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May 8, 2013

LeaveSmarter: Marshall Goldsmith

Filed under: Bestsellers,Leadership,Personal Development,Thought Leaders — Michael @ 7:00 am
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Last week, Marshall Goldsmith was in town for our private LeaveSmarter event, sponsored by BMO Harris and Whyte Hirschboek Dudek. Marshall delivered a moving hour-long talk on effecting positive change through proven methods. As Dr. Goldsmith puts it, the key to improvement is not simply knowing what to do. The key is simply doing what we already know we should do.

Check out Dr. Goldsmith’s book, What Got You Here Won’t Get You There for more insights into improving your success rate in work and in life. Visit him online for even more.

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May 1, 2013

Thinker in Residence: Jackie Huba, author of Monster Loyalty

Filed under: Book Reviews,Marketing,Thinker in Residence,Thought Leaders,Uncategorized — Sally @ 8:37 am
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Jackie Huba
is the co-author of two books on customer loyalty. Citizen Marketers: When People are the Message documents the emerging world of social media and how brands should begin to embrace a participatory culture. Jackie’s first book, Creating Customer Evangelists: How Loyal Customers Become a Volunteer Sales Force, explains how companies convert customers into evangelists who spread the word about products, benefits or value propositions. Huba’s work has frequently been featured in the media, such as the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Businessweek, and Advertising Age. She was a founding Board Member of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association. Her new book, Monster Loyalty: How Lady Gaga Turns Followers into Fanatics, will be released May 2, 2013.


Our Take on Monster Loyalty:

Lady Gaga is a musician, an entertainer, and a pop star. She wears crazy outfits and has wild videos. But if you ask some people, she’s so much more than that. She’s the person who inspires them, who gives them confidence, and who listens to them and understands. Clearly, Lady Gaga isn’t just making music and putting on a show. Her work centers on connecting with her fans, which she calls “Little Monsters.” And by doing so, has created a devoted following of millions and a long-term business strategy that rivals most businesses today. A musician! Who knew?

Jackie Huba knew. She herself was a fan of the artist and began to observe the ways that Lady Gaga interacted with her fans – some of them unique, all of them personal and sincere. As CEO of her business, Gaga does everything from personally inviting fans backstage at concerts to chatting directly with fans on their own social network to discuss everything Gaga related. An online marketing expert, Huba has long shed light on the power of word-of-mouth marketing, and she saw Lady Gaga take it to a level most companies only dream of. So, she wrote a book about it: Monster Loyalty: How Lady Gaga Turns Followers Into Fanatics.


“An important step in creating passionate, loyal customers is not just to focus on the features and benefits of your product or service but to make sure customers know that your business is about something bigger. By bigger, I mean something emotional that people can believe in.”


Most musicians are focused on writing the next big hit, staying relevant, and creating products to sell their fans. According to Huba, Gaga focuses first on connecting with fans. After all, without fans, a good song is unheard, a concert hall is empty, and merchandise is unsold. Huba includes a quote from Lady Gaga to illustrate: “I’m not the beginning anymore. I don’t really see myself anymore as the center. They’re the center. I’m the atmosphere around it…I will continue to become whatever it is [the fans] would like for me to be.” How many companies think like this?

Huba examines a variety of them – Fiskars, Mini, Method, and other companies that share Lady Gaga’s commitment to and reliance on her followers. These companies, like Gaga, know to “Focus on your One Percenters” in order to “Build a Community,” and “Embrace Shared Symbols” to “Make Them Feel Like Rock Stars.” While there are companies successful at this approach, none of them are as successful as Lady Gaga. And therein lie the lessons to learn, and the inspiration to change our business for the better. Huba states:

Building community starts with finding a common thread that brings people together. Common experiences that the members of a community have had help define what a community is all about and make it possible for members to rely on one another for support. Companies who want to build these kinds of communities have to act small even if they aren’t. They need to treat customers like peers and create a feeling of intimacy–a feeling that those customers are part of a group of like-minded people, not merely purchasers to be mass-messaged at.

Monster Loyalty is a book about marketing, customer engagement, and building a business for the long haul. It also happens to be about an engaging but unlikely character, one with a very specific vision that connects with a very specific fanbase, one we can all learn from. Don’t miss the opportunity this book offers to create your own distinctive brand that inspires a monster-amount of loyalty.


Explore Further:

Named as one of the 10 most influential online marketers, Jackie co-authors the award-winning Church of the Customer blog. With more than 105,000 daily readers, it’s ranked as one of the most popular business blogs in the world.


Next:

Check in with us tomorrow as we continue our Thinker in Residence series on Jackie Huba with a Q&A interview on what brands can learn from Lady Gaga and companies who create both buzz and meaning.

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March 7, 2013

Thinker in Residence: Bruce Nussbaum on Business & Books

Filed under: Big Ideas,Innovation,Personal Development,Thinker in Residence,Thought Leaders — Tags: Creative, creativity, intelligence, Nussbaum, ThinkerInResidence, TiR — Sally @ 1:02 pm
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In our final Thinker in Residence installment on Bruce Nussbaum, author of Creative Intelligence, we asked Nussbaum to give us an idea of the question that most drives him to do the work he does, and also what books have influenced his work. Read on and enjoy Nussbaum’s unique perspective that applies a sharp intellect and, to my mind, a light touch on such topics as creativity, capitalism, invention, and strategy.

