If we want our creativity to achieve anything, we have to overcome some obstacles …
“There are plenty of great ideas out there… but so few people actually do anything about them” Speaker on “Woman’s Hour”
Have you ever had a really great idea for work or personal life but not taken it to fruition?
Read on…
The quote above came from a lady speaking on the radio. She was seeking to sponsor a mature woman writer by offering an idyllic place for them to live and write rent free.
She believes that by giving them the chance to get away from their frenetic home environment they can be more creative and productive, that they can produce a book that gets published.
Sadly I was half asleep at the time and didn’t catch her name, but she did set me thinking about the variety of obstacles to creativity that exist within organisations but particularly within us.
I have devised the acronym PIGS to categorise these obstacles: Process, Individual, Group, and Structure. [If
anyone would like to fatten up the idea, your thoughts are welcome!]
For this article, I will focus on individual obstacles to being creative. These include:
Do any of these seem familiar too you?
So what great idea have you not followed through on? Could your idea have worked if you had more (but not too much!), curiosity or belief, persistence or persuasion?
Action
Think of something in your life that you thought was a great idea but came to nothing. Have another go at implementing it and see if you can make it work.
To Close
By chance, I attended a course with a leadership company last week. They use horses to help people understand leadership but also to help people with personal issues.
My issue was why do I sometimes not push good ideas through to fruition (now where have I heard that before)? The tutor asked me to pick up the horses hooves for my exercise.
It was a real insight as I struggled, spending too long trying to build rapport with the horse instead of just picking the hoof up, thinking other people’s tactics were better than my own, not getting advice on how to get a horse to raise its hoof, raising the first hoof and then giving up and trying to build rapport again when its weight was on the next foot.
The horse was the perfect metaphor for why I sometimes don’t follow through on ideas. It was with great satisfaction that I eventually picked up all four hooves (one at a time!) and realised I am perfectly capable of following through ideas if only I use the right strategy.
So can you!
John Brooker I Loving Creativity in Business
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| The-Creative-Gorilla-6.pdf | 189.21 KB |
Copyright © 2010 Yes! And… | environmental policy | website by under design
T: 020 8869 9990 | E: hi@yesand.co.uk
