
At Kraft Heinz, we are in the midst of transformation, accelerating profitable growth and driving innovation to deliver shareholder value over the long term. We have a laser focus on enhancing our Agile@Scale capabilities – which allow us to be nimble but with the scale of a large company – through partnerships with technology giants and cutting-edge innovators to lead the future of food. What's most exciting to me as a learning professional is the courage, curiosity, and confidence required for us as an organization to fuel this transformation from the inside out, focusing on supporting our people as champions of our brands, our consumers, and our company culture.
Not long ago, our global chief people officer Melissa Werneck pulled me aside and asked me a question that I found both exhilarating and confounding: “Let’s make HR more creative. How can we do that?” Exhilarating because creativity is my calling. Confounding because I had never given much thought to how to ‘teach’ creativity.” Like emotional intelligence, some believe creativity is innate, and those who believe it can be developed. I firmly believe the latter. Parkinson’s Law claims that work will expand to fill the time allotted for its completion; I believe similarly that creativity grows, or withers, on the proverbial tomato vine, based on the time and attention paid to it. Since the HR field is often associated with policy and procedure, how can we, as HR professionals, see ourselves anew? Creativity is a critical skill for all tied to problem solving, innovation, and strategic transformation. HR can be the unexpected leader in accelerating business transformation, paving the way to create the conditions that will best equip and empower teams to drive new ways of working. This sounds great in theory, but pontificating and executing are two very different things. Therefore, here’s my recipe (I work for one of the world’s largest food companies, after all) for how to cook up creativity in your team. Set the Temperature for Courage – Practice ‘loud courage.’ Leaders set the temperature through their actions, like a thermostat. Without ‘loud courage’ from leaders and open and honest dialogue about rewards and risks with managers, creativity becomes an uphill battle at best and a losing self-fulfilling prophecy at worst. Creativity grows from a willingness to try something new (and a recognition that with some of these trials, there will be discomfort, some successes, and, frankly, some failures). Outcomes lead to learning either way, and the tone and temperature the leader sets send a very strong message. Celebrate accomplishments, even if those accomplishments include recognizing what won’t work.HR can be the unexpected leader in accelerating business transformation, paving the way to create the conditions that will best equip and empower teams to drive new ways of working.