∗ What is the one unanswered question about business you are most interested in answering?

Decoding creativity is the biggest business challenge of our era. Creativity is the source of economic value yet we still don’t know that much about it. We don’t know what it is, how to train for it, who has it, how to manage it, how to maximize it. Creativity is at the heart of start-ups and entrepreneurship. Creativity still scares more business people yet they know that new products, services, and experiences generate the biggest profits of all. Our business schools still teach the analytics of efficiency because they are comfortable with it but also because they don’t know much about creativity. We need to decode creativity.

∗ What business book has influenced your work the most?

Max Weber’s The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism has had the most profound impact on my work. I have all my students read it. Creative Intelligence embraces the centrality of transforming what money can’t buy into what money can buy as being key to the rise of capitalism and Weber nails that. Weber, to take just one of many examples, talks about the notion of a “calling,” and it is this sense of a calling that drives so many creative people, including most entrepreneurs, to do what they do. Their motivation is not monetary gain per se but something higher, grander. Today we’ve secularized all that and our “calling” is in the name of society, the people. You can’t understand Sergey Brin or Jeff Bezos without knowing Weber.

∗ What is the business book you wish you had written and why?

The biography of David Kelley, co-founder of IDEO and founder of the Stanford D-School. Kelley has had, and continues to have, a tremendous impact on education, business, design, and society. He’s one of the quirkiest men I’ve ever met—and I’ve met a lot of powerful, strange people in my career, from Bill Casey to Henry Kissinger. I have a weird kind of dyslexia, a spacial dyslexia, that leaves me in a constant state of lost all the time. I don’t quite know where I am or how to get to another place. It’s been great for my creativity but don’t ask for directions—or even logic from me. Kelley seems to me to somehow be in that space. Plus, he has some great antique trucks.

∗ What business book are you reading right now?

I’m reading Playing to Win by Roger Martin, Dean of the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto, and A.G. Lafley, former CEO of P&G. Martin is the most innovative business school dean I’ve ever known and Lafley is an even greater rarity—he’s one of the most innovative CEOs there is. Martin was the chief consultant to Lafley when he ran P&G between 2000 and 2009 so we have a book by real practitioners with real experience who transformed one of the largest corporations in the world, making it much more innovative, much more creative.

And they are talking about strategy in straightforward, practical ways. Strategy is the science (or better yet, the practice) of choice. It is deciding, as Martin says, where to play and how to win. P&G transformed its winning game by opening up its closed silos, networking with outsiders for the first time and changing its internal culture to be much more creative and innovative. Martin and Lafley don’t explicitly talk about ‘Framing” and “Reframing” the narrative of a corporation and its engagement with its customers, but that’s what much of strategy really is.


Bruce Nussbaum, former assistant managing editor for BusinessWeek, is professor of innovation and design at Parsons School of Design and an award-winning writer. He is founder of the Innovation & Design online channel, and IN: Inside Innovation, a quarterly innovation magazine, and blogs at Fast Company and Harvard Business Review. Nussbaum is responsible for starting BusinessWeek‘s coverage of the annual International Design Excellence Award and the World’s Most Innovative Companies survey. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He taught third-grade science in the Philippines as a Peace Corps volunteer.


→ → Read our Thinker in Residence introduction to Creative Intelligence.

→ → Read Bruce Nussbaum’s thoughtful and thorough answers in our Q&A on Creative Intelligence.

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March 6, 2013

Thinker in Residence: A Q&A with Bruce Nussbaum

Filed under: Big Ideas,Innovation,Personal Development,Thinker in Residence,Thought Leaders — Tags: creativity, intelligence, Nussbaum, ThinkerInResidence, TiR — Sally @ 1:25 pm
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Creative Intelligence competencies are designed to help you amplify your creativity. Separately and collectively, they increase your creative capacity. The model here is not the light bulb going off in the mind of a genius but the improved ability that comes with training in sports or yoga. Each of us can learn to be more creative. Most of us can get really good at it.

~Bruce Nussbaum


Yesterday, we introduced you to Bruce Nussbaum’s new book, Creative Intelligence, and shared an overview of the author and his work. Today, we’ll drill deeper into the core aspects and benefits of Creative Intelligence. We asked Nussbaum a series of questions about his theory and the book that evolved from it, and we think you’ll find his answers thoughtful and thorough. As a result, we hope you get as excited about his work’s clear inclination toward potential, not limitation.


Q: You write in your book, “Let’s face it. Creativity scares us.” Why does it? And why shouldn’t it?

BN: Let’s start with the positive–creativity should NOT scare us because we were born creative. All that talk about humans being “tool-makers” is really talk about all of us being creative. Using a tool is a creative act and since tool-making and using distinguishes humans as a species (ok, not quite, a couple of other species use tools too), then we are naturally creative.

