Recently, Shaun Brandt of ONST Creative and I presented a session on creativity at an event for hackers, creatives and designers. Over the course of 2 days a few hundred people attended Wordcamp to learn about blogging, design, coding, creativity and WordPress. Shaun and I wanted to present something a bit different than what might be expected at an event like Wordcamp and so we gave a session called Fostering Creativity by Looking in Unlikely Places.
- We need to look in the places we normally don’t look because it is there that we find fresh creative ideas
“Creativity is the ability to connect the seemingly unconnected” William Plommer
- Looking in unlikely places provides opportunities for Serendipity: chance events that become beneficial and useful
- If we want to “think different” then we need to shake up stiff mental habits that keep us locked in the status quo
“The danger of habits is that a person can become a prisoner of familiarity.” Roger Von Oech
- Hard to see new situations we encounter in a fresh way because of our habits
- Problem is we don’t see new situations as they are, we are clouded by past experiences and assumptions… this hinders a creative perspective
- We need to balance having experience and breaking the old rules in order to see in new ways
- There are some things we can do to hack and defeat some of these rigid mental habits
Philo Farnsworth invented television by getting an idea from looking at the rows of neatly spaced crops on his farm. He applied the spacing concept to creating rows of light and dark spots on a cathode ray tube to create images. So, you could say looking at farming led to the invention of television.
“The creative act: The defeat of habit by originality overcomes everything”
George Lois- American Designer
- Defeat habits by being curious about interesting ideas and interesting people – seek out and learn from others
“Keep on the lookout for novel and interesting ideas others have used successfully. Your idea needs to be original only in its adaptation to the problem you are working on” Thomas Edison
- Defeat habits by engaging lots of interests and hobbies
“Legendary innovators like Franklin and Darwin share a defining attribute, they had a lot of hobbies” -Steven Johnson, Where good ideas come from
- Defeat habits by consciously shaking up routines
- Defeat habits by asking the “dumb questions” - The value of beginners mind
- Defeat habits by hanging out with weird
- Defeat habits by focusing on a problem and then letting go; do something totally different
- Defeat habits by including people in your projects who are from outside your domain
Jonas Salk, developer of the polio vaccine always brought together men and women from different domains in his think tanks
- Defeat habits by developing a culture of serious play. Play fosters trust and when there’s trust you are more likely to share and be open to fresh ideas
By Think Jar Collective founder Ben Weinlick