Can Creativity Be Taught?
The usual image of how creativity
happens: A composer inadvertently hears a melody rising from a babbling brook,
or an ad agency creative director crumples page after page of aborted ideas
ripped from the typewriter until the right one lands. But creativity, some
claim, can come from a far less elusive muse — from a structured process, one
that opens up the ranks of the creative to a wider swath than the Steve Jobs,
Jonas Salks and Franz Schuberts of the universe.
“I think there are individual
differences in our propensity to be creative,” Twitter says Wharton marketing professor Rom
Schrift,
“but having said that, it’s like a muscle. If you train yourself, and there are
different methods for doing this, you can become more creative. There are
individual differences in people, but I would argue that it is also something
that can be developed, and therefore, taught.”
Wharton
marketing professor Jerry (Yoram) Wind has in fact taught a course in creativity at
Wharton for years, and says that “in any population, basically the distribution
of creativity follows the normal curve.
At the absolute extreme you have Einstein and Picasso, and you don’t have to
teach them — they are the geniuses. Nearly everyone else in the distribution,
and the type of people you would deal with at leading universities and
companies, can learn creativity.”
Does creativity need the right
conditions to flourish? Jennifer Mueller, a management professor at the
University of San Diego and former Wharton professor who has researched
creativity, sees evidence that it does. “Every theorist that exists today on
the planet will tell you creativity is an ability that ranges in the
population, and I think in a given context, creativity can be shut off — or
turned on, if the environment supports creativity.”
John Maeda, former president of
Rhode Island School of Design, believes creativity can be taught — though he
qualifies that belief. “I wouldn’t say it can be taught in the normal sense of
adding knowledge and wisdom to someone. I would say instead it can be
re-kindled in people — all children are creative. They just lose their
capability to be creative by growing up,” notes Maeda, now a partner at Kleiner
Perkins Caufield & Byers and chair of eBay’s design advisory board.
Creativity in a child, he adds, “is the ability to diverge. In a productive
adult, it’s the ability to diverge and converge, with emphasis on the
converging.”
Anyone called upon to tap creativity
has his or her own method, but photorealist painter and photographer Chuck
Close suggests the matter is actually less mysterious than the muse-chasers
might believe. “Inspiration,” he has said, “is for amateurs — the rest of us
just show up and get to work.”
Working with Boxes, Inside and Out
In whatever the sector or discipline
— product development, exploitation of networks, music or education —
creativity shares certain traits, experts say. Jacob Goldenberg, professor of
marketing at the Arison School of Business at the IDC Herzliya in Israel, says
creativity has more than 200 definitions in the literature. “However, if you
ask people to grade ideas, the agreement is very high,” he notes. “This means
that even if it is difficult to define creativity, it is easy to identify it.
One of the reasons why it is difficult to define is the fact that creativity
exists in many different domains.” Still, he says: “Most creative ideas share a
common structure of being highly original and at the same time highly useful.”
“If you train yourself, and there
are different methods for doing this, you can become more creative.”– Rom
Schrift
In Inside the Box: A Proven
System of Creativity for Breakthrough Results, Goldenberg and co-author
Drew Boyd make the case that all inventive solutions share certain common
patterns. Working within parameters, rather than through free-associative brainstorming,
leads to greater creativity, the book says. This method, called Systematic
Inventive Thinking, has found application at Procter & Gamble and SAP,
among others. “We shouldn’t confuse innovation and creativity,” Goldenberg
says. “Creativity refers to the idea, not to the system [product, service,
process, etc.] that was built around it. For example, online banking is a great
innovation, but the idea [of using the Internet to replace the branch] was not
creative. It was expected years before it was implemented.”
Similarly, he adds, “cell phone
technology is one of the most innovative developments, but the need was defined
years before, and we just waited for the technology. In my view, a creative
idea that is still changing our lives is the concept of letting users develop
the software they need on a platform [that a particular] firm sells: the apps
concept. This means that consumers develop and determine the value of the
smartphone and tablets.”
This example, Goldenberg says, fits
one of the templates for creativity described in Inside the Box: “Where
you subtract one of the resources” — such as engineers and marketers — “and
replace them with a resource that exists inside a closure (box), in this case
your consumers.”
