By Danielle Woodruffe
Photo of Bob Gutworth, courtesy of Parker
Parker invited elders who have served our country to a unique Memorial Day Service honoring a local family. The ceremony was held in conjunction with Elmwood Cemetery.
The Howell family had a grandfather who survived World War I and a father who died in the Battle of the Bulge in World War II. Both men were commemorated. Parker Veterans are proud to have served our country and happy to honor the Howell family.
“I think it’s nice that Parker is honoring Mr. Howell. You should honor people like that,” said Parker at Stonegate assisted living resident, Bob Gutworth. “At the Battle of the Bulge, I was laying bobbed wire in front of our positions. We were very thinly spread out, hoping that the German soldiers wouldn’t show up. We were up north a little bit so we lucked out.”
More than a dozen Parker veterans were in attendance. The ceremony included a poem reading of “Dulce Et Decorum est”, written by soldier and poet, Wilfred Owen during World War I and published posthumously in 1920. Participants wrapped up the service with the playing of Taps.
Over the last year I've been involved in many conversations about innovation, both here at Parker and at industry meetings. Whether it's called innovation, transformational work, creative thinking, or other catchphrase, we spend a lot of time trying to define what the words mean rather than doing the work. And I think that's because the work is hard to describe – what is innovation? Innovation can mean one thing here at Parker and something entirely different for other organizations.
Innovation on a grand scale is the uber-ization of transportation services. At Parker, it might mean enhancing an existing program to serve participants in a very different way, such as developing an app for our health and wellness program (a work in progress).
In many organizations, discussions about innovation happen at the highest levels of leadership. That's great for the small group of people involved, but what about the other 99% of an organization?
Innovation can happen anywhere in an organization. It's about fostering an environment that allows for creative thinking to flourish, where great ideas, and sometimes not so great ideas, can develop without bias, and a system is in place so these ideas can move through the organization to be acted on.
In an article I was reading about fostering innovation, there was a comment about "people performing their best when encouraged to push their boundaries and think outside the box." That sounds great, but in senior care organizations there is a tendency to focus on what we must do (i.e. regulations and compliance) rather than what we want to do.
This is where leaders must serve as role models for envisioning and communicating what the greater possibilities might be, and motivating employees to do the same. We've all heard the saying "there is no such thing as a stupid question”, and we must empower our employees to be comfortable in thinking that "there is no such thing as a stupid idea or suggestion."
If you build a culture of being receptive to new ideas and different ways of thinking from anyone, anywhere, in an organization, innovation becomes organic and employees will become engaged in the process on a day-to-day basis.
Roberto
"Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid." – Albert Einstein