Lately, I've been having lots of fun with the
Whack Pack from
Roger von Oech . My girlfriend recommended it
when she saw the
innovation games from Enthiosys .
I've been reading a lot about creativity, empowerment, and
ba and was curious to try out the
Whack Pack . The
Whack Pack contains a set of
cards and a hand-book with exercises. Each card describes a
technique for stimulating creative thinking by helping you to
release, what
Roger von Oech calls, mental locks. There's
also an additional set of cards targetting innovation. If you're
interested in thinking more creatively I heartily recommend the
Whack Pack . I've summarised some
of the techniques below to give you a flavour of what's inside.
The key to thinking creatively is to forget what you know.
Education has taught us that there's one right answer. This is
wrong. There's always more than one right answer. One right answer
gives us only one course of action, and that's risky in a world
that's constantly changing. Never stop at the first right answer,
find others for options and comparison. We're also taught that
right answers are good and wrong answers are bad. Wrong again. Part
of thinking creatively is about trying different things. First one
approach. If that fails, try another approach, and then another,
and so on.
Don't be afraid to fail . If your
imagination is to run free you must welcome errors because they
indicate that you are diverging from thinking more of the same.
Knock your thinking out of the norm by challenging the rules,
breaking the rules. Don't let your imagination be constrained by
them. Similarly, don't let your thinking be contained within your
area of expertise. Develop the attitude of an explorer and be
prepared to discover new ideas wherever your mind takes you. Go
mad. Play the fool to provoke wacky ideas. These can stimulate your
imagination and provide stepping stones that lead you off the
beaten track to places rich with new ideas.
Roger von Oech describes two phases in creative
thinking: An imaginative phase followed by a practical phase.
During the imaginative phase he says you employ soft thinking,
which is metaphorical and playful, to generate ideas that are
different. In contrast, during the practical phase you employ hard
thinking, which is logical, precise and consistent, to evaluate and
execute ideas. Don't curtail your imagination by thinking logically
too soon. Give your artistic side a chance before judging your
ideas. Playing with ideas is fun. And having fun is contagious and
motivating. Incubate ideas for a while before evaluating them.
Back-off from the idea by putting it on the mental backburner. Let
your subconscious work the idea, put it into perspective, and find
new connections and stepping stones.
Don't forget to put your ideas into action. If you don't they're
worthless.
Wednesday, 1 March 2006
Creative thinking
Posted by Simon Baker - Permalink
2 Comments
Hi Roger. This is Luke Hohmann. One important distinction between Innovation Games(sm) for Customer Understanding and von Oech's Whack Pack is that Innovation Games are played with groups of customers while Whack Pack are ways to help you solve problems. Both approaches are useful in the right context. I think of it this way: If you think you know the problem you want to solve and you're stuck solving it, grab the Whack Pack and see how they can help you. However, if you're not sure of the problem, and you want to better understand your customers so that you can be certain you're solving the right problem, try Innovation Games(sm).
Regards,
Luke Hohmann
CEO
Enthiosys
Hi Luke,
Actually my name is Simon, not Roger. But thanks for making the distinction between the innovation games from Enthiosys and the Whack Pack from Roger von Oech . The cards from Enthiosys had simply reminded my girlfriend of the Whack Pack .