
Diversity, Innovation and Modern Business Education

January 2010
Success in the new millennium, now more than ever, is associated with companies that find innovative solutions and new markets. The relationship between innovation and successful enterprise isn’t new and it isn’t confined to commerce. Innovative technologies, such as gunpowder and radar, revolutionized warfare. The printing press revolutionized not only education but what it meant to be educated.
But commerce seems to be the focal point of the most significant expressions of innovative thinking today. While history’s greatest innovations were typically attributed to a single, inventive mind, today’s breakthroughs are increasingly the product of collaboration. What’s more, these collaborations typically embody a meeting of minds that create new solutions and identify new opportunities through a melding of different disciplines, different cultures and subsequently very diverse perspectives. One could say that diversity is moving beyond its social and ethical framework to become a driver of business creativity and value creation.
Witness the collaboration between Michigan-born Larry Page and Moscow native and first generation American Sergey Brin. The meeting of these two Stanford Ph.D. students led to the founding of one of our era’s fastest-growing global organizations. What began as Page’s dissertation, an exploration of the mathematical properties of the Web, is now Google, an entity which some have called “the most powerful brand in the world.” Page and Brin combined their passion for computers and intellectual curiosity to create an enterprise with an estimated market capitalization in excess of $94 billion (source: Yahoo! Finance).
More than just a brand, in 2006 Google became an official part of the lexicon when both Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary and the Oxford English Dictionary defined the word “google” as a verb meaning “To use the Google search engine to obtain information on the Internet.”
Innovation has always had its roots in identifying solutions to problems and fulfilling unmet needs. Modern business innovation often springs from putting together old ideas in new ways or seeing opportunities for existing products, services and concepts in new markets. Today’s managers can be heard to observe that leading heterogeneous teams, representing multiple cultures and life experiences, is a greater challenge then managing yesterday’s more homogeneous work groups. Yet thought leaders like James O. Rodgers opine that “… the world is changing. It’s evident in the marketplace, the customer base and the pool of potential employees…organizations will increasingly look for managers who demonstrate competence in getting the best from all employees” (James O. Rodgers, Managing Differently). Diverse organizations and diverse work teams promise the greatest opportunity for unconventional thinking and innovation.
FEATURED ARTICLES
- Political Fundraising: Out from the Shadows into the Social
- Joe E. Harlan on Diversity and The Consortium
- Hispanizing Corporate America
- Top Ten Tips for Working Abroad
- Global Business Requires Iteration and Non-Linearity
- Is Only Speaking English Good Enough?
- A Summer in Uganda
- A Multilingual Point of View
PAST ARTICLES
- Wake Up Call to My MBA Generation
- Workplace Diversity Must Include Buy-in from Whites
- Beyond Ethics: The Challenge of Strategic Corporate Responsibility
- Sustainability, Inc.: The Business of Green
- Patrick Kuhse Speaks about Ethics
- Corporate Social Responsibility and the Job Hunt
- Corporate Social Responsibility: Attractive to Millennials and Rewarding for Corporate America
- The Future of Corporate Social Responsibility
- What it Takes to Lead
- The Anti-Formula Formula for Leadership
- Exploring Leadership: Translating What You Know About Leadership into Tangible Change
- The Evolution of The Consortium's Mission
- OP 2010 in 140 Words or Less
- Soledad O'Brien: The Interview
- Career Services Help Students Secure Positions
- Are Professionals of Color More Adversely Affected by The Economy?
- A Consumer Advocate’s Advice to Corporate America
- Finding Funding Sources
- Now is the Time to Get an MBA
- Reflections After a Period of Change
- International Ambitions
- The Value of Face to Face Networking
- MBAs Help Companies Make the Business Case for Green
- Fielding Finance Questions
- Give Back to the Consortium
- The MBA Diversity Pipeline: How Can We Fix It?
- Innovation with a Social Value
- The Myth of S-Curves
- Diversity, Innovation and Modern Business Education
- Moving Outside Your Network Sparks Creativity
- Creativity in the Classroom
- Bringing Your Personal Perspective to a Project
- What is Innovation?
- Henry Cisneros on the Future of Ethnicity in America
- Designing Organizations That are Built to Change
- Reflections of an Unwitting Technoholic
- The Consortium: Sustaining a Different Environment
- Millennial Meltdown?
- Where Have all the Boomers Gone?














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