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11/03/2026

Innovation with Purpose: Three Pillars to Guide How to Innovate

Image of Belén Agulló García, Executive Consultant of Innovation of Terra.

Innovation is often accompanied by noise. New tools, new acronyms, and new, bold promises for efficiency appear almost daily, especially when it comes to AI and automation. For many teams, the challenge is not a lack of ideas; it’s the decision on where to focus without losing sight of people, quality, and long-term impact.

At Terra, innovation is approached through a simple framework inspired by executive consultant of innovation Belén Agulló García’s “Innovation with Purpose” vision. It rests on three pillars that allow us to turn curiosity into meaningful change, without chasing technology for its own sake. 

Pillar 1: Start with the “Why” Before Choosing Any Tool 

One of the most common traps in innovation is beginning with a solution instead of a problem. Teams hear about a platform, a model, or a workflow that worked elsewhere, and they rush to replicate it. Often, their haste results in scattered pilots, muddy outcomes, and human fatigue rather than progress.

A purpose-driven approach, on the other hand, begins with key questions including:

  • What issue are we trying to solve?
  • Who will benefit from this change?
  • How will it improve quality, access, or collaboration?

These questions apply across sectors: healthcare teams may aim to reduce turnaround time for patient-facing information; gaming companies might focus on improving the consistency of player support materials; and education initiatives often seek to make learning content easier to access across languages. When the purpose is clear, technology becomes a means, instead of the driver

Pillar 2: Put People at the Center of Every Innovation 

At Terra, we approach innovation for clients in a way that considers everyone involved in the process. Linguists, reviewers, project managers, engineers, and the communities who interact with the final content all shape what success looks like.

This perspective changes innovation decisions in subtle but important ways. A workflow that saves time but increases the cognitive load for linguists, for example, may not be an improvement. Similarly, a tool that looks powerful but in effect complicates collaboration for clients may slow projects down rather than speed them up.

As Belén often emphasizes, “Innovation should respect the work people already do well.” Building on that idea, linguists can be seen as guardians of language who bring expertise to the table that technology alone cannot replace. When innovation supports linguists’ work instead of sidelining it, quality and trust in the innovation process tend to follow. 

Pillar 3: Measure the Impact, Not Just the Effort 

Trying something new always involves effort, but effort alone is not a measure of success. Innovation with purpose requires defining what success means before a tool or workflow is rolled out.

Depending on the context, impact might be reflected in improved quality, fewer errors, faster turnaround times, better client satisfaction, stronger team well-being, or wider access to information. Without these indicators, it becomes hard to tell whether an initiative should be scaled, adjusted, or paused.

This pillar also helps teams resist adopting technology simply because it is fashionable. Clear metrics create space for learning, not just deployment, and allow innovation to evolve rather than accumulate.

How the Three Pillars Work Together in Practice 

In real projects, these pillars are closely connected. An initiative typically begins by clarifying the “why”. Teams then involve the right people to understand needs and constraints. Then, a solution is selected and piloted with intention, not urgency. Finally, results are reviewed against predefined indicators.

This approach works across industries, since the sequence remains the same whether the context is gaming, healthcare, education, or the public sector. Purpose guides decisions, people shape implementation, and impact determines what comes next.

Conclusion 

The three pillars to purposeful innovation are simple by design: start with why, put people at the center, and measure impact. Together, they offer a practical way to navigate innovation without losing focus on what matters. Whether evaluating AI, exploring new collaboration tools, or rethinking internal processes, this lens can help teams move forward into new territory with confidence.

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17/02/2026

Innovation Consultancy: Turning Ideas into Meaningful Change 

“Innovation” is often treated as a buzzword; one that’s associated with big ideas, fast growth, or disruptive technology. In practice, though, innovation is a quiet process that’s carried out with great deliberation. It lives in everyday decisions; in how teams solve problems; in how we test new approaches and adapt to constant change. And it’s in this quieter space of brainstorming and adaptation where innovation consultancy can support organizations in turning ideas into action.

Innovation consultancy helps teams question existing processes, explore alternatives, and design solutions that are both creative and practical. Rather than offering ready-made answers, innovation consultants work alongside teams to guide thinking, structure experimentation, and ensure that work is intentional, and progress is sustainable.

