EDITOR’S
NOTE: Breen’s article is based on research which Professors Teresa Amabile and
Steven Kramer have since gone on to develop into a 2013 book — “The Progress
Principle”.
Bill
Breen draws valid inferences from this study and will affect organizational
perceptions on generating ideas and deciding who's really creative in the
organization.
The
core of creative synergy in The Joyful Work Model Image source: integralleadershipreview.com
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By Bill
Breen
These days, there's hardly a mission statement
that doesn't herald it, or a CEO who doesn't laud it. And yet despite all of
the attention that business creativity has won over the past few years,
maddeningly little is known about day-to-day innovation in the workplace. Where
do breakthrough ideas come from? What kind of work environment allows them to
flourish? What can leaders do to sustain the stimulants to creativity — and
break through the barriers?
Teresa Amabile has been grappling with those
questions for nearly 30 years. Amabile, who heads the Entrepreneurial
Management Unit at Harvard Business School and is the only tenured professor at
a top B-school to devote her entire research program to the study of
creativity, is one of the country's foremost explorers of business innovation.
Eight years ago, Amabile took her research to a
daring new level. Working with a team of PhDs, graduate students, and managers
from various companies, she collected nearly 12,000 daily journal entries from
238 people working on creative projects in seven companies in the consumer
products, high-tech, and chemical industries. She didn't tell the study
participants that she was focusing on creativity. She simply asked them, in a
daily email, about their work and their work environment as they experienced it
that day. She then coded the emails for creativity by looking for moments when
people struggled with a problem or came up with a new idea.
"The diary study was designed to look at
creativity in the wild," she says. "We wanted to crawl inside
people's heads and understand the features of their work environment as well as
the experiences and thought processes that lead to creative
breakthroughs."
Amabile and her team are still combing through
the results. But this groundbreaking study is already overturning some
long-held beliefs about innovation in the workplace. In an interview with Fast
Company, she busted six cherished myths about creativity. (If you want to quash
creativity in your organization, just continue to embrace them.) Here they are,
in her own words.
1. CREATIVITY COMES FROM CREATIVE
TYPES
When I give talks to managers, I often start by
asking, Where in your organization do you most want creativity? Typically,
they'll say R&D, marketing, and advertising. When I ask, Where do you not want
creativity? someone will inevitably answer, "accounting." That always
gets a laugh because of the negative connotations of creative accounting. But
there's this common perception among managers that some people are creative,
and most aren't. That's just not true. As a leader, you don't want to ghettoize
creativity; you want everyone in your organization producing novel and useful
ideas, including your financial people. Over the past couple of decades, there
have been innovations in financial accounting that are extremely profound and
entirely ethical, such as activity-based costing.
The fact is, almost all of the research in this
field shows that anyone with normal intelligence is capable of doing some
degree of creative work. Creativity depends on a number of things: experience,
including knowledge and technical skills; talent; an ability to think in new
ways; and the capacity to push through uncreative dry spells. Intrinsic
motivation — people who are turned on by their work often work creatively — is
especially critical. Over the past five years, organizations have paid more
attention to creativity and innovation than at any other time in my career. But
I believe most people aren't anywhere near to realizing their creative
potential, in part because they're laboring in environments that impede
intrinsic motivation. The anecdotal evidence suggests many companies still have
a long way to go to remove the barriers to creativity.
2. MONEY IS A CREATIVITY MOTIVATOR
The experimental research that has been done on
creativity suggests that money isn't everything. In the diary study, we asked
people, "To what extent were you motivated by rewards today?" Quite
often they'd say that the question isn't relevant — that they don't think about
pay on a day-to-day basis. And the handful of people who were spending a lot of
time wondering about their bonuses were doing very little creative thinking.
Bonuses and pay-for-performance plans can even be
problematic when people believe that every move they make is going to affect
their compensation. In those situations, people tend to get risk averse. Of
course, people need to feel that they're being compensated fairly. But our research
shows that people put far more value on a work environment where creativity is
supported, valued, and recognized. People want the opportunity to deeply engage
in their work and make real progress. So it's critical for leaders to match
people to projects not only on the basis of their experience but also in terms
of where their interests lie. People are most creative when they care about
their work and they're stretching their skills. If the challenge is far beyond
their skill level, they tend to get frustrated; if it's far below their skill
level, they tend to get bored. Leaders need to strike the right balance.
