Defining Strategic Stretch Goals to Stimulate Innovation in Organizations

iStock_000005127182XSmallTake a random CEO and ask him what he expects from his employees and you will very often hear that his employees should think outside-the-box, challenge the status quo and come up with radical new ideas and execute them to achieve extraordinary business results.

Even though top-management encourages employees to try something new and give them a “permission to fail”, many people do not go the extra mile but prefer to stay in a mode of “comfortable apathy”. It is too risky for many employees because if their endeavor fails, they risk their career, might lose their bonus, and in the worst case even their job. One can understand employees when they ask themselves “Why should I go the extra mile, when I can risk my bonus and career chances?”

Overcoming these challenges is difficult and there is definitely no silver bullet but with a different take on performance goals, it might be possible to stimulate the willingness to innovate and drive change while at the same time providing measure that limit the employee’s risks.

Strategic stretch goals to stimulate innovation

By reaching for what appears to be the impossible, we often actually do the impossible. And even when we do not quite make it, we inevitably wind up doing much better than we would have done.Jack Welch

The concept of stretch goals has been broadly applied at General Electric in order to limit the annual bargaining between managers and their employees on performance goals. Stretch goals should limit such negotiating and improve long-term view, stimulate breakthrough ideas and justify trade-offs in one year to harvest the benefits in the following years.

A definition of stretch goals

Strategic stretch goals are goals that cannot be achieved with what is known and how is worked today. They aim for something that is impossible today.

This definition is important because setting the wrong stretch goals will burnout your people. Such tactical stretch goals are goals that can be achieved with the current way of work and they usually result in employees doing more of the same – which ultimately means longer hours.

Strategic stretch goals really push the boundaries of what is assumed to be possible to strive for the impossible. Only when you aim for the impossible, something that cannot be achieved with existing practices, you have the “pressure” to come up with radical new ideas instead of increasing your workload.

An example

Let us assume that you have defined a 10% growth goal for your business segment in the coming year. Instead of defining a tactical stretch goal of 15% growth for next year, a strategic stretch goal would aim for a 50% growth. Confronted with such a growth target, managers would have to come up with different solutions than simply working harder and longer. Maybe new distribution channels, new partnerships or other strategies could be a solution but working longer hours will not even bring you close to the 50% growth.

The “urgency” to innovate

Defining strategic stretch goals gives employees that are willing to innovate an opportunity to realize their ideas. For those that do not see the need to innovate yet, stretch goals can create a “sense of urgency” that stimulates and forces them to work on ideas that help to achieve these goals. The point of “pressure” and “sense of urgency” is not to get people working harder. It is to get people to do things differently and raise the capability of the organization.

How can you define stretch goals in your organization?

If you have not defined stretch goals in your organization, it will be difficult to introduce the concept, define them and link them to the bonus system in your organization. Nevertheless, you could easily run a workshop where you define stretch goals and work together with other people in your organization to develop radical ideas that might bring you closer to the strategic stretch goal.

Bernhard Schindlholzer

written by

Founder and Editor of CXAcademy