Creativity in Business: The Basic Guide for Generating and Selecting Ideas - Brossura

Byttebier, Igor; Vullings, Ramon

 
9789063693800: Creativity in Business: The Basic Guide for Generating and Selecting Ideas

Sinossi

Creativity in Business is the basic guide for idea generation and selection. It focuses specifically on business and education.

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Informazioni sull?autore

Ramon Vullings: Ramon Vullings is inspirational speaker, an innovation expert with humor, enthusiastic master of interaction, business author on applied creativity & cross industry innovation and ideaDJ.

Dalla quarta di copertina

Creativity Today -the management book on applied creativity- written by Ramon Vullings & Igor Byttebier- has inspired tens of thousands of managers, teachers and students around the world. Now this book is made available again in a revised version, under a new title, new subtitle and with a new cover design. All intended to breath a well deserved second live into this creativity classic and to emphasize its attractiveness as a basic guide for businesses and organizations that wish to become more creative.

Creativity in Business is clear, practical, fun, and rich with twenty years of experience. The book is a personal creativity coach, offering ideas, exercises and inspiration. Users (not just readers, in other words), are encouraged to grasp the essence of creativity, to put what they have learned into practice and to inspire others.

If you want to learn how to generate and enrich ideas more easily, to become an inspiring coach for creative sessions, Creativity Today will help you find answers to your challenges today.

Igor Byttebier has been working as a creativity consultant in many countries for the past 20 years. He specializes in breakthrough thinking in challenging projects. Ramon Vullings is an innovation expert, speaker, and business author. He is part of the innovation expert group 21 Lobsterstreet.

• Revised edition of Creativity Today
• Basic think and do book that made tens of thousands of managers more creative
• Now available again in a new sharply priced edition

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HUMAN THOUGHT

This chapter will provide an insight into our thought processes. We’ll have a look at the hardware and software of our thought system. We know that thinking mainly takes place in the brain. But what exactly is thinking? And why don’t we constantly come up with new ideas? Do the construction and design of the brain provide an explanation for this? And of course, what is creative thinking?

Definitions
During the course of evolution, man developed a remarkable thought system with an incredibly fine and diverse structure. We will come to the physical aspect (hardware) of the brain in a minute. First let’s take a look at the functionality (software). To start with, let’s look at some definitions. This is worthwhile because it indicates perfectly why creative thinking is not as simple as we might wish it to be.

What is thinking? Out of many possible definitions, we chose this one:
Thinking = Processing Information

We are constantly surrounded by all kinds of stimuli and our perception system (the senses) makes it possible to capture these stimuli. Our thought system enables us to process very simple but also very complex information. Simple things might be: making a cup of coffee, lacing up your shoes, listening to the weather forecast and choosing suitable clothing. It becomes more complex when we consider the working environment where tasks might be accountancy, political decision making, developing an educational programme, solving a mathematical problem, repairing an engine, and so on.

An efficient thought system is able to process this complex information quickly and correctly. How do we manage this? By being champions in recognising, using and, if necessary, adapting our thought patterns.

What are thought patterns? Thought patterns are clusters of data that we recognise as clusters and that we will store if and when they generate success. In a comparable situation, we can quickly retrieve these patterns and apply them again. Eventually, this occurs automatically so that we can focus our attention on new or more important problems. Thought patterns are the habits of our thinking. Experience is the sum of all the patterns and habits we have acquired in the past that make us able to act efficiently and effectively in a certain context.

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