3. TIME PRESSURE FUELS CREATIVITY
In our diary study, people often thought they
were most creative when they were working under severe deadline pressure. But
the 12,000 aggregate days that we studied showed just the opposite: People were
the least creative when they were fighting the clock. In fact, we found a kind
of time-pressure hangover — when people were working under great pressure,
their creativity went down not only on that day but the next two days as well.
Time pressure stifles creativity because people can't deeply engage with the
problem. Creativity requires an incubation period; people need time to soak in
a problem and let the ideas bubble up.
In fact, it's not so much the deadline that's the
problem; it's the distractions that rob people of the time to make that
creative breakthrough. People can certainly be creative when they're under the
gun, but only when they're able to focus on the work. They must be protected
from distractions, and they must know that the work is important and that
everyone is committed to it. In too many organizations, people don't understand
the reason for the urgency, other than the fact that somebody somewhere needs
it done today.
4. FEAR FORCES BREAKTHROUGHS
There's this widespread notion that fear and
sadness somehow spur creativity. There's even some psychological literature
suggesting that the incidence of depression is higher in creative writers and
artists — the de-pressed geniuses who are incredibly original in their
thinking. But we don't see it in the population that we studied.
We coded all 12,000 journal entries for the
degree of fear, anxiety, sadness, anger, joy, and love that people were
experiencing on a given day. And we found that creativity is positively
associated with joy and love and negatively associated with anger, fear, and
anxiety. The entries show that people are happiest when they come up with a
creative idea, but they're more likely to have a breakthrough if they were
happy the day before. There's a kind of virtuous cycle. When people are excited
about their work, there's a better chance that they'll make a cognitive
association that incubates overnight and shows up as a creative idea the next
day. One day's happiness often predicts the next day's creativity.
5. COMPETITION BEATS COLLABORATION
There's a widespread belief, particularly in the
finance and high-tech industries, that internal competition fosters innovation.
In our surveys, we found that creativity takes a hit when people in a work
group compete instead of collaborate. The most creative teams are those that
have the confidence to share and debate ideas. But when people compete for
recognition, they stop sharing information. And that's destructive because
nobody in an organization has all of the information required to put all the
pieces of the puzzle together.
6. A STREAMLINED ORGANIZATION IS A
CREATIVE ORGANIZATION
Maybe it's only the public-relations departments
that believe downsizing and restructuring actually foster creativity.
Unfortunately, I've seen too many examples of this kind of spin. One of my
favorites is a 1994 letter to shareholders from a major U.S. software company:
"A downsizing such as this one is always difficult for employees, but out
of tough times can come strength, creativity, and teamwork."
Of course, the opposite is true: Creativity
suffers greatly during a downsizing. But it's even worse than many of us
realized. We studied a 6,000-person division in a global electronics company
during the entire course of a 25% downsizing, which took an incredibly
agonizing 18 months. Every single one of the stimulants to creativity in the
work environment went down significantly. Anticipation of the downsizing was
even worse than the downsizing itself — people's fear of the unknown led them
to basically disengage from the work. More troubling was the fact that even
five months after the downsizing, creativity was still down significantly.
Unfortunately, downsizing will remain a fact of
life, which means that leaders need to focus on the things that get hit.
Communication and collaboration decline significantly. So too does people's
sense of freedom and autonomy. Leaders will have to work hard and fast to
stabilize the work environment so ideas can flourish.
Taken together, these operating principles for fostering creativity in the workplace might lead you to think that I'm advocating a soft management style. Not true. I'm pushing for a smart management style. My 30 years of research and these 12,000 journal entries suggest that when people are doing work that they love and they're allowed to deeply engage in it — and when the work itself is valued and recognized — then creativity will flourish. Even in tough times.
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