Getting creative in ‘The Times’
13/Jan/2010
Offering valuable tips for successful brainstorming is Andy Green, who provided expert tips on ‘How to Brainstorm’ in a news article on Times Online (January 13, 2010)
Andy’s full advice included:
How to
Brainstorm
1. Always define your question as
tightly as possible. I define creativity as ‘flexible thinking around beautiful
questions to add value’. Outstanding creativity is not coming up with 1001
different alternatives; it’s actually about asking the right question, the
beautiful question. You can tell when you have a beautiful question your ideas
ooze out. Conversely, if you are stuck, you can’t think of any ideas, go back
to redefining your question.
2. Creative thinking uses an
incremental dynamic once you have posed your question – like making a snowball.
Treat every idea as a potential stepping stone. It’s best to work from small,
asking yourself what little ideas can we think of, and equally accept crazy
ideas, asking what ways can these be incrementally adapted to add value.
3. Brainstorming is a great
consultation tool and can be a great tactic to overcome political opposition to
new ideas. By involving someone who typically says ‘No’ to your new ideas, and
get them become a member of the brainstorm group, by engaging with them with
the process, they get ownership of the ideas created. It’s easier to get
someone to say ‘Yes’ when you tell them ‘Isn’t this a great idea we came
up with!’
Also, if you are doing a consultation exercise, rather than
ask people, ‘What do you think?’, instead ask them, ‘What new future can we
create?’
4.
Brainstorming’s chief quality is actually outside the arena of creativity; it’s
great for team building, staff development – where junior and senior people can
work alongside each other – and for signalling the importance of an issue.
Remember however, there are many more different creativity techniques, which
can be better at generating ideas, particularly the most simplest of all,
incubation, sleeping on a well defined problem.
How not
to brainstorm
1. I created a word called ‘Ideapoo’ –
you need to accept that most of your ideas will be rubbish, ‘poo’, but at the
outset you have no idea of what are the good, or the not-so-good ideas. The
danger is you can throw away potentially good seeds, or stepping stones, only
seeing the poo and not the potential. Premature evaluation, being judgmental
too soon is a major killer of potential brilliance.
2. Creative thinking uses what I call
our Red Light Thinking, to analyse, follow logical lines of thought, and our
Green Light Thinking, harnessing our imaginative, emotional, and lateral thoughts.
You need to Red Light Thinking at the outset, to define the
need for any added value, and crucially, define your questions. You can then
engage your Green Light Thinking for new insights, and lastly re-engage your
Red Light Thinking to evaluate ideas, and identify plans of action. Far too
often, people engage in what can be called creative masturbation, generating
ideas with no proper setting or follow through. Most people equate
brainstorming with idea generating and expect a result at this stage, and often
give up. It’s like leaving a football match or an opera at half time and
complaining afterwards that there wasn’t an end result.
3. Always establish at the outset criteria
for your ideas. When you come to evaluate any ideas generated, rather than responding
with ‘I like this one’ instead, with a criterion in place you can judge ideas on
more formal, objective grounds.
4. Check the attitude state of yourself
and the participants. You can suffer from a victim mentality – where everything
is seen in the negative, or hubris, where you can be too arrogant and not
listen, or be alert to potentially good ideas (such as Ideapoo). I created a
word, ‘hibris’ where you need to have an arrogant self belief about your
ability to come up with ideas, tempered with a humility that you are willing to
listen and pick up ideas from the unlikeliest of sources. Many a potentially
good brainstorm session has been wrecked by an unsupportive, underlying
attitude state.
Remember,
the word ‘brainstorming’ is politically correct; there’s an urban myth going
around that the word is not politically correct and it upsets people with
epilepsy and you should instead, use ‘brain showering’. It’s absolute nonsense.
No epilepsy group has any policy on the issue.
Also, note
the word ‘brainstorm’ can either mean a specific creativity tool, or shorthand
for doing, what I call ‘Green Light Thinking’ – using lateral leaps of imagination
to arrive at new ideas, different ways of doing.
Read the final article at:
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/management/article6985219.ece