The New Rules of Brainstorming

Post on 25-Feb-2016

33 views 2 download

Tags:

description

The New Rules of Brainstorming. Creative Conspiracy: The New Rules of Brainstorming. (2013). Leigh Thompson. Harvard Business School Press. New Rules. Developed based on research and years of experience. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The New Rules of Brainstorming

The New Rules of Brainstorming

Creative Conspiracy: The New Rules of Brainstorming. (2013). Leigh Thompson. Harvard Business School Press.

New Rules• Developed based on research and years of

experience.• Alex Osborn in Applied Imagination in

1953 invented word and basic concept of brainstorming.

• He got most of it right.

Osborn’s Rules

1. Express ideas openly– Don’t hold back, get crazy, childish

2. No evaluation/criticism3. Focus on quantity

– As many ideas as possible4. Build on ideas of others (synergy)

– Combine ideas

Myths Developed• Groups are more creative than individuals.– People are pro-social and team oriented.

• Get rid of rules, relax, no tension.• Brainstorm as a group first to get creative

juices flowing.

Research Busted Myths• Individuals more creative than groups.• Groups need guidelines, structure, and

some pressure.• Brainstorm individually first, then in

groups.– Individuals (and groups) need priming.

• Stimulation of visuals, toys, phrases, props – expand thinking.

Research• Brainstorm individually, then exchange

ideas – a crucial part of creativity.• Two key elements in creativity– Attention/focus

• Develop then exchange a lot of individual ideas before group meets, because a group often fixates on a few ideas and gets groups stuck, slows them down.

– Incubation• By developing a lot of ideas individually, exchanging

them, then waiting to meet in a group allows for the necessary incubation.

Research• Myth– People should work close together in order to

generate ideas.• No – privacy is important for initial idea

generation (can focus better).– Idea generation works best in solitude … and

with lots of priming.• Cave-and-commons workspace is best.

Research• Groups can be pro-social, but…– Difficult to be unique or independent in a

group.– Tendency to go along to get along.

• Need some tension, pressure to keep focused, and to be unique, independent.

Groups• Ideal group size is five.– Large groups get confusing, too much

duplication, too much free riding.• Experienced facilitator must keep

discussion focused, open, spirited.– Passionately attack the problem, but respect

the people.• Fair, spirited fighting.

– Don’t allow storytelling, explanations, or wallflowers.

Groups• Use blackboard, whiteboards, flip charts to

write everything down (memorialize ideas).– Take photos on iPad or phone.– Put in a boneyard or repository (Google Doc,

wiki, blog) so group members can actively access ideas during, before, and after meetings.

• Mood: Consistently positive and upbeat– Facilitator’s responsibility.

Groups• Diversity is critical.– Don’t put friends together.

• If possible, regularly involve the input of of outsiders who are devil’s advocates.

• Conflict is OK – manage it.

Group Problems• Going along with the crowd• Riding the bus without paying the fee (free

riding)• Team superiority complex

– 90% believe they are in the top quartile.• The tyranny of the average

– Regress toward the mean – satisficing• Dumbing down (playing it safe to be

popular)• Evaluation apprehension

Group Problems• Cognitive interruptus (multitasking)– Fewer than 95% of people can multitask

effectively (and 90% of people think they are in the 5%)

– Takes a person seven minutes on average to recover from an interruption• Focus, focus, focus on generating a lot of ideas.

• Being in a group requires a symphony of skills: Listening, speaking, taking turns, taking notes, and summarizing.

Group Problems• Production blocking (time wasted while

group members queue up and wait to take turns expressing their ideas)

• Competing for attention• Simultaneous talking

Making Groups Effective (And Avoiding Free Riders)

• Don’t make team too big.• Assign roles.• Strengthen team cohesion.– Team T-shirts– Focus on shared goals– Use same lingo– Talk “we.”

• Increase diversity – not too much homogeneity.

Making Groups Effective• Craft a team charter.– A document written by all team members

specifying the team mission and expectations they hold for one another.• People are less likely to renege on an agreement they

agreed to in writing.

Making Groups Effective• Cyberstorming– Google Docs, etc.– No fighting for attention, no production

blocking• Brainwriting– Simultaneously and independently writing

down ideas. No eye contact. Silence. Focus attention on idea generation.

Making Groups Effective• Raise expectations.– Brainstorm for ten minutes, rest, then double

the number of ideas expected.• Separate people from the problem.– Attack the problem, not people.– Disagreement and conflict are OK.– Don’t get defensive.– Don’t be indirect – be direct but respectful.

• People like directness.• When stuck, summarize.

Making Groups Effective• Neutralize alpha-dominant people.– Aren’t aware they are dominating the

discussion, upsetting others, and making others loath to participate (doom loop) and give up.

– In group of six, three people do 70% of the talking. In a group of eight, three people do 70% of the talking, etc.

– Use forced democracy:• BRAINWRITING• CYBERSTORMING

• Brainwriting– Simultaneous written generation of ideas.

• No guessing• No confessions• All ideas anonymous

– No longer than ten minutes in group sessions– Secret ballot (put stickers on favorite ideas)– Flag four-six most popular– Groups who use brainwriting are much more

effective, especially when ideas are discussed (attention) and people reflect on them (incubation).

• Cyberstorming– Electronic brainstorming– Elegantly solve problems of production

blocking– Because ideas are displayed for everyone, they

can stimulate other ideas (synergy)– No one can talk too much, criticize ideas, or

interrupt.– Difficult because people have to both generate

and monitor ideas, but still more effective than old-fashioned brainstorming.

Rules For Brainstorming1. Express ideas openly.

– Don’t hold back, get crazy, childish2. No evaluation/criticism

– Generation first, then judging3. Focus on quantity.

– As many ideas as possible4. Build on ideas of others (synergy).

– Combine ideas 5. Keep groups small (five is ideal).6. Keep sessions about 30-40 minutes long.7. Individual brainstorming first (brainwriting), then in

groups.8. Have clear, accepted goals and expectations (structure).

Old Rules• Groups benefit most from building and

combining ideas (not generating lots of novel ideas).

• Groups are better at evaluating and judging ideas, not generating novel ones.

• Osborn’s old rules are effective because they are rules and provide structure.

• Quantity rule is most important.

Facilitator• Set a clear goal.• Keep group focused on the task.• Restrict people from telling stories or

explaining ideas.– Wasting time.

• When no one is suggesting an idea, restate the problem and encourage ideas.

• Encourage those people who are not talking to make a contribution.

Facilitator• Focus on process and resist inserting

substantive ideas.• Be a good umpire – enforce rules.• Focus on volume and novelty.• Break problems down into small chunks.• Help people get in touch with their child

(open, energetic).