Anyone with kids knows they are naturally creative. Of course, we go on in many of our schools to squeeze creativity out of our children. Teaching to the test, memorizing math and science formulas, just sitting still for hours on end, especially for boys, knocks the creativity out of you.

We’ve actually been taught that creativity is really hard. It isn’t. We’ve been taught that creativity is rare. It isn’t. We’ve been taught it just “happens,” like a light bulb going off. It doesn’t. We’ve been taught that creativity is mental. It’s social as much as mental. And we’ve been told, often again and again, that WE aren’t creative. We are, in so many ways. We just don’t define it as “creative.”

Researchers at Cornell University, University of Pennsylvania, and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, showed that in a test, participants “demonstrated a negative bias toward creativity ….when participants experienced uncertainty.” Worse, “the bias against creativity interfered with participants’ ability to recognize a creative idea.” People tend to choose what they know in the face of uncertainty even though they realize it probably won’t help them. It is just familiar. And what words did the participants associate creativity with? “Agony.” “Poison.” And my favorite—“Vomit.” So, yes, creativity scares us. And it doesn’t have to.

Q: You take quite a dismissive view of the recent obsession for seeing creativity as something ‘solve-able’ via neuroscientific investigation. (“We need to stop searching for some magical place in the brain where creativity resides.”) Where should we look instead?

BN: Hooking people up to brain scans in artificial experiments in labs to see which parts of their brains light up when they “create” doesn’t tell us anything about HOW to create. It tells us nothing about the reality of creative behavior. Neuroscience is a lot like Javanese shadow plays. You see the shadows of puppets up on the screen playing out scenes reflecting the social realities of life. To understand those realities, you have to understand Javanese and Indonesian politics and economics. You have to know the actual behaviors of people and their historic and cultural contexts.

It’s not much different with creativity. You can learn creative competencies that help you observe reality, take from it, and make the new. Most creativity comes from connecting existing information in new ways or old knowledge with new technology. It doesn’t come from any single part of the brain. It’s not right or left brain but whole brain.

I’ll get into neuroscience when it can MAKE me more creative. And we just might be there soon. The concept of flow state, which we all have learned about by now, is very connected to the chemicals in our mind. I’m betting it isn’t “neuro” science that gets us to more creativity but “pharmaneurology” (is that a word?) that does. But that’s another book.


And what words did the participants associate creativity with? “Agony.” “Poison.” And my favorite—“Vomit.” So, yes, creativity scares us. And it doesn’t have to.


Q: Demystifying creativity seems to be one of the goals of establishing your 5 competencies, and one of the ways we can do this is by “knowledge mining.” I think most people feel like they are cheating a bit when looking at another person’s work, that that isn’t true creativity. Why is this not true?

NB: Yikes, what is “true” creativity? My favorite text about innovation and creativity, which I assign to my classes at Parsons, is Keith Richard’s autobiography, Life. Think about it. There is nothing more creative than a great band, right. And the Rolling Stones is clearly one of the most creative. Here is a quote from Richards in my book: “What I found about the blues and music, tracing things back, was that nothing came from itself. As great as it is, this is not one stroke of genius. This was listening to somebody and it’s his variation on the rhythm. And so you suddenly realize that everybody’s connected here. This is not just that he’s fantastic and the rest are crap; they’re all interconnected.”

Most creativity involves mining one, two, or three domains of knowledge for ideas that you connect to something else in a novel way that generates value. That’s really my definition of creativity.

Q: “Lack of awareness about the frames that color our perceptions of the world severely limits our ability to see new opportunities. Yet one of the first steps in creating something new is to break free of the old definitions and interpret facts and patterns in new ways. And that can be quite difficult.” Would you talk a little about how “reframing” works?

BN: The hero (heroine?) in Zero Dark Thirty finds Osama bin Laden by changing the frame of how the CIA sees the terrorist. The CIA’s narrative of Osama had been that he was living in a remote area of northern Pakistan. The job of the CIA was first to look for him in this area and second, to discover what terrorist plots he was trying to carry out before they happened.

Maya, the CIA analyst, changed that frame. First, she reframed the narrative to say Osama could be living anywhere, including a big city in Pakistan. Second, she reframed the CIA’s engagement with him by starting to look for people connected to Osama, not just Osama. She reframed what I call the Frame of Engagement.

This reframing of both the story narrative and our sense of engagement can be hugely powerful in creativity. It opens up new possibilities and new options and new avenues for action. Reframing was crucial to the CIA.

Lew Gerstner reframed IBM and saved it when it took its narrative from being a builder of “hard metal” big computers to being a service that helps clients solve problems. We can do that kind of reframing to ourselves as well. Who are we really?

Method, the company that makes cleaning products, reframed what it means to be “sustainable” by making it cool, beautifully designed, and normal, as opposed to suffering, boring, and brown.

Q: There have been plenty of books written about the value of play, trying to subvert the assumption that play is a waste of time. You encourage organizations/people to allow play, but not without rules. How do we begin to ‘channel’ play?


