transforming processes and cultures to make innovation really work is a different challenge.
The United Nations Office at Geneva (UNOG) and the AVƵ’s i2i Hub held on Thursday, June 20, the launch of the new report “SEED, SCALE, STRUCTURE: How International Organizations Shape Innovation” written by ProfTina C. Ambos and Katherine Tatarinov, of the Geneva School of Economics and Management of the AVƵ.
"Innovation is not static, it’s dynamic, it’s a journey. And it is going to be crucial for achieving the SDGs."
ProfTina C. Ambos
The discussion with representatives of different UN bodies provided insights on a mix of established and growing innovation structures, and highlighted organizational innovation journeys, as well as the emerging roles innovators can play, which is crucial to fostering transformation and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.
Corinne Momal-Vanian, Director of Conference Management, UN Office at Geneva, emphasized that innovation has always existed within the UN. The most challenging part today is to empower people with the methodology and tools they need to innovate in an environment that is often restrained by how budgets are structured.
"There is no best way to organize innovation."
Katherine Tatarinov
Organizations are embracing different approaches to “organizing innovation” in order to be more agile, flexible and forward-looking, explained Katherine Tatarinov. Experimenting is, then, core to innovation. But experimentation needs space as explained Pradeep Kakkattil, Director of the Office of Innovations at UNAIDS. He urged organizations and people working for them to enable innovation with a lot of humanity, as experimentation sometimes comes with failure. But even when it fails, this is a step towards improvement.
"If you wait for someone to take a decision, trust me you will still be waiting. Take the decision (…) and assume that you may end up going in another direction the next month: we need to tread with humility when talking about innovation."
Pradeep Kakkattil
The discussion has been followed by a time for open questions from the audience, which fostered insightful views on how to get past the culture of caution, malaise, cynicism or indifference that often prevails in IOs. Much interestingly, Christopher Earney, Head of Innovation Service at UNHCR, made the point that innovation is not just about technologies: it’s about doing things better. Enabling innovation is, therefore, also about convincing people that things can be done in a better way and that this will not be overwhelming them.
As for the final world, ProfTina C. Ambos invited everyone to leave no one behind, especially when talking about innovation.
LG/BP

The authors
Tina C. Ambosis Professor of International Management and the Director of the Institute ofManagement at the Geneva School of Economics and Management (GSEM) of the AVƵ ofGeneva, Switzerland. She is also the Academic Director of the International Organizations MBA(). Her research and teaching interests include global strategic management andinnovation in the context of multinational corporations, technology start-ups as well asinternational organizations. Her work is regularly published in the top academic as well aspractitioner journals. Tina collaborates with several international organizations and shares herresearch insights in executive trainings and as a speaker.
Katherine Tatarinovis Research/Teaching Assistant and PhD candidate at the Geneva School ofEconomics and Management (GSEM) of the AVƵ. A former IT consultant andfreelance writer, Katherine’s research interests are digital transformation, social innovation, andentrepreneurship. She has published many Teaching Cases focusing on Information SystemsManagement and Digital Transformation.