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Tendayi Viki is an author and corporate innovation expert. As Associate Partner at Strategyzer, he helps companies innovate for the future while managing their core business. He has written three books: Pirates In The Navy, The Corporate Startup and The Lean Product Lifecycle.
He previously served as Director of Product Lifecycle at Pearson, where he co-developed an innovation framework that won the Best Innovation Program 2015 at the Corporate Entrepreneur Awards in New York. Tendayi has been shortlisted for the Thinkers50 Innovation Award and was named on the Thinkers50 2018 Radar List for emerging management thinkers to watch. He is also a regular contributor at Forbes.
In this episode, Tendayi discusses with Kaihan why innovation has to follow strategy and how you can become a pirate in the Navy (or an employee entrepreneur) to create new innovative solutions.
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"One of my pet peeves is when I meet heads of innovation and they say, 'My job is to let a thousand flowers bloom. There's no such thing as a bad idea.'and I just think that it sounds good in a sense that you want to democratize innovation, and yet it's very rare that I've ever found any innovation that is succeeded without some strategic connection."
-Tendayi Viki
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Episode Timeline:
00:00—Introducing Tendaya Viki + The topic of today’s episode
1:20—If you really know me, you know that...
2:04—What is your definition of strategy?
3:07—What got you interested in strategy?
5:13—Which comes first—strategy or letting ideas bloom?
6:18—What would you say you're most known for?
8:15—What story best illustrates why your concept is so important?
9:47—Could you explain your concept of "Pirates in the Navy?"
12:09—What framework or idea has been most impactful for you?
12:56—What's your favorite framework or tool that you like to use?
14:40—What are you working on now?
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Additional Resources:
Tendayi's Books
Thank you to our guests, thank you to our executive producer, Karina Reyes, our editor, Zach Ness, and the rest of the team. If you like what you heard, please follow, download, and subscribe. I'm your host, Kaihan Krippendorff. Thank you for listening.
Follow us at outthinkernetworks.com/podcast
5
2828 ratings
Tendayi Viki is an author and corporate innovation expert. As Associate Partner at Strategyzer, he helps companies innovate for the future while managing their core business. He has written three books: Pirates In The Navy, The Corporate Startup and The Lean Product Lifecycle.
He previously served as Director of Product Lifecycle at Pearson, where he co-developed an innovation framework that won the Best Innovation Program 2015 at the Corporate Entrepreneur Awards in New York. Tendayi has been shortlisted for the Thinkers50 Innovation Award and was named on the Thinkers50 2018 Radar List for emerging management thinkers to watch. He is also a regular contributor at Forbes.
In this episode, Tendayi discusses with Kaihan why innovation has to follow strategy and how you can become a pirate in the Navy (or an employee entrepreneur) to create new innovative solutions.
__________________________________________________________________________________________
"One of my pet peeves is when I meet heads of innovation and they say, 'My job is to let a thousand flowers bloom. There's no such thing as a bad idea.'and I just think that it sounds good in a sense that you want to democratize innovation, and yet it's very rare that I've ever found any innovation that is succeeded without some strategic connection."
-Tendayi Viki
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Episode Timeline:
00:00—Introducing Tendaya Viki + The topic of today’s episode
1:20—If you really know me, you know that...
2:04—What is your definition of strategy?
3:07—What got you interested in strategy?
5:13—Which comes first—strategy or letting ideas bloom?
6:18—What would you say you're most known for?
8:15—What story best illustrates why your concept is so important?
9:47—Could you explain your concept of "Pirates in the Navy?"
12:09—What framework or idea has been most impactful for you?
12:56—What's your favorite framework or tool that you like to use?
14:40—What are you working on now?
__________________________________________________________________________________________
Additional Resources:
Tendayi's Books
Thank you to our guests, thank you to our executive producer, Karina Reyes, our editor, Zach Ness, and the rest of the team. If you like what you heard, please follow, download, and subscribe. I'm your host, Kaihan Krippendorff. Thank you for listening.
Follow us at outthinkernetworks.com/podcast
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