A few days ago, I came across an article on Yahoo News – 3D-Printed Rocket Engine Part Passes Key NASA Test. I was eating a sandwich and waiting for a phone call, so I didn’t read it. I planned to look it up later. I thought if it was REALLY important, it would be on the news or the magic social media fairies would flood my Facebook page with the hundreds of ways I should feel about it.
We are all searching for innovation, and we all know that success in manufacturing is dependent on smart decisions, empowered employees, and delivering higher quality for lower cost. We know success is dependent on working smarter, faster, and more cheaply. Innovation is the key!
But how many of us are actually taking the steps to innovate?
How many of us are so focused on the next crisis, we don’t innovate? No one has time to innovate, we are too busy working reactively to put out emergencies to think proactively. Someone else will do it, or tell us to do it. Until “innovation” becomes a critical emergency (such as a process no longer works, or a customer demands it, or something is broken and needs fixing), innovation isn’t a priority.
But the future isn’t waiting. Its passing us by, and even Yahoo News can see it. Innovation works. Innovation created our industry… just ask Henry Ford and his assembly line. So I decided to do something about it. When a friend mentioned the, “Printed rocket thing that NASA did,” I realized I didn’t have anything intelligent to add. I wasn’t innovating, only spinning my wheels making excuses.
Now, I get my coffee in the morning and take a look at industry news. I think about how I work and where I spend too much time because the current tools aren’t working, and look for a solution. I come up with plans and make innovation a priority. I make sure I’m spending at least 10 minutes on innovation each day. I even set a clock
Maybe I’m an idealist, but the results speak for themselves. Innovation should never be the child of an emergency. Once you make the promise to yourself to be proactive in your innovation, even if it’s 10 minutes every morning, you’ll find fewer emergencies that require your undivided attention. Solve problems before they become an emergency.
Manufacturing thrives with innovation, a fact I believe many of us have forgotten. So what steps have you taken to innovate? How do you plan for the future in your business? Let us know, we’d love to hear from you.