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Why Aren’t Things Improving?

Robyn M. Bolton Author Interview

Unlocking Innovation introduces leaders to a framework called the ABCs—Behavior, Architecture, and Culture — by blending personal anecdotes, fictionalized case studies based on real people, and practical tools to guide readers through the psychological, structural, and cultural challenges that make or break innovation efforts. Why was this an important book for you to write?

For a long time, I resisted the idea of writing a book.  Having spent most of my career in corporate innovation, the one thing I knew for certain was that the world did NOT need another book about innovation!  There are thousands, maybe millions, out there, yet none of them have changed the results that corporates get from their innovation investments.

But then it hit me:  If there are so many books about how to improve something, why aren’t things improving?

As I reflected on my experiences, patterns emerged: brilliant executives treating innovation like operations, teams getting crushed by unrealistic expectations, and 90% of corporate labs shutting down within three years. But it all boiled down to one thing.

Innovation isn’t an idea problem. It’s a leadership problem.

We’ve got plenty of ideas. What we don’t have are leaders who understand that everything that made them successful operators will doom them as innovators. This book exists because every executive tasked with innovation deserves better than innovation theater and false hope.

What were some ideas that were important for you to share?

First, do the opposite of your instincts. Like George Costanza, if every instinct you have is wrong, then the opposite would have to be right. It’s a simple concept that is incredibly hard to adopt.  After all, your professional success created and honed your instincts, so ignoring them isn’t just difficult, it’s illogical.  But innovation and operations are opposite worlds, which is why you need to do the opposite of the instincts that made you a successful operator.

Second, stop obsessing over finding the perfect process or structure for innovation.  Those things are necessary but not at all sufficient for success.  Instead, take a holistic approach by building the ABCs: Architecture, Behavior, and Culture. And focus on leadership behavior first because that’s what makes or breaks innovation investments.

Third, innovation is not an event.  Stop wasting time and money on one-off hackathons, shark tanks, and startup field trips.  Innovation ROI requires long-term investment not a one-day offsite.

What is one piece of advice you wish someone had given you when you were younger?

“I don’t have time” means “It’s not a priority,”  and that’s perfectly fine because not everything can be a priority.  As leaders, though, we need to own it and be honest about why we’re not engaging in something.  And, as innovators, if we think something should be a priority, we need to work to figure out why it’s not and how to make it one. 

Also, reflection isn’t navel-gazing; it’s how you turn experience into wisdom. Make time for it.

What is one thing you hope readers take away?

Success isn’t about beating the odds—it’s about changing lives. Every time you show someone they’re capable of more than they imagined, you’ve won. The real innovation isn’t the product you launch. It’s proving that doing the impossible is actually possible.

Plus, you should definitely have a cookie while doing all this. I recommend chocolate chip.

Why do most corporate innovation efforts fail?

Only 1 in every 50,000 incubated ideas reaches $1 million in sales. If you ask most corporate executives why their companies’ innovation efforts fail, they’ll blame a lack of ideas or not enough big ideas. Innovation expert Robyn M. Bolton knows that innovation isn’t an idea problem, it’s a leadership problem. To drive real innovation, executives must defy the very instincts and behaviors that made them successful operators.

In Unlocking Innovation, Bolton draws on her twenty-five years of advising leaders to provide a practical, holistic innovation framework. Her ABCs of Innovation show leaders how to reshape their roles, teams, and organizations to create new value and catalyze corporate renewal from within. Using real-life stories, Bolton follows innovation leaders’ trajectories from heading up a new team and generating first results to navigating the inevitable crosswinds, complications, and conflicts—and ultimately delivering success. Unlocking Innovation is the essential guide for any leader tasked with innovating inside an established organization.

Unlocking Innovation: A Leader’s Guide for Turning Bold Ideas Into Tangible Results

After reading Robyn M. Bolton’s Unlocking Innovation, I can confidently say this book is a grounded, clear-eyed roadmap for any leader tasked with driving innovation inside a large organization. Structured around a three-year journey, the book presents a framework called the ABCs—Behavior, Architecture, and Culture—to help leaders navigate the real-world messiness of turning ideas into results. Bolton blends personal anecdotes, fictionalized case studies based on real people (like Hope, Faith, and Victor), and practical tools to guide readers through the psychological, structural, and cultural challenges that make or break innovation efforts. It’s not about dreaming up ideas; it’s about executing them.

Bolton’s voice is smart and strategic without being stiff. She has a gift for calling out corporate B.S. in a way that makes you laugh. Her stories, especially those that show leaders hitting roadblocks or being sidelined, felt familiar. The emphasis on behavior was a refreshing twist. Most business books obsess over frameworks and processes, but this one starts with the leader’s instincts, habits, and emotional resilience. It reminded me that sometimes, the biggest barrier to innovation isn’t the budget or the board, it’s us. Her advice to “do the opposite” of what made you successful in traditional roles resonated with me.

The year-by-year breakdown sometimes felt rigid, but even then, Bolton anticipates this and builds in flexibility. Her “Know Your” sections and TL;DR summaries are smart additions—like breadcrumbs through a dense forest. And the running joke about cookies was both charming and weirdly effective.

Unlocking Innovation is one of the few business books I’d recommend without hesitation to anyone leading innovation inside a complex organization. It’s especially useful for middle and senior managers who feel stuck between the C-suite’s demands and their team’s frustrations. If you’re tired of fluffy innovation talk and want something that respects both your intelligence and your time, this book is for you.

Pages: 223 | ASIN : B0DTRXX23S

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