BN:
We can begin by just thinking about all the places and spaces we play in–our many playgrounds. These are all what Huizinga called “magic circles” where we suspend the rules and make up new ones with people we trust. These are safe places where we try things out, where outcomes aren’t certain and where we can make mistakes without horrible things happening. We can laugh at them. Most of us already play in these kinds of playgrounds—we just don’t recognize them as such. So just do that—map them.

At work, start mapping where your playgrounds are. Who are your playmates? Any team working together in a space is really a playground with people playing. Any lab, of course.

The harder task is to think of the informal playgrounds you play in. Think about the people you like to get together with who aren’t formally part of your work group – where you “bat ideas around.” These magic circles and these playmates are often the most productive because there is less pressure to perform and produce.

Many companies like 3M and Google offer 15% or 20% “free” time to people to do their own thing. It’s a great idea—and one you should do for yourself anyhow. Think about who you’re with in that free time—who do you spend time with, just “messing around?” Who do you like to play with? Then do more of it. Play is serious. Serious play is creative.


At work, start mapping where your playgrounds are. Who are your playmates? Any team working together in a space is really a playground with people playing.


Q: You assert that “there is no need to make the case that Making is a necessary part of Creative Intelligence” to Gen Y’ers. How has technology changed the creativity game in terms of what we’re actually able to make?

BN: Just take a moment to think about what we make today without even thinking about it. The beautiful photography on Instagram, the shoes and t-shirts and clothes we design with Threadless and Nike, the products and services we invent and sell on Etsy, eBay, Amazon, and Kickstarter, the gizmos and robots we do for Maker Faires and school Science Fairs, the “bespoke” bikes we put together to ride, the class curricula we build with double-major or independent study, the friends networks we compose on Facebook, the intellectual comment we add to Wikipedia and, increasingly, the stuff we literally make with 3D printing.

There is a confluence of new, cheaper, easier to use digital fabricators (3D printers), new low-cost sales platforms, new social media aggregators of funding, crowdsourcing and, of course, the old, by now, Apple-provided digital tools for designing, presenting, collating, and curating your very own music and moving images that is generating a renaissance in making. Wowie.

Q: The word “pivoting” is often used in business in terms of strategy, but here you use the word a bit differently. “Pivoting involves taking the intangibles that money can’t buy—our dreams, our desires—and turning them into the things that it can….And that’s what creativity can do, create gold from straw, art from angst, and yes, household products from wishes for a better life….” How do people pivot “from creativity to creation”?

BN: Pivoting is all about scaling. It’s about taking your fresh, new creativity and linking to someone who can scale it into actual creation. I call that person the “wanderer.” The wanderer is the one who looks at your creativity, decides it should become reality and provides the financial, prototyping, marketing, making and selling resources to get it out into the world. In the past, it was often the General Manager in business that did this. HP, in its golden years, had many labs full of great engineers making new things. GMs would wander through, decide what could work, and make it happen.

Museum and gallery curators are wanderers. Coaches and teachers are wanderers. They are all experts with lots of experience who edit creativity, make decisions, and then provide resources to go from creativity to creation.

Guess which is the largest group of such “wanderers” who curate creation? Family and friends. They are key wanderers in enabling startups on Kickstarter—and everywhere. Hooray, mom and dad! Who knew you were critical to creativity?


Museum and gallery curators are wanderers. Coaches and teachers are wanderers. They are all experts with lots of experience who edit creativity, make decisions, and then provide resources to go from creativity to creation.


Q: All 5 of your competencies, particularly Making and Pivoting, in my mind, contribute to the emergence of “Indie Capitalism.” Can you explain what this movement is and its potential power?

BN: Indie Capitalism is the kind of capitalism we all love—it’s entrepreneurial, it’s creativity-based, it’s local, it’s social, it’s US. It’s not CRONY CAPITALISM—BIG—business or banks or government (although it does embrace big businesses, banks, and government that embrace Indie Capitalist principles).

Nearly all of my students at Parsons want to start up their own companies when they graduate. This is startling to me and should be to everyone in America. They want a capitalism that reflects their culture and, in a way, all of us do. We all—conservative or liberal—applaud Steve Jobs, right.

So here are the principles of Indie Capitalism:

1- Creativity drives capitalism. Creativity is the source of economic value. It’s not efficiency, it’s not trading, it’s not finance but creativity. Profit derives from generating and scaling creativity into marketable commodities.
2- The entrepreneur drives economic growth. The entrepreneur, motivated by a calling to create something new or better, is the source of innovation, economic growth, jobs, profits, taxes.
3- Capitalism is a social movement, not just a market phenomenon. Capitalism exists within a social context of ceremonies, rituals, and emotions that make it dynamic and offer the opportunities for creativity and profit.
4- Social networks are the building blocks of the economy, again, not just the market. People belong to a large and growing number of real and digital communities and economic value arises out of those social relations.
5- Making is a core part of economic and social life and more making should be local, not just global. Made-In-The-USA is a brand of rising cultural and economic value.

Q: Creative Intelligence may be “a new form of cultural literacy” but you also believe it can change how we meet economic and political challenges since we are currently “stuck in a problem-solving mindset—as if there’s one correct solution to any of the issues facing the nation, as if the puzzle will end as soon as we get it right.” How can practicing Creative Intelligence help?

