Other-Focused Corporate Innovation: How Leaders Spark Creativity Beyond Themselves

walt disney

Innovation fails when leaders make it about themselves. The most transformational breakthroughs come when leaders make it about others—their teams, customers, and the shared story that gives the organization meaning.

Hence, other-focused corporate innovation: the convergence of creative collaboration, narrative clarity, and disciplined experimentation. It’s also the essence of Bob Weis’s approach to creativity and innovation. As former president of Walt Disney Imagineering, Weis helped translate dreams into destinations by focusing not on his own ideas, but on unleashing the creativity of others. His three principles – cultivating creativity, aligning through storytelling, and balancing people, process, and projects – form the backbone of sustainable, purpose-driven innovation.

  1. Foster Creativity by Focusing on Others

Weis’s first tenet is clear: creativity doesn’t happen by command; it happens by design. “You can’t impose creativity,” he has said. “You have to create the environment for it to emerge.”

That’s precisely what other-focused leaders do. Instead of trying to generate every big idea themselves, they create the conditions where their teams can imagine, explore, and build together. The leader’s role shifts from being the source of creativity to being the amplifier of it.

An other-focused approach means asking different questions. Instead of, What breakthrough do I want to achieve? ask, What obstacles do I need to remove so others can explore? How can I make imagination safe again?

LEGO’s transformation in the early 2000s offers a perfect example. After financial struggles, leaders refocused the company by empowering its creative designers—supported, not steered, from above. They fostered a culture built on curiosity and customer connection, spawning innovations like LEGO Ideas, which crowdsources product concepts directly from fans. That’s other-focused creativity in action—turning the organization outward to learn, listen, and co-invent.

  1. Use Storytelling to Align Innovation

Weis’s second insight – storytelling – anchors creativity in coherence. For Disney, every new project had to extend the company’s central story of imagination and joy. That narrative constraint didn’t limit innovation; it focused it.

The same holds true for any brand. Innovation divorced from story often leads to fragmentation: disjointed initiatives that confuse employees and customers alike. Storytelling turns innovation into orchestration. It ensures every new idea connects back to the enterprise’s identity and purpose.

Other-focused leaders use this discipline to invite others into the story, not just tell it themselves. Patagonia, for instance, continuously evolves its narrative of environmental stewardship by empowering employees and consumers to be protagonists – repairing clothing, advocating for conservation, and sharing local impact stories. The company’s innovations in both product design and purpose flow from that shared sense of storytelling ownership.

The key question isn’t What’s our story? It’s Whose story are we helping others tell through what we create?

  1. Balance People, Process, and Projects

Weis’s third principle captures the practical side of innovation: people, process, and projects. Innovation rarely starts with an edict. It starts with a challenge—a meaningful problem given to a diverse group empowered to solve it.

The casting of that group matters. When the same people meet in the same room repeatedly, they produce the same ideas. Weis treated innovation teams like film casts: bring together varied skills, perspectives, and experiences to unlock new viewpoints.

Other-focused leaders do the same. They assemble teams that reflect the diversity of those they serve. Diversity isn’t cosmetic—it’s catalytic. It expands empathy, leading to richer insights and better solutions.

Weis would often launch creative bursts—a one-week sprint, a design charette, a focused brainstorm—and then step back to let teams discover. That rhythm of intense focus followed by reflection produces not just results, but learning. Process becomes less about control and more about guidance: enough structure to channel creativity, enough freedom to let it breathe.

In corporate settings, this can translate into agile innovation programs, rotating project teams, or time-boxed challenges. The “project” becomes a lab where people and process intersect—and where leadership exists to facilitate, not dictate.

The Leader’s Role: From Architect to Gardener

Ultimately, other-focused corporate innovation redefines the leader’s identity. Instead of acting as an architect imposing structure, the leader becomes more like a gardener cultivating growth.

You plant seeds (ideas), tend the soil (culture), and shape the environment (story) so others can flourish. You don’t tell creativity where to grow—you guide its direction when it does.

The paradox of innovation is that the more leaders release control, the more creativity they unleash. That’s what Bob Weis practiced at Disney – and what forward-looking companies like LEGO and Patagonia continue to demonstrate across industries.

Other-focused leadership transforms innovation from a solo act into a shared journey. It’s not about having all the answers; it’s about asking the generous questions that enable others to find them.

When leaders orient their creative energy outward – toward people, purpose, and story – they don’t just spark innovation. They sustain it.

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