This is “Creativity”, section 13.2 from the book Modern Management of Small Businesses (v. 1.0). For details on it (including licensing), click here.
For more information on the source of this book, or why it is available for free, please see the project's home page. You can browse or download additional books there. To download a .zip file containing this book to use offline, simply click here.
Money never starts an idea; it is the idea that starts the money.“Owen Laughlin Quotes,” Searchquotes, accessed February 4, 2012, www.searchquotes.com/quotation/Money_never_starts_an_idea._It_is_always_the _idea_that_starts_the_money/17400.
Owen Laughlin
Thomas Friedman—the author of That Used to Be Us,Thomas Friedman and Michael Mandelbaum, That Used to Be Us: How America Fell Behind the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011). Hot, Flat, and CrowdedThomas Friedman, Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution—and How It Can Renew America (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008). and The World Is FlatThomas Friedman, The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005).—and other pundits consistently argue that the future belongs to those societies and businesses that can best capitalize on creativity and innovation. It is a great tragedy that we often think of creativity and innovation in terms of new technologies only. We fail to realize that creativity and innovation can occur anywhere within a business. There is a story—perhaps it is an urban legend—about a member of the cleaning staff for a company that manufactures shampoo. This employee brought a suggestion to the attention of an executive on the marketing team. The employee pointed out that the instructions on the back of the bottle of shampoo said—“Lather and rinse” and suggested that it should read “Lather, rinse, and repeat.” It may be apocryphal and somewhat unethical, but, if true, it would have led to a significant increase in sales. We recount this legend not to advocate any form of chicanery but to point out that creative insights may come from anyone and anywhere. Creativity is not limited to scientists, engineers, designers, or top executives. It is a property that all human beings possess. Likewise, creativity need not be singularly channeled into new high-tech products or advanced designs. Innovation may pursue different strategies. There are three fundamental innovation strategies for firms: need seekerA firm that actively interacts with its present and future customers and carefully listens to them so that it can develop new products and services., market readerA firm that maintains a close relationship with its customers and provides them value through small innovative changes., and technology driverA business that puts money into research and development to produce revolutionary breakthroughs and/or incremental changes..Barry Jaruzelski and Kevin Dehoff, “The Global Innovation 1000: How the Top Innovators Keep Winning,” Strategy+Business (Booz & Company), November 3, 2010, accessed February 4, 2012, www.strategy-business.com/article/10408?gko=08375. Need seeker firms actively interact with their present and future customers and carefully listen to them so that they can develop new products and services. These firms tend to be the first in the market. A market reader firm maintains a close relationship with its customers and provides them value through small innovative changes. A technology-driven firm is a business that puts money into research and development to produce revolutionary breakthroughs and/or incremental changes. Such a firm spends more time and effort in anticipating future customer needs and carefully listening to what customers believe they want at this point in time. None of these three innovation strategies is clearly superior to the other. It is interesting to know, however, that none of these strategies precludes or minimizes the potential contribution that could come from a small business. If one examines the three innovation strategies, it could be clearly argued that small businesses have an advantage over their larger rivals for the first two strategies. Both rely on a business having a deep and intimate understanding of the needs and desires of its customers. Small businesses also are better positioned to actively listen to their customers and, because of their size, respond more rapidly. Even the third innovation strategy often is the domain of the smaller business. Think of the number of technological breakthroughs that were initiated by smaller firms (at least, smaller at that time) than the large behemoths.
At one level, creativity should be thought of as a rare flower that should be nurtured at both the individual level and the organizational level. Many businesses create an environment that not only does not foster creativity among its personnel but also actively crushes it. Such firms punish any failure, which increases fear in the personnel to try something new. These firms fail to reward innovative successes. They foster groupthink, often responding with the following reply: “We have always done it this way.” The leadership team believes that leaders are the only ones responsible for creative actions. This type of organization is toxic to creativity.
Before examining the tools and techniques that might enhance creativity, it is important to understand what personal and organizational factors might inhibit creativity.