BN: I write in the book that “we were trained to deal with a world of predictable futures but the future—both the good and the bad—is anything but predictable. We’re living in an ‘I don’t know’ world where we can’t fathom the problems to come, much less the answers.”

When cascading change makes problems constantly morphing even as they present themselves to us, we can’t come up with the “right” solutions. There really aren’t any, just options that could work. So we need a different mind-set to dealing with unpredictability. It’s like going into a frontier where you know very little, if nothing at all, about your surroundings. So you need skills to cope, to discover, to invent, to adapt, to innovate. Historically, we’ve been at this place before. We need to return and relearn these creative skills of survival.

Creative Intelligence offers us skills we can learn and train for that enable us to succeed and prosper in an environment of chaos and uncertainty. So we see puzzles and challenges, not problems, that have multiple answers. We play at these challenges to figure out new ways of dealing with them. We try and see the world differently through different narrative frames and participate differently though different engagement frames. And then we don’t stop with new concepts or ideas but we use new methods of making things and then find wanderers to help us turn our creativity into real things.

In a stable world that doesn’t change that much over time, focusing on efficiency makes a lot of sense. That’s what we still study and train for. In a changing world, shifting all the time, creativity is a much more important skill. That is the challenge ahead for all of us.


Bruce Nussbaum, former assistant managing editor for BusinessWeek, is professor of innovation and design at Parsons School of Design and an award-winning writer. He is founder of the Innovation & Design online channel, and IN: Inside Innovation, a quarterly innovation magazine, and blogs at Fast Company and Harvard Business Review. Nussbaum is responsible for starting BusinessWeek‘s coverage of the annual International Design Excellence Award and the World’s Most Innovative Companies survey. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He taught third-grade science in the Philippines as a Peace Corps volunteer.

→ → Check in with us tomorrow for more insight “On Business and Books” from Bruce Nussbaum.
→ → Read yesterday’s Thinker in Residence introduction to Creative Intelligence.

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March 5, 2013

Thinker in Residence: Bruce Nussbaum, author of Creative Intelligence

Filed under: Big Ideas,Innovation,Personal Development,Thinker in Residence,Thought Leaders — Tags: creativity, intelligence, Nussbaum, ThinkerInResidence, TiR — Sally @ 2:08 pm
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Today we are introducing a new author-focused blog series called Thinker in Residence. For this series, we’ll be asking some of the brightest and boldest business authors writing today to give us insight into their work. Over the course of a week, we’ll give you, our readers, a review of the book, an interview with the author, and the author’s perspective on a current business challenge.

We’re excited to welcome Bruce Nussbaum as our first 800-CEO-READ Thinker in Residence. Over the next three days, we’ll take a look at his new book, Creative Intelligence: Harnessing the Power to Create, Connect, and Inspire, gain some insight about the book and its five competencies for enhancing creativity from the author himself, as well as find out more about what interests and influences his work.

Creative Intelligence: The Review

We often believe people are either born creative or they’re not. And we revere creative geniuses with a near-mythical devotion. But this kind of thinking is erroneous, Bruce Nussbaum assures us, Creative Intelligence. Creativity is not a talent doled out to the fortunate by DNA: “We need to stop searching for some magical place in the brain where creativity resides.” Instead, creativity is a practical skill that can be developed, and one that is crucial for all business people whether they are in search of a job or in search of a solution.

Nussbaum is a champion of creativity, and that enthusiasm is apparent throughout Creative Intelligence. A subject that is often regarded as “soft” is treated with great reverence, but at the same time, is given a practical overhaul, made (he emphasizes) measurable.

My goal in developing the concept of Creative Intelligence is to make the practice of creativity routine. I believe it can be an organic, everyday occurrence, not an artificial experience orchestrated by consultants who encourage participants to wear funny hats and write wild ideas on a whiteboard. I’d like to enable you to create easily and more often.

Other well-known (for better or for worse) books about creativity such as Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers and Jonah Lehrer’s Imagine relied on tales of great accomplishments to articulate their ideas about creativity. But Nussbaum neither advocates a neat 10,000 hours of practice nor delving into the revealing power of neuroscience to solve the mystery of creativity.

Creative Intelligence is about tools, not lightbulbs. It’s something we do, not something that happens to us. It’s about what happens during those moments of insight, but also after; it’s the hard work and the collaborations that can help bring your idea out of your mind and into the world.

Nussbaum then presents five competencies to make enhancing your creativity possible with practice.

Knowledge Mining: “The people who are routinely creative are skilled at connecting information from various sources in new and surprising ways.”

Framing: “Lack of awareness about the frames that color our perceptions of the world severely limits our ability to see new opportunities. Yet one of the first steps in creating something new is to break free of the old definitions and interpret facts and patterns in new ways. And that can be quite difficult.”

Playing: “By adopting a more playful mind-set we’re more willing to take risks, explore possibilities, and learn to navigate uncertainty, without the paralyzing stigma of failure.”