Schrift has used a different
template from Inside the Box in his classes: The idea of building a
matrix of characteristics of two unrelated products, and creating new
dependencies. Such examples, he says, include an air freshener that changes
scent every 10 minutes (remixing the concepts of time and fragrance), or a gym
with a fee that is structured to increase if you don’t work out enough (fitness
and incentive). “A lot of the time, looking for a new dependency gives you a
creative idea,” Schrift notes.
Wind says that in whatever
discipline, creativity is primarily “an ability to challenge the status quo and
come up with new and better solutions. In art, the most creative figures are
those who came up with new perspectives — Brancusi, who broke away from Rodin;
Picasso, who broke away from the Impressionists; Duchamp, who took readymades
[ordinary manufactured objects, a porcelain urinal being the most infamous] and
said, ‘this is art.’ Anyone who primarily breaks the current status quo and
creates a new dimension — the first person to think about understanding
medicine in terms of a person’s DNA; in advertising it is [William] Bernbach,
who came up with the slogan for Volkswagen, [or] Frank Gehry, who basically
broke the tradition of the four-wall museum and came up with a dramatically
different structure in Bilbao.”
Making Space for the Troublemakers
Corporate culture is no less hungry
for creative leaders. Or is it? Any company would eagerly embrace the next
iPhone, but it is far from clear that companies tolerate the cost of doing
business when it comes to generating creativity. In an IBM survey of 1,500 CEOs
from 60 countries in 33 industries released in 2010, creativity was cited as
the most important organization-wide trait required for navigating the business
environment. And yet, as Mueller
found in a 2010 study published in Psychological
Science,
people often espouse creativity as an abstract goal, but then, when presented
with it, spurn it. In The Bias Against Creativity: Why People Desire But
Reject Creative Ideas, co-authored by Mueller with Shimul Melwani and Jack
A. Goncalo, experiments suggest that the desire for creativity is often
overshadowed by a need to reduce uncertainty — even as subjects rate their
attitudes toward creativity as positive. Moreover, this bias contributes toward people being less able to even recognize creativity.
Additional research underway by Mueller
suggests that creative personalities are often dismissed as trouble. “They are
seen as difficult, not as efficient or able to present their ideas with focus,
and are also seen as naïve,” she says.
“People, either rightly or wrongly,
have this stereotype that creative people are high maintenance and emotionally
volatile. Twitter
And where it gets
problematic, the moment the organization suffers, is when creative people are
discounted for not being seen as team players. And that is the dark side of being tagged as a creative type.” And yet:
“Why would you want somebody who doesn’t produce creative work [just because]
they are less trouble to manage?”
“The stereotype is that creativity
just has to be unleashed, and it’s not true. It has to be tightly managed. You
have to know how to foster it.” –Jennifer Mueller
The bias against creativity even
extends to the classroom, Mueller says. “There is the reality that any teacher
needs a rubric in order to give a good grade, and creativity in being new or
different creates uncertainty in the mind of the students about whether it fits
the answer the teacher is looking for,” she notes. “Teachers think of creative
students as disobedient. There is lots of focus on reducing ambiguity,
especially in college where the student is your customer. You now have to
answer to what the customer wants, and what the customer wants is to get a good
grade — and the best way to get a good grade is to reduce ambiguity.”
Americans are not showing the kind
of creative expression that might otherwise be bubbling away — in college, but
also grade school. Scores from the widely administered Torrance Tests of
Creative Thinking have been declining since 1990 among the nation’s youngest
students, according to a study by College of William & Mary assistant
professor Kyung-Hee Kim of nearly 300,000 test scores between 1968 and 2008.
“The decline is steady and persistent, from 1990 to present, and ranges across
the various components tested by the TTCT,” the study finds. “The decline
begins in young children, which is especially concerning as it stunts abilities
which are supposed to mature over a lifetime.”
“There is an understanding that this
is happening in China and India as well,” Mueller adds, “and the fact that it
is happening in the U.S. is troubling people, but I don’t think they know what
to do about it. I, myself, have tried to do stuff students don’t like, and they
will hate you. If student ratings aren’t high, then you’re not going to get
tenure.”
One environment Mueller admires for
its healthy creative process is IDEO, the multinational design consulting firm.
