“The two most important forms of diversity when it comes to innovation are visible diversity (typically skin color, age, gender, etc.) and underrepresentation (anytime someone is less than 15% of the majority group). Other forms of diversity are also relevant but these are the ones that psychologically play the most role in how someone engages with the innovative process.” TwoImportantPlayAgeFormProcessRolesGroupsColorDiversitySkinsInnovationMajorityGenderVisibleEtcRelevantInnovativeSkin Color Author:David Livermore
“Given the increasing diversity among customers and employees, organizations that attend to cultural intelligence are more successful.” GivenSuccessfulDiversityOrganizationCustomersEmployee Author:David Livermore
“When you start paying attention to diversity, you notice it (and notice its absence!). And based on the culture of your upbringing and the culture of your organization, you may or may not be primed to think consciously about innovation.” ThinkingMayCultureAttentionDiversityOrganizationInnovationAbsencePay AttentionUpbringing Author:David Livermore
“The more diverse your team, the better you'll be at identifying what a diversity of users perceive as problems.” ProblemTeamDiversityPerceiveUsersDiverseIdentifying Author:David Livermore
“The better you work to find the pain point and problem facing a diversity of users, the more clearly you can DEFINE the goal when you implement the process for culturally intelligent innovation.” ProblemPainProcessGoalDiversityIntelligentInnovationUsers Author:David Livermore
“Smaller companies are often more homogenous. Don't simply increase your diversity because of the social pressure to do so. Instead, realize that hiring a more diverse team will give you a whole new repertoires of innovative ideas. And then develop a strategy for effectively using the diversity of your team.” GivingIdeasWholeSocialRealizingCompanyTeamDiversityIncreasePressureStrategyDiverseInnovativeHiringSocial PressureInnovative IdeasDiverse Teams Author:David Livermore