Thursday, May 7, 2009

Creativity Conference - Australia

The VERY FIRST Creativity Conference to be held in Australia will be in Ballarat from 11-14 February 2010.  Sponsored by the Thinking Network, over twenty leading International specialists in all forms of creativity, innovation and change have promised to run sessions at the conference. 

Creativity Oz will be modelled on the lines of the highly successful ACRE Creativity Conference in South africa, the Mindcamp Conference in Toronto, and the CREA conference in Europe.  A full range of interactive and participative workshops will be interspersed with keynote sessions from the World's best speakers.

More blogs will follow as the organisation of the event gains momentum.  We are establishing a new website for the conference to give up-to-the-minute news as the program develops.  Stay tuned for updates - and please leave a comment or send us an email with your interests and ideas to make the conference a huge success.  Look forward to seeing you there!

Ken and Co. at the Thinking Network.

Twitter - POSITIVE NEWS ONLY DAY!

Kneale Mann has had this wonderful idea that we should have a 'positive news only' day on twitter.  The suggestion is to put aside all the quotes, links, advice, self-promotion and grumpy posts.  Just for one day - and the day is Sunday 10 May.

Take a look at Kneales blog...  http://bit.ly/lR509

And while we are being positive on twitter, why not apply the same philosophy to anything you might post on any other social media pages?

And better still - how about a wonderfully positive response on the day to everyone IN PERSON? Not just your loved ones, but be positive to the grumpy guy, the person in front of you in the checkout queue that's a bit slow, your dog when you take him for a walk - even the driver that cuts you up on the freeway!

And if you're not on twitter?  Join up before the 10th May - and spread some sunshine!  Remember it's MOTHER'S DAY in Australia!


Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Don’t start a think tank without thinkers!

Think Tanks are all the rage!  Maybe it all started with Kevin Rudd’s 2020 Summit? 

Mr. Rudd asked 1,000 of Australia's top brains to map out strategies for the future at a '2020 Summit' in Canberra on 19-20 April 2008.  The results were published a year later.  962 ideas put forward resulted in nine proposals being given the green light by the Federal Government.  Was this value for money, and what can we learn from the experience? 

Proposals included a new ABC TV channel for children, research into a bionic eye, formation of a volunteer civilian force to deal with regional emergencies, a review of the tax system, a review of how the states and territories work together, a carbon pollution reduction scheme, a student scholarships award scheme, building an indigenous cultural centre and creating a white paper on homelessness.  Further initiatives include the broadband network, initiatives to help business and developing relationships with schools. 

But what if we had asked the same questions of group of people chosen at random?  Say the next ten people in a queue at the supermarket?  What proposal would they have put forward?  They may have missed out on the bionic eye, of course, that’s a bit specialized, but the rest?  My guess is they would have probably covered them all.  So was the think tank value for money?

 A more important question of course could be is there a better way to run a think tank in the future?  Surely we should expect much more from ‘the Country’s leading thinkers’?  So what might be possible? 

The Kevin Rudd experience in April 2008 can perhaps be seen as a giant version of a familiar scenario that happens in many organisations around Australia every day.  Groups of people gather together in the same room with an issue in mind and the intention of ‘brainstorming’ for the best solution. 

When the participants have been through some effective training in productive thinking the results are often spectacular.  Some great ideas have emerged and have produced amazing improvements in performance.  Delivery times cut in half, cost of production halved, huge slabs of time saved, and in the present economic climate, jobs and organisations could be saved too!

 But if the brainstormers haven’t been taught thinking skills, the results are typically disappointing.  They rely on one process and get limited results.  The outcomes are often a statement – and frequent re-statement – of opinion, and a reflection of ‘what we do around here’ married to vested interest.  Ideas re judged as soon as they appear, which suppresses any genuine creative thought.  Suggest anything radical and it’s put down as ‘too risky’. 

So why don’t we teach thinking skills?  Maybe because everyone thinks they can think?  And of course they can, but in how many different ways?  How many creative thinking strategies have you learned?  How about critical thinking?  But we know you can’t solve 21st century problems with 20th century thinking.  We know that the thinking that got us to where we are isn’t going to be the best thinking to get us into the future.  The thinking that created the current recession is certainly not going to be a suitable form of thinking for recovery!

