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Creativity Techniques used by Winning Companies
Companies formerly won their marketing battles through superior
efficiency or quality. Today they must win through superior creativity.
One does not win through better sameness; one wins through uniqueness.
Winning companies such as IKEA, Harley Davidson, and Southwest
Airlines are unique.
Uniqueness requires developing a culture that honors creativity.
There are three ways to increase your company’s creativity:
1. Hire more naturally creative people and give them free rein.
2. Stimulate creativity in your organization through a myriad of
well-tested techniques.
3. Contract for creativity help.
Go to Brighthouse in Atlanta,
Faith Popcorn in New York, or Leo Burnett in Chicago, for
example, and get help in finding a breakthrough idea.
Creativity Techniques
• Modification analysis. With respect to some product or
service, consider ways to adapt, modify, magnify, minify,
substitute, rearrange, reverse, or combine.
• Attribute listing. Define and modify the attributes of the
product. For example, in seeking to build a better mousetrap,
consider ways to improve bait, method of execution,
method of hearing execution, method of removal, shape,
material, price.
• Forced relationships. Try out new combinations. For example,
in trying to build a new type of office furniture, consider
combining a desk and a bookcase, or a bookcase
and a filing system.
• Morphological analysis. Play with the basic dimensions of
the problem. For example, in trying to move something from
one point to another, consider the type of vehicle (cart,
chair, sling, bed), the medium in which/by which the vehicle
operates (air, water, oil, rollers, rails), and the power source
(compressed air, engine, steam, magnetic field, cable).
• Product problem analysis. Think of all the problems that a
specific product has. For example, chewing gum loses its
flavor too quickly, may cause dental cavities, and is hard
to dispose of. Think of solutions to these problems.
• Decision trees. Define the set of decisions that are to be
made. For example, to develop a new grooming aid, decide
on the user (men or women); type of aid (deodorant,
shaving product, cologne); type of package (stick, bottle,
spray); market (commercial, gift); and channel (vending
machines, retailers, hotel rooms).
• Brainstorming. Gather a small group and pose a problem,
such as, “Find new products and services that homes
might need.” Encourage freewheeling thinking, stimulate
a maximum number of ideas, try new combinations, and
avoid criticism at the beginning.
• Synectics. Pose a generic problem, such as how to open
something, before posing the real one, hoping that it
broadens the thinking.
A major source of ideas can come from futurists such as Alvin
Toffler, John Naisbet, and Faith Popcorn and the trends they have
spotted. Faith Popcorn became famous for her creative labeling of
trends, including anchoring (religion, yoga), being alive (vegetarianism,
meditation), cashing out, clanning, cocooning, down-aging, fantasy
adventure, 99 lives (multitasking), pleasure revenge, small
indulgences, and vigilant consumers. She would consult on how
aligned a company’s strategy is with these major trends, and often tell
a company that it is off-trend in several ways.
Smart companies set up idea markets. They encourage their employees,
suppliers, distributors, and dealers to offer suggestions that
will save costs or yield new products, features, and services. They es
tablish high-level committees that collect, evaluate, and choose the
best ideas. And they reward those who suggest the best ideas. Alex
Osborn, the developer of brainstorming, said: “Creativity is so delicate
a flower that praise tends to make it bloom, while discouragement
often nips it in the bud.”
It is sad that creativity probably peaks at age 5 and then children
go to school only to lose it. The educational emphasis on left brain
cognitive learning tends to undernurture the creative right brain.
Article added at: 11.18.2006 by Emanuel Julo