Understanding Concept of Creativity

Understanding Concept of Creativity

Part of your job as a manager is to foster new ideas. But how do you assemble a team with the right mix of skills and perspectives to promote creativity? Creativity is the ability to come up with new and different ideas or breakthrough fixed ways of thinking. Learn how to manage an intellectually diverse work group and their environment to produce more and better ideas that encourage innovation when developing products and work processes.

Just what are creativity and innovation? Generally, you know them when you see them, right? But a deeper understanding of what creativity is can help you enhance the creativity of any group you lead. Let's start with a couple of definitions, and then move on to correct the most common misconceptions people have about creativity.

Meaning of Creativity

Some Useful Definitions of Creativity

Creativity is the heart of entrepreneurship while innovation is the oxygen that is keeping it alive.

'One's destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.'- Henry Miller

“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up.” - Pablo Picasso

Creativity is goal-directed thinking which is unusual, novel, and useful.

Creativity is the ability to produce work that is both novel (i.e. original, unexpected) and appropriate (i.e. useful concerning task constraints).

Creativity is involving the creation of something new and useful and creative thinking did not essentially require tangible creative products; rather the process should be more focused on defining creativity. - Runco (2007)

Creativity is just the extraordinary result of ordinary processes. - Smith, Ward & Finke

Creativity is a novel and personally meaningful interpretation of experiences, actions, and events. However, the novelty and meaningfulness of these interpretations need not require to be original or (even meaningful) to others. Indeed, the judgment of novelty and meaningfulness that constitutes creativity is an intrapersonal judgment. This intrapersonal judgment is what distinguishes creativity from other forms of creative expression. - Beghetto and Kaufman

Although we can accept its existence and importance, it has been a highly difficult task for the researchers to define creativity. Creativity refers to a person's ability to think differently or novel, which means the originality of ideas and usefulness of the ideas to the business and organization.

Can Creativity be learned?

We all are born with raw creativity ability but only a handful of few are more creative than many. Creativity is like raw material for the new and best solution for problems arising in every sphere of life. Creativity is a process of developing and expressing novel ideas that are likely to be useful. Creativity is not so much a talent as it is a goal-oriented process. Creativity begins with a foundation of knowledge, learning discipline, and mastering a novel way of thinking which comes from/by experimenting, exploring, questioning, assumptions, using imagination, and synthesizing information.

Creativity does not merely mean only "think different" and you cannot make your group more innovative just by deploying a few people who have creative character traits, and then relying on these folks for all your breakthrough ideas. It's a matter of designing a collaborative approach that maximizes everyone's distinctive gifts, experience, and expertise. Creativity is learned through practice and the development of long-term creative potential depends on experience. Therefore, since creativity also stems from experiences, it is a trait that can be acquired. Creativity is concerned more with possible solutions to a problem. The purpose or goal of the creative process is the solving of a particular problem or the satisfying of a specific need.

Dimensions of Creativity:

Novelty & Usefulness

Creativity involves thinking that aims at producing ideas or products that are relatively novel and that are in some respect, compelling. A human being is exceptionally blessed with the higher-level thinking abilities of creativity and problem-solving. Such activities require the use of already stored information along with the information concurrently received from the environment.  The most advanced thought process, creativity, involves the production of uncommon and novel ideas that are highly relevant to the situation.

Creativity is not Intelligence

Creativity is defined as something different from intelligence and as a parallel construct to intelligence, but it differs from intelligence in that it is not restricted to cognitive or intellectual functioning or behavior. Instead, it is concerned with a complex mix of motivational conditions, personality factors, environmental conditions, chance factors, and even products. Creativity has some domain-specific and domain-general elements in the sense that it needs some specific knowledge, but there are certain elements of creativity that cut across different domains.

Creativity involves Convergent as well as Divergent Thinking

The creative process begins with divergent thinking where the group moves away from familiar or established ways of seeing and doing things and this in turn produces novel ideas. Convergent thinking occurs in the later stages of the creative process. As the original ideas generated by the divergent thinking are communicated to others, they are evaluated to determine which ideas are genuinely novel and worth pursuing. The group then uses convergent thinking to choose an option with the potential to solve the problem that initiated the creative process.

Creativity is about Problem Solving

Innovation is the embodiment, combination, and/or synthesis of knowledge in original, relevant, valued new products, processes, or services. Innovation is the end result of the creative process. Again, creativity is a process you employ to improve your problem-solving. So you're not done until your creative efforts have produced a product, service, or process that answers the original need or solves the problem you identified at the outset.