 Perhaps one of the main reasons behind this lack of training in thinking skills is the view that ‘thinking’ is seen as a soft skill.  Soft skills are often considered as optional extras.  The hard skills like ‘knowing’ things take precedent.  But we didn’t ‘know’ the recession was coming.  And maybe we don’t ‘know’ how to recover?  Do we know how to cure poverty?  Do we know how to prevent terrorism?  Do we know how to maintain a healthy planet? 

So if knowing things is not enough, thinking becomes the only option; it’s not a luxury item any more.  And if that’s the case we MUST teach thinking skills at every opportunity; in schools, colleges, university, the workplace and the family. 

And as far as Think Tanks are concerned we really must teach the participants productive thinking skills, models, tools techniques and processes.  Then we have a much better chance of having a real ‘value for money’ think tank with the potential to come up with more options and better ideas.  And to extend the thinking beyond ‘what’ needs to happen, to include why it’s a good idea and how we might go about it. 

Let’s put the ‘think’ back into think tank.  Opinion tanks are a waste of time.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Creativity through connections

This is an amazing dedication to creatively using what already exists!  There should be no downturn or layoffs or bankruptcy if we could get half as much creativity into the business world!


Think about it - share it - do it!  How could we apply the principle in business? In education?  In government?  International trade?  How about putting an end to poverty?  Is there anyone or any organisation who WOULDN'T be better off if they could make connections, synthesise like this?  Love to hear your thoughts...

Ken

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Lovely quote from Phil McCreight via twitter...

He that will not apply new remedies must expect new evils; for time is the greatest innovator. ~Francis Bacon, "On Innovation," Essays

Sky Business News

Well, my first live TV appearance!  A little scary sitting in the tiny remote studio in Melbourne with the host and main studio in Sydney.  All I could see was me on the monitor and the TV camera in front...  No picture of the host and interviewer so absolutely no body language cues - bit like speaking on the phone to a stranger.  

But it seemed to go well I think.  And Sally was happy too!

Who is Sally I hear you ask?  Sally Urquhart is the CEO of littleBIG Marketing and PR, a boutique agency based in Melbourne.  So if anyone is looking for an amazingly brilliant PR person, give Sally a call or send an email to sally@littlebigmarketing.com

The main point of the conversation on Sky Business was how could Productive Thinking provide a potential upside in the downturn.  Sky Business have a segment called 'upside' on their morning show everyday.   We focused on how PT provides a better understanding of exactly what is going on and what the future could possibly look like BEFORE we start looking for solutions.  Rather than look for the 'one right answer' we need to open up and widen the search for what's REALLY going on.  I suggested that asking the guy in the warehouse and the waiter and the shop assistant was going to provide more immediate feedback than waiting for the financial analysis!

The warehouse guy knows he hasn't despatched much in the past two days, the waiter knows how many covers have been served and the shop assistant knows right there and then how many people have been into the shop and what the customer thinks of the goods.  The key role for the CEO should be to get up and go look.  The principle from there was to teach everyone some productive thinking skills before you needed to lay them off.  If the learn to think, discover new and better ways of doing business and making customers deliriously happy - maybe you won't need to lay them off at all?

How is it possible that organisations can go into receivership with the entire staff made redundant, with it all coming as a surprise to the staff, the distributors knowing nothing about it, the franchisees not being aware of a problem, and customers paying deposits on goods THE DAY BEFORE the company went down?  Why didn't they know?  And why were they not involved in looking for potential solutions?  What if they had productive thinking skills?  What if they had seen the early warning signs a year ago?  What if they had changed the way they do business?  What if they had halved costs?  What if they sold twice as much?

Wishful thinking?  Maybe, but we'll never know...

What we do know is that staff, distributors and franchisees were clearly not involved, they were not asked to think, and they are now all out of a job in the middle of a recession.  Let's hope they soon find a progressive employer.  Good luck to all concerned.

Just a thought - look forward to comments!

Have a fun day

Ken


Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Sky Business News

Sky Business News have confirmed a spot on their 'Upside' segment for 9.45 am tomorrow, 15 April, Aussie Eastern time.  Looks like all their interview segments are about 4-5 minutes...  The focus should be on Productive Thinking, what are the barriers and why we need it - how much can you say in 5 minutes?  Another new experience though - wonder what I'll be saying about it after the event?