Innovation is no longer optional at work; employees are expected to bring new ideas, improve processes, and think creatively as part of their day-to-day roles. But new data suggests that expectation is colliding with a quieter reality: many workers are still afraid of what happens if they get it wrong.
A study by INTOO and The Harris Poll finds that 74% of U.S. employees say innovation is part of their job, and 78% report regularly contributing new ideas. Even so, 64% say they wish they were doing more, pointing to a growing pressure to keep up.
High Expectations, Uneven Confidence
On the surface, many workplaces appear supportive. Most employees say their managers are open to new ideas, and a large majority believe mistakes are treated as learning opportunities. Many also report feeling comfortable trying new approaches or admitting when they do not have all the answers.
A significant share of workers still hesitate. Forty-one percent say they worry a simple mistake—like incorrect information or a missed task—could cost them their job. That concern exists alongside otherwise positive perceptions of workplace culture, creating a disconnect between what companies promote and what employees actually feel.
That gap matters. When employees are unsure how failure will be handled, they are more likely to hold back, even in environments that encourage experimentation on paper.
Innovation Pressure Is Rising Across Generations
The expectation to contribute ideas is especially strong among younger and mid-career workers. Employees between 18 and 44 are more likely to say they regularly bring innovative thinking to their roles compared to older peers.
For many, creativity has become a way to demonstrate value and stay competitive. But that pressure is not evenly distributed. Older workers are less likely to feel their ideas are welcomed, raising questions about whether all employees are being given the same opportunity to contribute.
If innovation is tied to career growth, uneven participation could create new divides inside organizations.
The Real Barrier Isn’t Ideas
The data points to a clear tension. Employees are participating, managers are generally receptive, and companies are encouraging experimentation. Yet hesitation persists due to uncertainty around risk.
When expectations to innovate are paired with fear of consequences, employees are pushed into a balancing act—contribute, but do not fail. That dynamic can limit how bold those contributions actually are.
What This Means for the Future of Work
As innovation becomes embedded in everyday roles, the challenge for organizations is making sure employees believe they can act on their ideas without penalty.
That requires more than policy, and depends on how managers respond to mistakes, how feedback is delivered, and whether employees see real examples of risk-taking being rewarded rather than punished.
Without that consistency, the push for innovation may stall — not because employees are unwilling, but because they are calculating the cost of getting it wrong.















