Glossary
Stakeholder Engagement
Stakeholder Engagement is the process of actively involving individuals or groups who have an interest in — or are affected by — innovation initiatives. It ensures that key perspectives are heard, expectations are managed, and decisions are informed by a diverse set of voices from across the organization and …
Definition
Stakeholder Engagement is the process of actively involving individuals or groups who have an interest in — or are affected by — innovation initiatives. It ensures that key perspectives are heard, expectations are managed, and decisions are informed by a diverse set of voices from across the organization and beyond.
In innovation, stakeholder engagement is not just about communication — it’s about collaboration. By involving stakeholders early and often, teams gain critical input that strengthens solution relevance, accelerates buy-in, and reduces friction during implementation.
Stakeholders may include business leaders, customers, end users, subject matter experts, or operational teams. Their engagement can take many forms: co-creation sessions, Judging Panels, pilot testing, or ongoing feedback loops.
Well-structured engagement builds trust and alignment, especially during phases like Validation and Scaling. It also reinforces innovation culture by creating shared ownership and transparency in how decisions are made.
For engagement to succeed, it must be intentional. Teams should clearly define who to involve, when, and how — and be prepared to listen, adapt, and act on input. When stakeholders see their insights reflected in outcomes, commitment increases and resistance decreases.
Relevant links and use cases
Nosco Consultancy – supporting stakeholder engagement throughout the innovation lifecycle
KUKA Use Case – example of engaging internal stakeholders to guide idea selection and implementation