The rapid shift to hybrid work accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic has fundamentally transformed organizational dynamics highlighting the need for innovation leadership in distributed environments. This paper addresses the evolving challenges of managing innovation in hybrid settings where traditional frameworks often fall short due to their reliance on co-located teams. The objective is to critically evaluate existing innovation frameworks and leadership models, identifying their limitations in hybrid contexts and propose a new hybrid-optimized innovation leadership framework. Through secondary research and a comprehensive literature review, this study synthesizes relevant academic and industry insights including perspectives on transformational, servant and digital leadership as well as innovation models such as Doblin’s Ten Types of Innovation and Open Innovation. The Hybrid Innovation Alignment Model (HIAM) is introduced, focusing on six guiding principles trust-based autonomy, digital inclusion, asynchronous collaboration, psychological safety, purpose-driven connectivity, and adaptive leadership. Key findings indicate that a hybrid-specific framework can foster innovation by integrating digital tools and adaptive leadership styles, while supporting asynchronous workflows and remote collaboration. This paper contributes both theoretically and practically by offering a flexible framework for hybrid teams, enhancing innovation processes and leadership effectiveness in increasingly distributed work environments.