Steinar helps organisations and individuals unlock their potential through the exploitation of design thinking, design management and design methodologies. He focuses on how to improve organisational performance and innovation capacity through stakeholder engagement strategies, through building creative capacity and a design driven culture, and through fostering the capabilities to effectively manage creative processes.
His book ‘INNOLITERACY – from design thinking to tangible change’ encourages reflection and inspires you to embark on your next development or change project. Taking its departure in the idea that all change for the better is innovation, the overall message of the book is to allocate much more resource to the earliest phases of a project – to the fuzzy front end, where the problem is unveiled and understood, defined and challenged, and where the roadmap for how to replace the existing with something better is drawn.
Steinar is an accredited member of the DBA’s Experts Register.
Indecisiveness, on the other hand, seems to be less in demand. Indecisiveness is perceived to be a weakness of doubt and bewilderedness. Something that slows momentum by keeping doors open, allowing new alternatives to be brought to the table, and keeps the discussion going for as long as it takes. Indecisiveness also takes more time – time for reflection – because nothing is final, everything can be improved, or at least done in other ways. Even, possibly, with better results.
On an individual level, team members can be encouraged to reflect upon their own roles in the organisation, on the organisation’s overall activities and performance, or on current and specific issues of concern.
Moreover, instead of depending on inputs from ‘he who shouts louder…’, structured reflective processes ensure that all team members contribute, that all input is considered equally valuable, and that everyone builds confidence in their own gut feelings.