Title: Creativity
1Creativity
2Agenda
- Questions
- Creativity topics
3Creativity
- Changing paradigms
- Use creative problem solving
- Also useful for opportunity finding
4The 4-Ps model of creativity
- Person
- Process
- Product
- Press (environment)
5Thats impossible!
- Translation
- Based on the paradigm we use today, we dont know
how to do it
6Whats a paradigm?
7Paradigm examples
8Whats the importance of this Paradigm stuff?
- Watch example
- Bicycle example
9Definition
- To be considered creative, a solution or idea
must - Be new, or unique
- Have utility or value (solve the problem)
10Why are we teaching this?
- Yet another tool in your toolbox
- BUAD 100 is a first course for many
- When you were young....
11There are twenty-two creativity techniques
- Not all apply to a certain situation
- Many apply to more than one type of situation
12Creativity research
- Youll never be more creative than you are today
- Youll gain more knowledge, but youll
continually lose your creativity
13Creativity research
- A drastic drop-off in creativity occurs at about
the 4th grade - Discouraged from inquiry
- Parents not as patient
- Education process tells you there are right and
wrong answers - Peer pressure to conform
14Creativity research example
- Architecture seniors are far less creative than
architecture freshmen - Taught building codes, constraints of materials,
consumer tastes - Narrowing our perspective
15The good news
- Creativity can be restored
- The CPS methodology can be used to bring our
creativity back to where it was when we were
younger - Supported by 100s of studies on CPS and
creativity
16Five steps common to all problems (p. 119)
- Problem definition
- Compiling relevant information
- Generating ideas
- Evaluating, prioritizing ideas
- Developing implementation plan
17Creative thinking Generative thinking Divergent
thinking
Critical thinking Evaluative thinking Convergent
thinking
Each CPS Phase
18Couger variant
- Three refinements
- Opportunity finding, not just problem solving
- Emphasis on starting point/iterative process
- Identification of creativity techniques useful
for each phase
19Interrogatories
- An analytical technique
- Phrase a question about the problem using each of
the 5 Ws and H - Why, who, where, what, when, and how
20Application exercise
- Your boss asks you to help on the problem of
reluctance of some employees to use the computer
for their job activities - Use the interrogatories technique (5 Ws and H)
21Application exercise
Why are people in our company reluctant to use
the computer for their job activities? Who... Whe
re... What... When... How...
22Analogy/Metaphor
- Intuitive technique
- Use an analogy, and apply that to the problem
- Recommend using nature analogies
23Analogy/Metaphor
- Apply the baby birds analogy to the previous
problem of employee reluctance to computer use
24Baby bird analogy
- Fear of flying from the nest
- Does the organization allow employees to take
chances? - Pressure to behave like the other birds
- Does that pressure exist in our organization?
25No company and no organization within a company
is immune to creativity improvement
All employees need creativity as a part of their
skill-set
261st part summary
- Twenty-two techniques
- Analytical and intuitive techniques
- Help restore the creativity we lost around the
4th grade, and continue to lose - CPS can restore our creative levels
- Every company/department needs improvement
27Creativity exercise
- In one minute, generate as many uses as possible
for a paperclip
28Creativity exercise
- Using attributes association, you could have
doubled your output - The objective here is to improve your fluency of
ideas - The more ideas you generate, the more likely an
optimal one will emerge
29Attribute association
- Identify the attributes of a paperclip
30Attribute association
- Identify the attributes of a paperclip
- Smooth edges
- Flexible
- Sharp, pointed
- Light weight
- Low cost
- Curved
31Attribute association
- Identify the attributes of a paperclip
- Smooth edges smooth paper, clean ear
- Flexible fastener, hook, jewelry
- Sharp, pointed weapon, pop balloons
- Light weight ammo
- Low cost
- Curved
32Conceptual blocks to creativity
- Perceptual
- Emotional
- Cultural
- Environmental
- Intellectual
33Perceptual blocks
- Accepting as facts data that are really
unsubstantiated assumptions - Difficulty in isolating the problem
- Narrowing the problem too much
- Broadening the problem too much
- Failing to use all the senses - over reliance on
sight
34Emotional blocks
- Fear to make a mistake, to fail, to risk
- Preference for judging ideas, rather than
generating them - Fear and distrust of supervisors, associates, and
subordinates - Difficulty in changing our mind-set
- Overly strong desire for closure