Making: “The revival of a ‘maker culture,’ combining open-source philosophy, new channels for distribution made possible by social media, and a shift to DIY…consumerism, has helped Making become a critical component of innovation once again.”

Pivoting “involves taking the intangibles that money can’t buy—our dreams, our desires—and turning them into the things that it can….And that’s what creativity can do, create gold from straw, art from angst, and yes, household products from wishes for a better life….”

Making and Pivoting as described above leads naturally to the third section of the book: “The Economic Value of Creativity.” Here Nussbaum explores the role of creativity in remaking capitalism into Indie Capitalism.

My use of the word “indie” is deliberate. “Indie” reflects an economy that is independent of the prevailing orthodoxies of economic theory and big business. It shares many of the distributive and social structures of the independent music scene, which shuns big promoters and labels. And as happens with many bands, so many of today’s successful creative endeavors began as local phenomena before branching out to new locations and networks.

Nussbaum concludes his book with a call to action. He believes that Creative Intelligence is “a new form of cultural literacy” that can change how we meet economic, business, and political challenges. In fact, as the subtitles states, Nussbaum credits creativity as being a powerful antidote for our current debilitating “problem-solving mindset—as if there’s one correct solution to any of the issues facing the nation, as if the puzzle will end as soon as we get it right.” Each of us has a responsibility, he seems to be saying, to both become creative and to reframe creativity.

With energetic prose, unintrusive but enlightening research, and cleverly-told stories, Creative Intelligence helps ground creativity, making it a skill attainable by us mere mortals, and thus gives us the power to do lofty things.

***

Author Biography:

Bruce Nussbaum, former assistant managing editor for BusinessWeek, is professor of innovation and design at Parsons School of Design and an award-winning writer. He is founder of the Innovation & Design online channel, and IN: Inside Innovation, a quarterly innovation magazine, and blogs at Fast Company and Harvard Business Review. Nussbaum is responsible for starting BusinessWeek‘s coverage of the annual International Design Excellence Award and the World’s Most Innovative Companies survey. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He taught third-grade science in the Philippines as a Peace Corps volunteer. Follow him on Twitter: @brucenussbaum

Smart Links:

Here are a few links to our favorite online material by Thinker in Residence, Bruce Nussbaum, to help you further explore his work.

3 Paths Toward a More Creative Life, a Fast Company Co.Design article

Creativity is in such demand today that when we apply for jobs, when we join organizations, or when we just meet other people, we are asked to present our creative selves. But we can’t do that unless we understand the nature of our own creativity, locate the sources of our originality, and have a language that explains our work.

4 Ways to Amplify Your Creativity, a Fast Company Co.Design article

You can make creativity routine and a regular part of your life. That’s true for big companies as well as small startups, corporate managers as well as entrepreneurs. Creativity is scalable.

How to Put the Indie in Capitalism: An Excerpt from Creative Intelligence on Wired.

If Indie Capitalism were to have a single foundational principle, it would be this: Creativity drives capitalism. Creativity is the source of economic value. Creativity transforms what money can’t buy into what money can buy.

***

Check in with us tomorrow for an in-depth Q&A with our Thinker in Residence, Bruce Nussbaum.

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January 31, 2013

Sketchnotes on Brains on Fire: The 2013 F.I.R.E. Sessions

Filed under: Big Ideas,Blog,Communication,Events,Marketing,Thought Leaders — Tags: Brains on Fire, F.I.R.E. Sessions, Greenville, Jackie Huba, Jonah Berger, Love146 — Michael @ 3:03 pm
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A few weeks ago I reviewed Mike Rohde’s The Sketchnote Handbook. This week Tuesday, as Jon and I were sitting inside Greenville’s Peace Center, eagerly anticipating the start of Brains on Fire’s 2013 F.I.R.E. Sessions, I picked up the blank Moleskine sketchbook (compliments of the Brains on Fire folks) that sat on the table in front of me and said to Jon, “I think I’m going to sketchnote this.”

What followed was an amazing day full of insights. From the author Jackie Huba we got a sneek peek into the world of Monster Loyalty. Then Brains on Fire’s own Geno Church delivered a compelling talk on creating authentic community interaction. Then we walked down Greenville’s sunny Main Street to a delicious shrimp and grits lunch at Devereaux’s. We returned for the afternoon session, kicked off by author Jonah Berger’s presentation on how things become contagious. Closing the day was Love146′s Rob Morris, a living, breathing definition of the word ‘passionate’. The common thread throughout F.I.R.E. Sessions was one thing: people. This event served as a clear underscoring of what Brains on Fire is all about, and we were honored to be there to share in the conversation. My personal take-away is this: put people at the center of your business, always.

For an even more in-depth re-cap of the event, check out John Moore’s blog post. To all of you at Brains on Fire: thank you!

Check out my sketchnotes from the two morning sessions below, but please withhold your criticisms—I will confess I’m an amateur. Be sure to keep an eye on the Brains on Fire folks in 2013. Since we’re book people and you probably are too, I’ll simply say that there is a new book on the way and it’s going to be good. If you can’t wait for the new one, make sure you’ve taken some time with the original Brains on Fire.