Perhaps one of the most commonly used creativity tools is brainstormingA group process by which individuals produce solutions to problems without any restriction placed on their possible options., an approach that emphasizes collaboration within a group. Brainstorming begins by specifying a problem or issue—for example, “How can we boost sales at the restaurant?”; “What can be done to reduce customer complaints?”; or “Why do these particular types of defects keep occurring?” Then one brings together personnel who are directly familiar with the problem or the issue. Sometimes it might be advisable to bring in people not directly familiar with the problem or the issue because they may bring a totally different perspective that might enhance the overall creativity of the problem-solving exercise. The room where the brainstorming exercise is held should be equipped with a whiteboard, or a computer with a projector, or a simple flip chart. The moderator or the facilitator of the brainstorming session should restate the problem. Individuals should be able to shout out possible solutions. The facilitator writes them down or types them into the computer, which is then projected so that all people can see the proposals. The most critical point of the brainstorming session is the openness with which the group accepts any and all ideas. No matter how bizarre or off-the-wall a suggestion might appear to be, no one is allowed to criticize it. Even if an idea is simply crazy, participants do not have the latitude to make any negative remarks. After all the ideas have been presented and written down, the group begins a process of winnowing down the number of suggestions to a smaller number, perhaps five.Jeffrey P. Baumgartner, “The Step by-Step Guide to Brainstorming,” The Wonderful World of Jeffery Paul Baumgartner, accessed February 4, 2012, jpb.com/creative/brainstorming.php. In the real world, most decisions cannot be done with respect to a simple, single criterion. As an example, one might evaluate the five possible solutions with respect to cost. In the freewheeling environment of brainstorming, one possible solution might yield the lowest cost but might be illegal. Before evaluating the reduced set of solutions, the group must identify all the criteria that would be useful in determining the solutions. Examples of such criteria might be cost, viability, the probability of implementing the solution within a given timeline, or customer acceptance. Once these criteria have been identified, the group can then scale (numerically evaluate) each solution with respect to the criteria. Such an approach should help the group identify the overall best solution. This is the most basic and most common format for brainstorming. Other variations exist that are designed to deal with some possible deficiencies of classical brainstorming, such as naturally reticent members.“Brainstorming: Generating Many Radical, Creative Ideas,” Mind Tools, accessed February 4, 2012, www.mindtools.com/brainstm.html.
Another useful approach to stimulate creative thinking about a problem or an issue is mind mappingA diagram that specifies all the types of relationships among key elements of a problem or an issue.. This technique is used widely in a variety of contexts, including creative writing courses. It is a visual model that uses words, phrases, tasks, or concepts centered on an idea or a problem. A node or a figure representing the core notion is drawn at the center. Ideas that are related to this central notion are drawn off, as branches, to the sides. These secondary ideas, in turn, may generate other offshoots. This continues until all interrelationships are mapped on the diagram. Figure 13.2 "Mind Map for Expanding Frank’s All-American BarBeQue" is a mind map that might have been drawn for Frank’s All-American BarBeQue, when it was considering an expansion.
Figure 13.2 Mind Map for Expanding Frank’s All-American BarBeQue
William Simione Jr., the founding member of Simione Consultants (see the opening vignette of Chapter 9 "Accounting and Cash Flow"), has always believed that there has been a need for the home health and hospice industries to have timely financial benchmarks. Recognizing that this need was not being met, Simione started Financial Monitor LLC in 2009. This company launched a product known as the Financial Monitor. This is an excellent example of a business using its creativity to develop a new business. Using the company’s expertise in the home health and hospice industries, Simione designed a program that would benchmark clients’ quarterly financial reports against industry standards. Two principals, William Simione III and David Berman, have managed the development of the Financial Monitor. In 2009, Rob Simione was added to the Financial Monitor team as the senior manager.
The long-term goal of the Financial Monitor is to become the industry’s major database for financial information. Currently, Simione has a database of 160 providers. With this information, Simione not only provides clients with meaningful financial information but also provides the home health and hospice industry with data that can be used in advocacy efforts on both national and state levels. Simione has begun to work with both the National Association for Home Care and Hospice and several state associations to have the Financial Monitor help them in their advocacy efforts. The short-term goal is to have five hundred home health and hospice agencies on the Financial Monitor by end of 2011, and the long-range goal is to have in excess of five thousand on it by the end of 2014.
TED Fullerton—Matthew Jenusaitis—Importance of Creativity in Business
(click to see video)A discussion of the importance of creativity in business. It is seventeen minutes—but very good.
TEDxPugetSound—Edgar Papke—Creativity and the Human Art of Business
(click to see video)Discusses how to match creativity and motivation. Another long video, but it has excellent ideas.
Let Creativity & Imagination Grow Your Business
Discusses the importance of creativity for business development.
www.theopensite.com/marketing-business-promotion/small-business-imagination-creativity
Passion & Creativity Go a Long Way for Small Business Owners
Reviews the critical role of passion for start-ups.
www.catalystmarketers.com/passion-creativity-small-business-owners
Creativity: Breaking the Mental Blocks
How to overcome barriers to creativity.
www.smallbusinessadvocate.com/small-business-articles/creativity-breaking-the-mental-blocks-694