What Innovation Consultants Do, Day by Day 

Innovation consultants work at the intersection of strategy, creativity, and execution. Their role goes far beyond brainstorming sessions or future-facing concepts; in fact, much of their work is grounded in everyday operations, where incremental changes can have a lasting impact.

This often means they’re analyzing workflows, identifying friction points, and helping teams decide what is truly worth changing. Innovation consultancy also involves facilitating collaboration across departments, aligning technology with human needs, and creating space for experimentation without unnecessary risk. Rather than pushing ideas forward too quickly, consultants help teams test, refine, and learn from these efforts before making any broad-scale changes.

In fast-changing environments, innovation consultants act as steady reference points. They support teams by navigating uncertainty, managing competing priorities, and maintaining clarity when timelines or expectations tighten. By encouraging reflection and continuous learning, they help organizations build innovation into how work gets done, rather than treating it as a separate initiative. 

Terra’s Executive Consultant of Innovation: Belén Agulló García 

Image of Belén Agulló García, Executive Consultant of Innovation of Terra.

At Terra, innovation consultancy takes shape under the direction of Belén Agulló García, executive consultant of innovation. Her role requires expertise in several areas including strategy, language, and real operational practice as her teams turn ideas into concrete, workable initiatives that hold up in day-to-day contexts.

Belén brings a strong academic foundation to her work. She holds a degree in Translation and Interpreting, a master’s degree in Audiovisual Translation, and a PhD in Translation and Intercultural Studies. Her broad academic background informs her understanding of how language, technology, and culture intersect—and interact—particularly in complex, multilingual environments.

On her professional path, Belén has spent more than fifteen years in the video game localization industry in roles such as project manager, translation director, and quality and innovation lead. This hands-on experience allows her to approach innovation from within existing workflows, with a clear view of any constraints, risks, and opportunities for meaningful change that may be at play.

In practical terms, her work includes:

  • Assessing processes and workflows to identify where change can add real value
  • Supporting teams as they explore new approaches, tools, or ways of working
  • Helping align innovation initiatives with business goals and human needs
  • Facilitating collaboration across departments that do not always work closely together
  • Evaluating how to introduce emerging technologies responsibly and sustainably

Training is another key dimension of her profile. For several years, Belén has taught video game localization and subtitling technologies in advanced degree programs and professional workshops in Spain, the United Kingdom, and France. This close connection to education keeps her perspective grounded in current practice and emerging needs.

Belén’s role is rooted in listening, asking the right questions, and creating conditions for teams to shape solutions that fit their particular context and needs. By staying close to daily operations, she helps ensure innovation remains relevant, practical, and achievable.

Innovation with Purpose 

A key principle behind Terra’s approach to innovation is the idea of purpose. We don’t innovate simply to keep pace with trends or to adopt tools just because they’re new. Rather, we guide our innovative work with intention and an enormous sense of responsibility.

As Belén explains, “Every time we want to innovate or introduce new technology, I like to start by asking why. Because we don’t do things just for the sake of it, but to move forward in a more meaningful, effective way.”

Innovation with purpose means considering the impact of change on people, teams, and the broader ecosystem. It involves asking whether a new approach improves clarity, inclusivity, or long-term resilience. It also means recognizing that technology should support human expertise, not overshadow it.

This mindset shapes how Terra approaches experimentation and growth. We evaluate innovation not only through efficiency gains, but also through its ability to strengthen collaboration, trust, and meaningful outcomes. Belén’s work reflects this balance, keeping the human perspective at the center of every innovation effort.

Conclusion 

Innovation consultancy plays an essential role in helping organizations navigate complexity with clarity and intention. By combining strategic insight with practical, everyday support, innovation becomes a continuous, integrated practice, rather than a fractured, one-time effort.

Through her role as executive consultant of innovation, Belén helps Terra approach change thoughtfully, and she supports our teams and clients with equal care as they adapt, experiment, and grow. Ultimately, Terra’s approach reflects a simple truth that Belén sees in her work every day: meaningful innovation happens when ideas, people, and purpose move forward in the same direction.