35Cultural blocks
- Overly strong desire to belong
- Desire to be practical and economical
- Feeling that it is not polite to question
- Stereotyping
- Fear of asking questions that show ignorance
- Belief that problem-solving is serious
36Environmental blocks
- Lack of cooperation and trust among colleagues
- Distractions - phone, easy intrusions
- Lack of support to bring ideas into action
- Over-emphasis on cooperation or on competition
- Punishment for risk-taking that doesnt work out
37Intellectual blocks
- Strong tendency is to use only those solutions
that worked before - Reliance on logical thinking
- Hesitancy to use intuitive thinking approaches
- Too much faith in statistics and past experience
38Intellectual blocks
- Fear of exploring the unknown
- Mind-sets
- Paradigm fixation, where we have difficulty
viewing things outside our normal view of the
world
39Key objective
- Once we are aware of our conceptual blocks, we
can begin to tear them down - Doing so will enable us to identify a myriad of
alternatives and possibilities that were hidden
to us
40Torrence test of creativity
- Measures fluency
- Measures originality
- How many of your ideas were rarely mentioned by
others taking the test
41Lotus blossom technique
- Continually breaking things down into simpler
units - Like peeling back the petals of the Lotus blossom
42(No Transcript)
43Wishful thinking technique
- State the question, goal, or problem
- Assume anything is possible
- Make a wish
- Examine each fantasy statement, use it as a
stimulation, and react with statements like, We
could do that if..., or That would work if...
44How practical is this?
- Average return on investment of 300
- TQM returns 100
- RD returns 20
45Creative vs. critical thinking
46Creative thinking
- Gives us new ideas
- An exercise in imagination
- Produces various conceptions of the problem or
issue, various ways of dealing with it, and
possible responses to it
47Critical thinking
- Comes into play AFTER we have an idea to try, a
theory to test, or a proposition someone wants to
prove - Helps us interpret complex ideas
- Helps us appraise the evidence offered in support
of arguments
48Creativity exerciseassociation fluency
- Make up one silly or bureaucratic sounding title
for the following occupations - Plumber
- Disc jockey
- Undertaker
49Blooms taxonomy
- Knowledge
- Comprehension
- Application
- Analysis
- Synthesis
- Evaluation
Spending 90 of your time below this line
retains 85 of the acquired knowledge
50Knowledge
- Grasping basic facts
- List the steps in system design
- Describe a consumer preference survey
- Define return on investment
51Comprehension
- Understanding the meaning of basic facts
- Explain the purpose of a system design
- Summarize the reasons for computing ROI
- Defend the use of performance appraisal systems
52Application
- Ability to use learned material relating the
new material in a new context - Solve an ROI problem
- Relate the steps in designing a system to those
for building a house
53Analysis
- Take an item apart and decide what the parts are
e.g. take a concept apart - Separate an employee performance appraisal system
into its key components - Discriminate the key elements for conducting
effective consumer surveys
54Synthesis
- Ability to put parts back together integrating
what is known from other areas with this subject - Organize a consumer survey
- Generate an appraisal system for a pet instead of
a human
55Evaluation
- Ability to judge the value of material (output,
results) for a given purpose - Evaluate a system design
- Support the value of use of ROI for a non-profit
organization
56BREAK through thinking
Conventional thinker Breakthrough
thinker Technique oriented Purpose
oriented Copes with problems Finds the
right as stated
problem Demands hard data Demands hard,
copes
with soft data Insists on firm state-
Tolerant of ambiguity ment of work
57Constrained thinking
- Mind set
- Groupthink
- Delimited thinking
- Paradigm paralysis
- Brainpower is only additive
- BP1 BP2 BP3 ...
58Empowered thinking
- Mind reset --- mind unlock
- Group rethink --- synergistic thinking
- Paradigm breaking --- paradigm shift
- Multiplies brainpower
- BP1 x BP2 x BP3 ...
59Evaluating existing paradigms developing new
paradigms
- Choose the paradigm to evaluate
- Examine the purpose of the paradigm
- Delineate the parameters related to the paradigm
being examined - Examine the rationale for the parameters
- Question the paradigm
- Develop an improved paradigm
60Four quadrants
- Visioning
- Exploring
- Experimenting
- Modifying
61Holistic thinking
- Suboptimal results occur if we rely on one of the
two hemispheres of our brain - Janusian thinking, concentrating on using both
hemispheres simultaneously, produces holistic
results