The 6 Myths Of Creativity | Printer-friendly version
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Saved by 10 people (-3 private), first by anonymouse user on 2006-03-02
- Fgd1031 on 2007-08-23 - Tags business , ideas , innovation , personal development , delicious
- Stumax on 2006-10-25 - Tags business , creativity , imported:del.icio.us , management , productivity
- Wenxin on 2006-07-31 - Tags articles , business , creativity , inspiration , management , psychology
- Jenniever on 2006-01-11 - Tags creativity , business , management , productivity , article , inspiration , delicious
- Joel on 2006-01-10 - Tags creativity , leadership
Public Sticky notes
These days, there's hardly a mission statement that doesn't herald it, or a CEO who doesn't laud it. And yet despite all of the attention that business creativity has won over the past few years, maddeningly little is known about day-to-day innovation in the workplace. Where do breakthrough ideas come from? What kind of work environment allows them to flourish? What can leaders do to sustain the stimulants to creativity -- and break through the barriers?
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So it's critical for leaders to match people to projects not only on the basis of their experience but also in terms of where their interests lie. People are most creative when they care about their work and they're stretching their skills. If the challenge is far beyond their skill level, they tend to get frustrated; if it's far below their skill level, they tend to get bored. Leaders need to strike the right balance.
Highlighted by joel
Time pressure stifles creativity because people can't deeply engage with the problem. Creativity requires an incubation period; people need time to soak in a problem and let the ideas bubble up.
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