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December 28, 2012

Our ‘Favorite’ Business Books of 2012

Filed under: Big Ideas,Blog,History and Biographies,Leadership,Personal Development,Personal Finance and Investing,Social Responsibilty,Technology,Thought Leaders,Uncategorized — Tags: Antifragile, best of, Bitter Brew, book list, favorite books, Fine Print, five books, Global Odds, Quiet — Sally @ 11:53 am
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Last week, we released our picks for the Best Business Book of 2012 as well as the eight category winners. Following in the footsteps of the New York Times, if we may, who asked a few of their esteemed book reviewers to reveal a list of their favorite books of 2012 (“Favorite is not synonymous with best, so this process can be painful. Brutal honesty is required. We pick what we actually liked, not what we only admired, although ideally our favorites fit both descriptions” writes Janet Maslin. And also, “In the midnight hour these 10 Favorites — not 10 Bests — call for a gut check. Bottom line, for each of us: Is this a book I’d give to a friend?”), we’ve decided to also share with you a list of our ‘favorite’ business books. For us, we decided this list should consist of books that are square pegs that don’t quite fit into the business book genre’s round holes. Books that are valuable and interesting to the business and/or nonfiction reader, but might have more universal application than the books that were picked for our annual awards. And so…our editorial staff’s favorite books of the year:

Sally – Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking by Susan Cain from Crown Business

The secret to life is to put yourself in the right lighting. For some it’s a Broadway spotlight; for others, a lamplit desk. Use your natural powers–of persistence, concentration, insight, and sensitivity–to do work you love and work that matters. Solve problems, make art, think deeply. [...] Figure out what you are meant to contribute to the world and make sure you contribute it. If this requires public speaking or networking or other activities that make you uncomfortable, do them anyway. But accept that they’re difficult, get the training you need to make them easier, and reward yourself when you’re done.

Dylan – The Fine Print: How Big Companies Use ‘Plain English’ to Rob You Blind by David Cay Johnston from Penguin Portfolio

How the promise of cheap, competitive and unlimited telecommunications service has been turned into a reality of expensive, monopolistic and limited service is just one part of the larger transformation in the American economy since the late 1970s. A host of large industries, including banks, credit card lenders, electric utilities, health care, oil pipelines, Hollywood studios, property insurance, railroads and water companies, all have worked quietly to rewrite America’s economic playbook in their favor. [...] In The Fine Print, we’ll look at how legislatures have rewritten basic business laws, some whose principles date back thousands of years.

Michael – Beating the Global Odds: Successful Decision-making in a Confused and Troubled World by Paul Laudicina from John Wiley & Sons

Today’s leaders and citizens have to accept a world fraught with volatility and disruptive change, and they have to realize that inaction is not a good option. It’s not all bad: This unprecedented volatility is accompanied by an equally unprecedented and compelling convergence of doing well with doing good–a blending of the pursuit of enlightened self-interest with the pursuit of the common good….By leveraging new technological capabilities and employing more dynamic ways of thinking and inspiring the future, we can beat the global odds.

Jon – Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder by Nassim Nicholas Taleb from Random House

Some things benefit from shocks; they thrive and grow when exposed to volatility, randomness, disorder, and stressors and love adventure, and risk, and uncertainty. Yet, in spite the ubiquity of the phenomenon, there is no word for the exact opposite of fragile. Let us call it anti-fragile. [So...] The best way to verify that you are alive is by checking if you like variations. Remember that food would not have a taste if it weren’t for hunger; results are meaningless without effort, joy without sadness, convictions without certainty, and an ethical life isn’t so when stripped of personal risk.

Jack – Bitter Brew: The Rise and Fall of Anheuser-Busch and America’s Kings of Beer by William Knoedelseder from HarperBusiness

Thanks to their beer, the Busch family had tasted all that America ever promised the immigrant class from which they sprang –wealth almost beyond comprehension, political power that provided access to presidents, and a lifestyle rivaling that of history’s most extravagant royals. Along with that, of course, came a king-sized portion of heartbreak, scandal, tragedy, and untimely death. But they had endured…. Of the brewing giants that boomed after Prohibition…only Anheuser-Busch remained as a free-standing, independent company, still operated by the family that founded it.

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December 20, 2012

LeaveSmarter: Martha Rogers

Filed under: Big Ideas,Marketing,Strategy,Thought Leaders — Tags: Don Peppers, Extreme Trust, LeaveSmarter, Martha Rogers — Michael @ 12:29 pm
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Last month, Martha Rogers was in town for our private LeaveSmarter event, sponsored by BMO Harris and Whyte Hirschboek Dudek. Martha delivered a powerful hour-long talk focusing on the benefits of putting the customer at the center of your business.

As Martha puts it, “…it’s about ‘do things right’, ‘do the right thing proactively’.” Check out the video below for just the tip of the customer relationships iceberg. Check out Extreme Trust by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers for the full monty.

 

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December 19, 2012

The 2012 Business Book of the Year!

