Barriers to Innovation
Barriers to Innovation are the obstacles that limit or slow down the process of creating and
applying new ideas, products, or methods. These barriers can come from individuals,
organizations, or the external environment.
1. Barriers from Persons (Individual Barriers)
These barriers come from people's attitudes, fears, and personal situations that stop them
from supporting innovation.
• Resistance to Change: People prefer old ways and feel uncomfortable with new
methods or technologies.
• Personal and Professional Career Issues: Fear that innovation might affect their role,
promotion, or workload.
• Identity and Ego: Some individuals feel insecure or fear losing importance when new
ideas come from others.
• Employment Stability: People may resist innovation due to fear of job loss through
automation or change.
• 'Information is Power' Attitude: Some employees hide information to maintain control
or influence instead of sharing it for team growth.
2. Barriers from the Organization (Organizational Barriers)
These barriers come from the organization’s structure, culture, or leadership that prevent
innovation from growing.
• Cultural Paradigms, History, and Values: Old traditions and fixed habits make it hard
to accept new ideas.
• Vision and Leadership: Lack of clear vision or leadership support reduces motivation
for innovation.
• Systems of Recognition and Rewards: When creative efforts are not recognized or
rewarded, employees lose interest.
• Remuneration and Bonus Structure: Salary systems that only reward routine work
discourage creativity.
• Maturity of Organization: Older companies avoid risks as they are comfortable with
their current success.
• Vertical Structure and Silos: Departments that don’t share information or work
separately block teamwork and new ideas.
Barriers to Innovation are the obstacles that limit or slow down the process of creating and
applying new ideas, products, or methods. These barriers can come from individuals,
organizations, or the external environment.
1. Barriers from Persons (Individual Barriers)
These barriers come from people's attitudes, fears, and personal situations that stop them
from supporting innovation.
• Resistance to Change: People prefer old ways and feel uncomfortable with new
methods or technologies.
• Personal and Professional Career Issues: Fear that innovation might affect their role,
promotion, or workload.
• Identity and Ego: Some individuals feel insecure or fear losing importance when new
ideas come from others.
• Employment Stability: People may resist innovation due to fear of job loss through
automation or change.
• 'Information is Power' Attitude: Some employees hide information to maintain control
or influence instead of sharing it for team growth.
2. Barriers from the Organization (Organizational Barriers)
These barriers come from the organization’s structure, culture, or leadership that prevent
innovation from growing.
• Cultural Paradigms, History, and Values: Old traditions and fixed habits make it hard
to accept new ideas.
• Vision and Leadership: Lack of clear vision or leadership support reduces motivation
for innovation.
• Systems of Recognition and Rewards: When creative efforts are not recognized or
rewarded, employees lose interest.
• Remuneration and Bonus Structure: Salary systems that only reward routine work
discourage creativity.
• Maturity of Organization: Older companies avoid risks as they are comfortable with
their current success.
• Vertical Structure and Silos: Departments that don’t share information or work
separately block teamwork and new ideas.