Creative Leadership Isn't a Lab, It's a Signal | #2
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概要
What if the biggest barrier to innovation isn't a lack of ideas, but the way leadership signals who's allowed to have them?
In this episode of What If?, Leslie Grandy explores what creative leadership actually looks like inside organizations and why so many companies mistake optics for impact when it comes to innovation.
When leaders ask "what if?", they do more than spark ideas. They create psychological permission the signal that curiosity, challenge, and early thinking are not only allowed, but expected. Without that signal, teams default to safe bets, incremental improvements, and inherited assumptions that quietly slow innovation to a crawl.
Drawing from her experience at Amazon, T-Mobile, and Best Buy, Leslie breaks down:
- Why innovation labs often create the illusion of progress while isolating creativity from execution
- How segregating "innovators" teaches the rest of the organization that innovation isn't their job
- What happens when brilliant ideas can't cross the boundary from invention to operations
- How cultural values like "data-driven", "continuous improvement", and "team unity" can unintentionally suppress breakthrough thinking
- Why creative velocity depends on leaders modeling intellectual bravery—not protecting the status quo
You'll hear a behind-the-scenes story of T-Mobile's Cameo product, an idea that failed not because it lacked insight, but because the organization wasn't designed to support what it imagined. Leslie contrasts that with Amazon's dual operating model: data-driven optimization paired with judgment-based invention, and why Jeff Bezos warned against the "tyranny of data."
This episode is for leaders who want more than performative innovation.
For teams tired of being reactive.
And for organizations ready to stop outsourcing creativity to labs, decks, or consultants and start embedding it everywhere.
Because creative leadership isn't about protecting existing systems.
It's about consistently inviting better ones to emerge.
Reflection question:
What if the signal your culture is sending isn't "be creative," but "don't rock the boat"?