Filed under: Book Awards,General Management,Leadership,Thought Leaders — Tags: 2012, awards, best, book, Business, Lencioni, management, organizational health — dylan @ 12:50 pm
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The Advantage is a smart, quiet book. The valedictorian of the business book class of 2012 whose extracurricular is the chess club rather than debate or pep. The title and cover are straightforward. The message isn’t about making millions of dollars, turning the ship around, inspiring innovative excellence, breaking all the rules. Instead, the message is about prevention, about laying a solid groundwork of internal health to avoid the extremes mentioned above. To venture into a different metaphor, The Advantage is about eating your veggies, sharing a dessert rather than eating the entire slice, and taking a walk around the neighborhood each morning, rather than auditioning for The Biggest Loser to make a drastic and last-ditch change.

The single greatest advantage any company can achieve is organizational health. Yet it is ignored by most leaders even though it is simple, free, and available to anyone who wants it.

Despite its sensible qualities, or rather because of them, we are passionate about the importance of this book and recommend it to every manager or business owner who wishes to prevent organizational disease, rather than treat the symptoms when it’s already too late to stop the spread. We love it’s prime message of attending to the little things, so there aren’t so many BIG things to contend with. And Patrick Lencioni, one of the biggest names in business books, is the right person to show you how to attain organizational health–nay, organizational excellence–and prevent the dysfunctions that come from such internal parasites as politics, unresolved conflict, confusion. Like anything that’s valuable, an organization’s health takes some working at. The payoff? Transformation.

An organization has integrity–is healthy–when it is whole, consistent, and complete, that is, when its management, operations, strategy, and culture fit together and make sense.

Lencioni values management and so he begins his thesis with this foundational truth: management affects every aspect of a company. He explains that he learned from an early age “that some of the things that took place in the organization where I worked made sense, that others didn’t, and that it all had a very real impact on my colleagues and the customers we served.” And management’s contribution to the welfare of every person connected to the company intrigued him, leading him down the career path of writing books that offer practical solutions to solving persistent management problems.

An organization doesn’t become healthy in a linear, tidy fashion. Like building a strong marriage or family, it’s a messy process that involves doing a few things at once, and it must be maintained on an ongoing basis in order to be preserved.

The first thing companies must do to attain organizational health is decide that organizational health is worthy of their attention. Leaders “must humble themselves enough to overcome the three biases that prevent them from embracing it.”

  • The Sophistication Bias: sometimes the practical is the most valuable
  • The Adrenaline Bias: it’s not always the urgent that is the most critical
  • The Quantification Bias: the measurable isn’t the only thing justifiable

Managers must then commit to practicing the 4 Disciplines:

  1. Build a Cohesive Team by building trust, mastering conflict; achieving commitment; embracing accountability; focusing on results.
  2. Create Clarityand achieve alignment by answering six critical questions (see the book for just what these questions are.)
  3. Overcommunicate Clarity through repetition of those answers to inspire belief.
  4. Reinforce Clarity by building systems that reinforce the answers without institutionalizing them.

Lencioni closes the book by spending some time with one of his favored topics (see his bestselling Death by Meeting): the meeting. Meetings cannot and should not be eliminated, Lencioni asserts, but they can be regulated. He suggests establishing four types of meetings–administrative, tactical, strategic, developmental–that are held at specific times or to solve specific problems. Both employees and leaders then know exactly what they are getting into and what is expected of them.

As dreaded as the “m” word is, as maligned as it has become, there is no better way to have a fundamental impact on an organization than by changing the way it does meetings.

As may now be apparent, with The Advantage Lencioni leaves his preference for fable writing (e.g. The Five Dysfuntions of a Team, The Five Temptations of a CEO, and one of our favorites, Getting Naked) behind. There are no fictional characters and narrative this time around, and while we’ll miss Lencioni’s talent for telling engaging tales, The Advantage still sings with the tenor of Lencioni’s accessible and generous voice. The book is well-stocked with straight-forward advice about getting things right in your organization before they become wrong. Because if, or rather, when, things do go wrong as they are apt to in the life of a company, the organization’s health will be strong enough to withstand and endure the assault. Therein lies The Advantage, and why we chose this book as our 2012 Book of the Year.

(To revisit this year’s book awards, as well as those from previous years, click here.)

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December 6, 2012

The Author Pow Wow and The Art of Project Management
(For Authors)

Filed under: Author Pow Wow,Publishing Industry,Thought Leaders — dylan @ 11:51 am
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The 800-CEO-READ Author Pow Wow is just around the corner, and we still have a few spots open.

For those still on the fence, know this: We have last year’s keynote speaker and New York Times bestselling author Tim Sanders—Love is the Killer App, The Likeability Factor, and Today We Are Rich—giving a special half hour session on publishing entitled The Art of Project Management (For Authors). His talk on publishing last year melted minds, and left people changed for the better in opinion and approach. If you want to make the most of your next publishing opportunity, you’ll want to be in the room and a part of this discussion.

For those who can’t make it, this video from David Kazzie that we found via Guy Kawasaki is the best we can do.

If that didn’t help, you should join us at the Author Pow Wow in Austin, Texas from January 13 to the 15th.

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