Unleash Your Inner Creative Genius - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive.
Creativity can be difficult for us because for most of our lives we have been trained to not think creatively. Much of our education during our earlier years focus on either remembering a specific set of facts or reproducing a solution we have been taught. For most of us at work, this is also true. A majority of the time we are rewarded for recalling how we previously solved such a problem, or finding how someone has solved a similar problem, and then adapting that to our current situation. But this is opposite of creative thinking. Creative thinking produces new, different, and unique solutions and is more necessary than we realize. After all, without creativity, nothing novel of value would be produced.
So how can we increase our personal creativity?
Creativity Performance
Creativity performance is the end result of creativity; it is the observable aspect of creativity. It can be either a creative product (a tangible invention such as an iPad) or creative persuasion. Creative persuasion happens when an individual has influenced the way others think or has changed the minds of others about what is possible.
Creativity Potential
Creativity potential signals the possibility for creativity. This potential for creativity can come from a person or a place. Some people are more creative than others, just as certain environments are more conducive to creativity than others. Research on personality tells us that people with high intrinsic motivation, a wide range of interests, high openness to new experiences, a propensity for risk-taking, and independence tend to be more creative. Similarly, research shows that organizations that value original thought and ideas and provide opportunity for exploration and autonomy are ones where creativity thrives.
Creativity Process
If creative performance is what we want to achieve and creative potential is how we lay the groundwork for creativity, then creativity process is what happens in the middle—and explains how creativity actually occurs. This is where we can have the most impact in terms of improving creativity. By looking at the process aspect of creativity, we can learn about the certain ways of thinking (“cognitive mechanisms”) that lead to creative ideas and products. By focusing on the process, we can increase our chances of achieving creativity, no matter what our starting potential.
Tips for Improving Creativity
1. Take multiple perspectives.
Your first solution to a problem may not be the best one. Your first instinct may be the most simplistic one, the most complicated one, the most conventional one, or the most biased one. How would your boss approach this problem? How would your sister, father, or child think about it? By doing this, you increase your understanding and look at it with more depth.
2. Merge perspectives.
Combine unoriginal products or ideas to create synergistic results. Subjects that seem incompatible and highly dissimilar at first glance can combine to create the most value.
3. Come back to it.
On a different day, in a different mood, after a mental break, or after sleeping on it, your brain has done some reorganization and you may see the problem and the solution a bit differently.
4. Draw it out.
Use stick figures, diagrams, graphs, and charts. Viewing it in print rather than simply thinking about it enhances your understanding of the problem and the data you are working with. Seeing something displayed visually can trigger new ideas, opportunities, and ways of thinking about the problem.
5. Verbalize with metaphors.
It can be difficult to put abstract concepts into words but creating an analogy can spark new insights.
6. Focus on quantity.
Creativity and perfectionism do not go well together. Creativity can often be a numbers game. The more mediocre solutions you think up and the more bad products you create the higher your chances of finding something that works.
7. Involve others.
A second perspective can see value in things you have taken for granted or dismissed as unimportant. Although you have taken an idea as far as you think it can go, it might be just a jumping off point for a new mind with a fresh outlook.
8. Create a conflict.
When involving others, purposely choose those who think differently than you. If possible, argue or play devil’s advocate about the solutions. A conflict provides additional motivation to generate new ideas.
Related posts:
- Creative Antidotes for Painful Meetings
- A Few Simple Words Can Kill Creativity In Your Team
- Q1 Performance Reviews
CRM Software Free Trial – Your CRM online guide to Web-based Contact Management Software Free Internet Trials and the latest news, article, reviews & comparisons.
CRM Software Free Trial – Your CRM online guide to Web-based Contact Management Software Free Internet Trials and the latest news, article, reviews & comparisons.
Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.
“We here at the “Web-Based Contact Management Software News, Reviews” are posting for your consumption the latest blog posts from the major Web-Based CRM Software vendors around the world who are focused on the development of products that enhance your CRM experience.” enjoy
——————————
Post Name:
Unleash Your Inner Creative Genius – Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive.
* If Needed – To Read the Full Story: (post’s here may be limited by vendor’s RSS feed) – Highlight above post’s blue title, right click and search with google.
Post Footer automatically generated by wp-posturl plugin for wordpress.
Listed Related posts:
- How to Launch Your Own Business - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. Know you want to work for yourself but aren’t sure where to start? This is the first post in a two part series on concrete steps you can take to make your entrepreneurial dreams a reality....
- Be Great at Any Task - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. Tony Schwartz’s blog post on Harvard Business Review, Six Keys to Being Excellent at Anything, just appeared in my Google Reader. The post is based on the advice Tony extols in his new book, The Way...
- “Basecamp is how Peer Pressure Creative gets business done” - Story From: 37signals Product Blog Nick Satkovich of Peer Pressure Creative on how his team uses Basecamp: Peer Pressure Creative was born on September 1, 2008, as a small team of 2 developers and one graphic designer. Our small team has...
- Detail-Oriented Leaders: How to See the Big Picture - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. If you are a detail-oriented leader, you are generally likely to be conscientious and excellent at planning ahead, but perhaps you aren’t particularly creative or strategic. But success in a dynamic working environment often requires both...
- How to Orient a New Team Member - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. When I remember new hire orientations of jobs past, I think of watching cheesy, outdated videos, completing a marathon of poorly photocopied forms, and being escorted to an empty cubicle three hours before the end of...
- How to Create a Team Charter for Success - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. You’ve probably had an opportunity to be part of a team that wasn’t as successful as you’d hoped. It isn’t much fun to watch a team struggle and never find their way to success. This will...
- How to Avoid Micromanaging - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. Micromanaging is defined as insisting on having a say in an employee’s work at every opportunity, and every manager does it to some extent. Why? Primary reasons include the belief that you can do a task...
- Effective Teams Part 1: What Drives Team Performance? - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. On my first post on the Team Leadership blog, I mentioned that one of the ten things effective teams have in common is norms. A few weeks ago, Wired magazine ran a write up of a...
- Effective Teams Part 2: Examples of Team Norms - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. Team norms are basically relationship guidelines that develop gradually. Team members develop particular ways of interacting with each other over time until those habits become behavioral expectations. A team can have high performance norms or low...
- Are Experience and Skills Overrated? - Story From: The QuickBase Blog. Get more connected. Be more productive. I was talking to the CEO of a management consulting firm the other day and was surprised to hear him say that he doesn’t require new consultants to have – or plan on getting – an...











