Friday, October 25, 2013

Thoughts on Creativity


Like most of the Earth’s population (I’ll have to double check this fact) I have never considered myself as someone creative. Actually, I did once. As kids, we all let our imaginations run wild and we come up with some pretty creative stuff- a cruise that is also a school? Some would call that genius….. But after a while, when my hands did not seem to be able to come up with beautiful crafts or pretty drawings, I stopped believing I was creative, or capable of creativity.

I think that perception slowly started to change as I came to college and the concept of critical thinking was reinforced. I started to realize that I did have good ideas, and with some research and training I could come up with some pretty amazing solutions to problems. I also started to notice my creativity outside of the classroom. Particularly with people- I know everyone says they’re a people person, but I really am. People are my thing, I’m especially good at relationships and I’m very creative in the way I solve people problems.





I always feel more creative around other people; I like the feeling that others are keeping your ‘creativeness’ in check. It can be incredibly frustrating to get your ideas shut down. And if I don’t know/trust the people around me, I immediately feel self-conscious (and judged) when one of my ideas is shut down, and then I shut down. So that’s bad. I need to feel like I have credibility within a group in order to feel creative.

There are other things in my personal environment that make me feel creative. Good movies, good conversations, and good music have a huge creative effect on me. Content- articles, videos, books help a lot, if anything they help me to get into a creative mindset. But there’s also the random inspiration that happen through life moments- cool street art, bad service experiences, and funny jokes- all of those are part of how I build creativity.




The organization I interned with two summers ago was not the most creative- at least not the parts I was exposed to, I think it might have to do with the sheer size of it, the fact that there are very separate business functions, and the fact that there are very specific business goals that the organizations is pressured to achieve. Even the strategic, highly problem focused jobs, had little to none real innovation. The one I intern with now has slightly more room for creativity, but at the same time, they are not focused on change- yet. It’s a small start-up and I can see that the structure and culture their building now- could lead to innovation. For example they have a big emphasis on being the best and “staying ahead of the curve”.

The organization that I interned with this summer did the best job at it. As interns we even had training on innovation and design. There is an enterprise effort to make the company a modern marketing organization. Part of what this means, is encouraging creativity, and for employees to take more risks. Because of this effort they are experiencing important challenges. Senior management grew up with the traditional model, and they are not the most comfortable with innovation, although they understand it’s importance. It’s also a big organization and change is slow, so slow. 


I believe than anyone has the power to be creative. For an individual, the right tools and mindset have to be available. For an organization the processes and rewards have to be aligned to allow it to happen. For both an individual and organizations, the first step is believing that you can be creative. Letting go of excuses (I’m not good with my hands, creativity sacrifices productivity, etc) is the first step in allowing this phenomenon (creativity) to occur.

I do believe that creativity can be taught, but I refuse to believe that it should always be structured in an organized process (even if the organized process works). And so, there must be many ways to come up with creative solutions. And it must be based on the type of problem, but also whatever feels right in the moment. I do think we should trust our gut, but at the same time, trying different approaches (if time permits) to solve one problem might be the most complete way to come up with solutions for problems. 

Overall creativity is a phenomenon where something new and valuable is created and we all have the ability to do that. I'm convinced. 




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