Characteristics of Creativity:

The process of creativity is thought to have the following four characteristics:

  • Rejection of Previously Accepted Ideas
  • Result of Motivation & Persistence
  • Results from organizing the unclear situation in a coherent, clear, and new way.
  • Creativity is measurable, at least to some extent.
  • Creativity can be developed and promoted.
  • Creativity is not highly rewarded in practice, as it is supposed to be in theory
  • It is imaginative involving imagination since it is the process of generating something original
  • It is purposeful, that is, creativity is imagination put into action towards an end.
  • It produces something original in relation to one's own previous work, to their peer group, or to anyone's previous output in a particular field.
  • It has value with respect to the objective it was applied for. Creativity involves not only the generation of ideas, but also evaluation of them, and deciding which one is the most adequate one.
  • There are two types of creativity little or everyday creativity and Big or eminent creativity. The two forms of creativity rely on interpersonal and historical judgments of novelty, appropriateness, and lasting impact.

Related Links

Creation Date Friday, 09 October 2020 Hits 2650

You May Also Like

  • Change & Culture of Innovation

    Change & Culture of Innovation

    Predicting the future is a tricky business but managers need to have a future perspective in order to take business advantage and remain competitive. They need to drive and introduce constructive change to the business of the enterprise. The first step to creativity and innovation is to drive a culture of Innovation. Managers need to focus on developing future mindset all the time to keep pace with the unfolding future.

  • Building Perfect Creative Team

    Building Perfect Creative Team

    One misconception around creativity is that creative act is essentially solitary. Most of the world's important inventions resulted not from the work of one lone genius, but from collaboration of a team with complementary skills. Managers should build teams with the ideal mix of traits to form a creative group and then establish the conditions that make creativity much more likely to occur.

  • Generating Ideas using Brainstorming

    Generating Ideas using Brainstorming

    The brainstorming technique was developed by Alex F. Osborn in 1957 and brainstorming means where a team of members generates a large amount of alternative fruitful ideas on a specific problem without any criticism and then evaluates each idea in terms of their pros and cons. Brainstorming techniques fall into four broad categories: visioning, exploring, modifying, and experimenting.

  • The Skill of Decision Making

    The Skill of Decision Making

    In its simplest sense, decision-making is the act of choosing between two or more courses of action. Decision making is a key skill in the workplace and is particularly important if you want to be an effective leader. When decisions have to be made, there are several stages that you should go through to reach a practical solution. Understand the meaning and importance of decision making and how to look at it as a process.

  • Creating Highly Effective Teams

    Creating Highly Effective Teams

    How do we create effective teams? What comes to mind when you think about an effective team? High performing teams exhibit accountability, purpose, cohesiveness, and collaboration. It is a team that works seamlessly as a whole. Everyone brings unique talents and strengths and support each other to bring out the best in everyone. How do you create one?

  • Generating Ideas using SCAMPER

    Generating Ideas using SCAMPER

    SCAMPER is an activity-based thinking process that can be performed by Cooperative learning. SCAMPER is an acronym that provides a structured way of assisting students to think out of the box and enhance their knowledge. This can be used in the organizational context as a technique for creative problem solving and as a toolkit to generate fresh ideas.

  • Benefits of Teams in Workplace

    Benefits of Teams in Workplace

    The use of formal work teams is commonplace in modern organizations. But why we have teams? What are the benefits or advantages that teams provide for organizations and employees? Do we really need to adopt formal team structures and use team-building approaches in organizations? Read this article to explore and learn the benefits of having formal teams in organizations.

  • Investment Theory of Creativity

    Investment Theory of Creativity

    Sternberg in the year 2006, proposed the investment and confluence theory focused on understanding creativity. According to the investment theory, creativity requires a confluence of six distinct but interrelated resources known as intellectual abilities, knowledge, styles of thinking, personality, motivation, and environment. It emphasizes that creativity is not about one thing, but about a system of things.

  • Collaborative Leadership

    Collaborative Leadership

    Collaborative leadership is all about collaborative problem-solving and decision-making or can also be defined as the leadership of a collaborative effort. . The term started to appear in the mid-1990s in response to the formation of long term public-private partnerships to rebuild public infrastructure. Learn how you can use principles of collaborative leadership to enhance your leadership skills for being an effective leader.

  • Thinking & Problem Solving Skills

    Thinking & Problem Solving Skills

    Today's dynamic business world demands that you make decisions that significantly boost productivity and drive competitive advantage. But how do you know whether a decision will benefit the organization? And how do you know that the decisions are based on rational and statistical reasoning?  Explore how to become a dynamic problem solver with the skills to make accurate decisions.

Explore Our Free Training Articles or
Sign Up to Start With Our eLearning Courses

Subscribe to Our Newsletter


© 2023 TechnoFunc, All Rights Reserved