{"id":9212,"date":"2021-08-16T08:07:20","date_gmt":"2021-08-16T15:07:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/garage-en-us\/?p=9212"},"modified":"2021-08-16T08:07:20","modified_gmt":"2021-08-16T15:07:20","slug":"microsoft-garage-partners-with-air-force-officer-to-grow-employee-led-innovation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-us/garage\/blog\/2021\/08\/microsoft-garage-partners-with-air-force-officer-to-grow-employee-led-innovation\/","title":{"rendered":"Microsoft Garage partners with Air Force Officer to grow employee-led innovation"},"content":{"rendered":"
At Microsoft, employees are trying new things and embracing lessons from success \u2013 and failure. They\u2019re seeking out diverse perspectives in a culture that practices a growth mindset. The annual company-wide Microsoft Global Hackathon, produced by The Garage, is a big part of that culture. The Garage was honored to work with Major Ryan \u201cMerlin\u201d Middleton of the U.S. Air Force for the past year to bring a different spin on innovation, learn from Hackathon projects, and help move ideas forward. Middleton\u2019s time at The Garage has helped Microsoft employees push innovative ideas upstream, and hone strategies that translate to other organizations, like the Air Force.<\/p>\n
When Middleton embedded with The Garage in July 2020, he brought 20 years of Air Force leadership experience to the group, eager to share his insights and discover how The Garage provides a safe space for Microsoft employees to invent and explore.<\/p>\n
In years past, Middleton had traveled the world on cargo aircraft delivering troops, medical aid, and supplies, meeting new people, and experiencing different cultures. He joined the Air Force to have an adventure and ended up with an exciting career. Most recently, Major Middleton came from the Chief of Staff of the Air Force\u2019s Blue Horizon Fellowship, a ten-month program that teaches officers how to create and test prototypes with strategic potential.<\/p>\n
\u201cI get the opportunity to work with really talented and motivated individuals, and there\u2019s always something new keeping me intellectually curious and growing,” said Middleton. That curiosity-driven approach to life seemed a natural fit for the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL), the organization Middleton is a part of now, with thousands of active-duty military, civilian scientists, and engineers. Their charter is focused on emerging trends, conducting experiments to demonstrate value and determine military utility of different technologies. Middleton came to The Garage to learn from another organization that seeks to identify and grow prototypes for business value.<\/p>\n
From the start, Middleton noticed similarities and differences between the Air Force and Microsoft. Whether someone is in the military or at Microsoft, everybody wants to be appreciated for the work they do and know that their work has an impact on the mission. \u201cHow do you do that and promote those values in a large bureaucracy or corporation? Those are similar questions that I think we ask ourselves all the time, how can we encourage employees to share their ideas and how do we give them resources to grow?\u201d Leadership across both entities have consistently invested resources in those areas.<\/p>\n
Another similarity is the question of how to socialize ideas outside of one\u2019s immediate group and gain traction. Middleton remarked, \u201cThat is one of The Garage\u2019s strengths \u2013 so that people can focus on creativity and the value of their idea, and The Garage can help you connect with the right people to grow and validate your idea. I think that\u2019s something a program like The Garage does really well.\u201d Groups in the Air Force are trying to do the same, to share ideas outside of their squadron and reach other teams.<\/p>\n
One area of difference he perceived was working with a majority of teams applying software solutions. At Microsoft, many of the teams have the skills and tools to quickly create and test software prototypes to solve a problem. While the Air Force does offer pathways to field solutions rapidly, many solutions require tools beyond software, which removes the rapid, low-barrier to entry advantage that software-only solutions provide.<\/p>\n
After working on almost twenty Hackathon projects, Middleton has internalized the benefit and importance of having a \u201chack culture.\u201d Hackathons bring groups together, promote cultural values, and are a way to source and identify ideas that have business value from all over the company. It connects teams with their senior leaders who ask challenging questions that make projects better.<\/p>\n
After his time at Microsoft, his perception of the company has evolved. \u201cI assumed Microsoft had incredibly talented people and that\u2019s just been reinforced as I\u2019ve worked with employees across the globe.\u201d One notion\u2013 that innovation came easier to a company like Microsoft \u2013 proved incomplete. \u201cBeing part of a large tech corporation with a reputation for excellence doesn\u2019t mean there\u2019s a magic formula to make solving problems any easier. You still need to rely on each other, work as a team, set goals and overcome challenges together. It\u2019s true for any organization regardless of what size or industry,\u201d said Middleton.<\/p>\n
Something that hackathon teams know well, as the nature of how a hack project forms is through a coalition of the willing, each person bringing their own set of skills and insights to the challenge. Hackathon projects lend themselves to self-organizing and dividing the work amongst team members. Scrappy and fast-moving to develop something in just a few days, hack projects are propelled by employees who are passionate about a cause or solving a problem that affects their lives, and not necessarily related to their day job. The freedom to decide what to hack on is just one of many reasons why employees choose to participate in the Hackathon.<\/p>\n
Maj Middleton worked alongside Ed Essey, the Garage\u2019s Director of Intrapreneurship. Essey has spent the past few years embedding with Hackathon winning teams to move projects forward through proof-of-concept, validation\/vetting the solution, to sponsorship and integration. Together they coached teams at all stages of the project lifecycle.<\/p>\n