First, try this, right now:
Think of a person who you consider to be creative.
I’m willing to bet you didn’t think of yourself.
Very few people think they are creative. Most believe it’s a magical gift which is bestowed upon the smartest, wildest, or best looking*.
Here are the criteria to see if you are a creative person or not:
Can you think of any problem in the world?
Can you think of at least one solution to that problem?
Congratulations! You’re creative.
Now let’s talk about how to be more creative
A) Quit trying to fit in
This disaster of a conversation happens every day:
“Hey I have all these new ideas!”
“Ooh, that’s not really how we do things here”
“Oh, okay.”
This message is passed like a virus from new hire to new hire, from department to department. Some companies have it even if they pretend they don’t.
I have a friend who was hired to “disrupt the organization.” The company was so proud when he came on board: “Look at us! We’re innovators!”
Guess what happened when the disruption started? My friend received curse-littered emails from 2 of the 3 seniors for what he’d done. Cool as ever, he didn’t apologize and let the results play out.
You may not be in a position to bring in millions of rands to your company, but stand your ground when you are right. Use these magic words:
“Let’s just try it and see if it works. We can always switch back if it doesn’t.”
B) Always be looking out for problems
Although it’s counterintuitive, this is the first step to being creative. Even traditional artists, (writers, painters, etc.) usually create in response to conflict in the world.
KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT about the problems you find. At least, until you:
C) Bring solutions to those problems
I don’t care what you think your job title is. From this point forward, you are now a full time problem solver.
See an open position online and know someone who would fit it perfectly? Refer them.
See something missing from your favorite blogger’s website? Find them a plugin which would fix it.
See a letter which fell off a sign? Put it back.
Solve problems. Watch how everything falls into place. It’s like magic.
D) Find ways to grab people’s emotions
Here is one of my favorite stories:
In 1992, Robyn Waters started working for Target. She was given a pretty lowly job, and hated what she was working with. As a former fashion snob, she got sick of Target lagging behind the market and putting out clothing designs a year after everyone had moved on from that trend.
She begged that more money and attention be given to the women’s clothing department. Nobody listened.
So Target kept cranking out bland, old, boring trends.
But when the fashion industry made a switch from neutral khaki to bold color, Waters realized she had to do something differently.
She went to a candy store in New York, bought the brightest colored M&Ms she could find, placed a crystal bowl in the middle of a conference table.
She waited.
As people filed into the room, Waters opened a bag of M&Ms and poured them into the bowl. Turquoise, pink, red, and yellow candies splashed and spilled into the bowl.
Then she dumped in another bag.
Then another.
The effect mesmerized the room. People couldn’t look away.
“Do you see?” she asked them. “Do you see your reaction to color?”
We all know the rest of the story. Target’s bullseye is one of the most recognizable icons on the planet, and they remain a real presence in the fashion world.
None of that happens if Waters simply tried to explain where she thought trends were headed.
You think the world is made of rules. It isn’t.
The world is made of people.
People are made of emotions.
The more you can make people feel, the better chance of getting your ideas into reality.
E) Learn everything
About your company. About your industry. About your craft. About your coworkers.
Creativity is often simply combinations of existing ideas.
F) Stay healthy
At 24, I often feel lazy to exercise and eat healthy constantly . A healthy mind yields greater impact.
G) Experiment
You know when I talked about the magic words up there — “Let’s just try it and see if it works?”
Yeah, sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes it blows up in your face. And that sucks. I’m not one of those writers who will tell you failure is awesome because it’s not.
However, the height of your creative ability is proportional to your ability to live with failure. It is the creative person’s imperative to try things, even (especially) if they might not work.
Experiment. Adjust. Repeat forever.
H) Start Micro Journaling
It is always worth documenting stuff so you can always go back should sh%# hit the fan.
The final secret…
…is so simple it’s almost annoying.
I would love to engage further on Twitter @ngalekat
Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://medium.com/@ToddBrison/how-to-stay-creative-in-a-sea-of-corporate-boredom-daca62eed64e
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