Creativity is begun in brainstorming sessions — which is certainly not novel —
but it is then shepherded through a more structured route. “They have their
initial session, called ‘deep dive,’ and that session is very short. Then they
break the problem apart by assigning people specific pieces. Then there is a
focus session, so there is chaos and focus, and interplay between these two
things is always going on. There is a person whose full responsibility is to
structure it, and I think in that process you learn, you ask the customer
certain things, you tweak it some more,” Mueller notes. “The stereotype is that
creativity just has to be unleashed, and it’s not true. It has to be tightly
managed. You have to know how to foster it.”
Creative Safe Haven
The willingness to “foster it” is a
challenge in many corporate environments. According to Schrift, one way to
manage creative forces is to manage talent wisely. “Maybe we don’t want
creative people in certain positions,” he says. “One of the obstacles for
innovation is not necessarily the process of coming up with the idea, but is
more cultural — a lot of companies do not incentivize employees to do things
differently.” Sometimes, workers are evaluated on a relatively short cycle, and
“when you are innovating, that involves a lot of failure.”
“Mind-wandering seems to be essential
to the creative process, and I don’t think a lot of businesses are aware of
that fact.”– Scott Barry Kaufman
Changes in corporate culture, such
as giving workers permission to question authority, can be efficacious, says
Scott Barry Kaufman, scientific
director of the Imagination Institute at Penn’s Positive
Psychology Center. The salient question isn’t whether creativity can be
taught, notes Kaufman, since everyone is creative, but rather demonstrating
faith in the creativity of workers. “I am not talking about rebelliousness, but
giving people time for constructive internal reflection and even daydreaming. A
lot of research is suggesting that the more that you demand people’s external
attention, the less chance you are allowing them to dip into the default mode
where daydreams and reflection happen — and lot of great ideas are not going to
come from the brute force of work but from personal life experience.
Mind-wandering seems to be essential to the creative process, and I don’t think
a lot of businesses are aware of that fact.”
Neither are most multitaskers —
which means, these days, most people. In a recent New York Times op-ed piece, neuroscientist and musician Daniel J. Levitin made the case that tweeting,
Facebooking and emailing your way through the day saps creativity. “Daydreaming
leads to creativity, and creative activities teach us agency, the ability to
change the world, to mold it to our liking, to have a positive effect on our
environment,” wrote Levitin, author of The Organized Mind: Thinking Straight
in the Age of Information Overload. In other words, we need time to hear
the music in a babbling brook.
Measuring Creative Success
Is commercial viability the only
gauge of creativity’s success? Wind points out that there are innovations in
the arts whose value is best judged by other artists, and Goldenberg says peer
expertise is sometimes required. “The only way to measure creativity is to use
judges who grade many cases including the idea you want to grade,” notes Goldenberg.
“This is a complex process and usually done in a research setup and not in
practice. This means that a creative person repeats his or her success, and
this is not an after-the-fact judgment of one random event.”
But Wind points out that in general,
newness and usefulness are the main
indicators of acts of great creativity. “I would take the extreme position
that creativity has to have value to be successful,” he says. “You can come up
with a lot of ideas, but if you are not adding value to the stakeholders, then
they are not creative ideas.” Twitter
Airbnb certainly meets the criterion
of adding value to stakeholders, and, according to Maeda of Kleiner Perkins
Caufield & Byers, the self-listing lodging clearinghouse stands an example
of spectacularly creative thinking. “There are more people staying in Airbnb
lodgings on any given night than all Hilton hotels combined,” Maeda notes of
the company founded by the young and now-wealthy trio of Brian Chesky, Nathan
Blecharczyk and Joe Gebbia. “It showed plasticity in their creativity that went
beyond their design training in making physical goods. They recognized the
excess capacity available in everyone’s home, and they designed a scalable
service to enable anyone to access that capacity. Their successful design for a
service solved the trust barriers inherent to a peer-to-peer economy.”
Wind cites Uber as his example.
“Uber is a truly creative approach as opposed to the traditional taxi,” he
says. “How wonderful it is that you could leverage the network idea and create
a new business.” The Uber model is now being emulated and adapted to other
sectors — Ubers for laundry, snowplows and even wine delivery. But while
imitation might be the sincerest form of flattery, Uber’s success is actually a
cue for the genuinely creative types to move on to other ideas. Says Wind: “The
first one [to establish the model] is the example of creativity. The secondary
companies following Uber — they are not.”
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/can-creativity-be-taught/
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