You bring your smartest, most creative people into the room. You carve out time for brainstorming. You invite ideas. And yet—you hear from the same handful of voices every time.
If this sounds familiar, you're not alone. Many senior leaders assume that meetings and design thinking sessions are inclusive by default. But in reality, traditional approaches to collaboration often silence the very people who have the most valuable ideas. Not because they lack creativity, but because the format favors dominance over depth.
For CTOs, CPOs, and CIOs trying to spark innovation, this presents a hidden threat. Your boldest ideas might never be spoken. And the loudest voices? They’re not always the most insightful.
The Problem with Traditional Brainstorming
- Dominant Voices Steer the Conversation
Whether it’s the highest-ranking person in the room or the most extroverted, traditional brainstorming quickly centers around those comfortable speaking up early and often. Once a few ideas are shared, groupthink takes hold, and other perspectives are lost.
- Design Thinking Is Too Verbal
Design thinking was built to be inclusive. But in practice, it often relies on fast thinking, verbal agility, and public evaluation—conditions that inhibit reflection, dissent, and introverted contributors.
- Innovation Becomes Performance
When meetings reward quick wit and confident delivery, creativity becomes performative. People begin filtering ideas based on how they’ll be perceived, not on how valuable they are.
3 Things Leaders Can Do Right Now
You don’t need a full redesign to start hearing from everyone. These simple shifts can change the dynamic immediately:
- Start with Writing, Not Talking
Before opening the floor to discussion, ask everyone to spend five minutes silently jotting down ideas.
- Why it works: This levels the playing field by giving introverts and deep thinkers space to generate ideas without being interrupted.
- Use Round-Robin Sharing
Give each person a chance to speak without interruption before allowing open discussion.
- Why it works: This prevents dominant voices from steering the conversation too early and encourages equal participation.
- Separate Idea Generation from Evaluation
Don’t critique ideas as they’re shared. Collect everything first, then shift into analysis mode.
- Why it works: It reduces fear of judgment and keeps early-stage thinking expansive.
3 Longer-Term Shifts to Build Inclusive Innovation Culture
To consistently unlock the creative potential of your full team, you need to change not just your meetings, but your mindset.
- Redesign Your Collaboration Norms
Establish shared practices that elevate ideas, not personalities.
- How: Train teams on inclusive facilitation. Use collaboration tools that allow anonymous idea submission. Normalize quiet reflection as part of group work.
- Broaden Your Definition of Contribution
Don’t equate loud with valuable. Reward those who ask thoughtful questions, connect dots behind the scenes, or build on others' ideas.
- How: Celebrate a range of creative contributions in performance reviews and team retrospectives.
- Create Psychological Safety
If people believe their ideas will be judged harshly, they won’t share them. Period.
- How: Model vulnerability by sharing your own incomplete or unconventional ideas. Explicitly invite dissent and acknowledge it as a strength.
Final Thoughts
Innovation doesn’t fail for lack of creativity. It fails because creativity gets silenced—often unintentionally. If you want to unlock the full potential of your team, don’t just look for more ideas. Look for better ways to hear them.
The next time you walk into a brainstorming session, ask yourself: Who isn’t speaking? Chances are, that’s where your most original thinking is waiting.