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Creativity

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  1. The collective life mission of Creativity

How do you usually prefer to solve problems?

How important is creativity in problem-solving?

Work in groups. Each group reads a different piece of advice on how to solve problems creatively.

 

How to solve problems

 

1 Change your perspective

A lot of problems can be solved simply by looking at them in a different way. Try problem reversal. Don’t ask how you can sell more of your products. Ask how you could sell fewer and see where that idea takes you. Perhaps you could create a totally new market where exclusivity was more important than sales volume. As marketing and communications specialist Ros Jay points out: ‘Many companies have done well out of problem reversal. Businesses like Apple Computers have looked at the market and, instead of saying “how can we compete with all these big players”, have asked themselves “what can we do that all these other companies aren’t doing?” In the late 1990s the mighty IBM’s slogan was ‘Think.’ Apple’s was ‘Think different.’

 

2 Be playful

Must work always feel like work? John Quelch, Dean of the London School of Business, asks: ‘How many times a day does the average five-year-old laugh? Answer: 150. How many times a day does the average 45-year-old executive laugh? Answer: five. Who is having more fun? Who is, therefore, likely to be more creative? Need we ask?’ At ?What if!, a London-based innovation consultancy, they’ve worked out that most people get their best ideas away from the office, so they’ve made the office look like home, complete with armchairs, kitchen and even table football. ?What if! is now a £3 million company whose clients include Pepsi Co, ICI and British Airways, so they must be doing something right.

 

3 Make connections

In their bestseller, Funky business, Jonas Ridderstrale and Kjell Nordström discuss the idea that ‘as everything that ever will be invented has been invented, the only way forward is to combine what is already there’. So we get ‘e-mail’, ‘edu-tainment’, ‘TV dinners’, ‘distance-learning’ and ‘bio-tech’. Sometimes the combinations are impossible. Yamaha, for example, hasn’t yet worked out a way to combine motorbikes with musical instruments – perhaps it will. But Jake Burton had more success when he gave up his job on Wall Street in 1977 to pioneer a new sport. Bringing together two quite separate things – snow and surfboards he developed a modern snowboard. Today there are nearly four million snowboarders breaking their necks in the name of fun!

 

 

 

Case studies

Work in groups. Choose a chairperson. Hold a meeting to solve the problem in either Case study 1 or Case study 2 below.

• Read paragraph one. What else do you know about this business?

• Read paragraph two. What's your immediate response to the problem?

• Read paragraph three. It should give you some extra ideas on how to solve the problem.

• Conduct a problem-solving meeting with your group.

• Summarise the problem and your solutions for the other group or groups. Find out if they agree with you.

 

Case study 1 A quality problem at Harley-Davidson The company Harley-Davidson is more than just a motorcycle company. It's a legend. The firm's website says it all: 'It's one thing for customers to buy your product. It's another for them to tattoo your name on their bodies.' Featured in cult movies like Easy Rider and brandstretched to include everything from cowboy hats to deodorant, the Harley is an American icon to stand alongside Coke, Levis and Marlboro. The challenge But in the mid 80s the company was in big trouble. Faced with strong competition from Japan and unable to keep costs down without affecting quality, Harley was steadily losing market share to copycat models manufactured by Honda, Yamaha and Kawasaki. Thanks to just-in-time production methods and a simpler management structure, it seemed that everything the Americans could do the Japanese could do better and more cheaply. A flood of Japanese imports was even starting to worry the Reagan administration in Washington. New Harley-Davidson CEO Richard Teerlink had to come up with a rescue plan - and fast! The opportunity One thing Teerlink knew was that the average age of the Harley rider was increasing. It was no longer a young blue-collar worker's bike. High prices had seen to that. Now middle-aged bankers, accountants and lawyers wanted to swap their business suits for biker leathers at the weekend and go in search of freedom. These people weren't in a hurry to take delivery of their bikes, as long as it was worth the wait, and 75% of them made repeat purchases. They admired the superior engineering of the Japanese bikes, but they really didn't want to buy Japanese - they just needed a good reason not to.   Case study 2 An image problem at Hennessy Cognac The company Hennessy Cognac has a long and colourful history going back to 1765 when Irishman and war hero, Richard Hennessy, left the army and started the company in France. Today it is one of the premium brands owned by food and drinks giant, Diageo, whose other famous names include Guinness, Gordon's gin, Dom Perignon champagne and Johnnie Walker's whisky. The challenge But in America in the mid 90s Hennessy had a serious image problem. Perhaps because of its great tradition, Hennessy was regarded as an after-dinner drink for old men, bores, snobs - everything the young ambitious American professional definitely did not want to become. Compared with the ever-popular gin and tonic and other more exotic cocktails, sales of Hennessy looked positively horizontal. Conventional advertising and point-of-sale promotions seemed to have little effect. The marketing team at Diageo needed to devise a truly original campaign if they were going to reverse a slow decline in sales. The opportunity You're not paying attention. Nobody is. These days there's so much marketing hype it's impossible to take it all in. It's estimated that we all see around 3,000 advertising messages every day from billboards to T-shirts, bumper stickers to webpage banners, and the net result is that we take no notice at all. Particularly in sophisticated luxury goods markets, straight advertising just doesn't work anymore. What does seem to work is peer pressure - seeing what our friends and colleagues are doing and doing the same. Busy people, especially, don't like their lives being interrupted by stupid commercials. But that doesn't mean they can't be persuaded, as Diageo discovered.  

 

 

Read the text below to find out what the companies actually did. Were your suggestions similar? Is there anything in the case studies which is relevant to your own line of business?


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