A Note on these Creative Clicks by Gal Friday, Marianne Carr: Click on the Headlines to Get to the Creative Thinking Original Post.
Short and sweet creative thinking from Seth Godin about how to make ideas more powerful.
The most important question is usually WHY?
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
An interesting creative thinking exercise would be to ideate, “In what ways do these trends impact our current offerings?” and “How might these offerings need to change to continue our current level of success?”
Zappo’s is exploring Holacracy. Time will tell if it is a fad or will become Standard Operating Procedure. My hope is that it encourages creative thinking and creativity at work.
Internal customers are any stakeholder you deliver a product or service to in exchange for some kind of social/professional currency. We all have internal customers.
In this article you will also find links to books recommended by Bill Gates and Steve Jobs. I am going to explore all three lists and learn something this summer.
This is kind of Meta – a map of maps. I am still trying to wrap my head around what really makes a good Infographic. This one is too big to fit on my computer screen all at once mainly because it is vertical and my computer screen is horizontal. On my mobile device, which is vertical, it’s just too darn small to be useful. So if I print it out, there goes the convenience of the links. Sigh.
My favorite quote: “Design thinking” is really just another way of saying “problem-solving.” But this IS a good primer for Design Thinking. Most important step is Define the Problem. Most important aspect of defining the problem is Empathy. - Marianne Carr
Download our FREE “Taking the No Out of InNOvation eBook to help you generate extreme creativity and ideas! For organizational innovation success, contact The Brainzooming Group to help your team be more successful by rapidly expanding strategic options and creating innovative growth strategies. Email us at info@brainzooming.com or call us at 816-509-5320