Saturday, August 31, 2013

CEO / CREATIVITY SPECIAL...... Cult of Creativity


Cult of Creativity 

CEOs need to feed their own creative side well to foster innovation 

As a manager, how do you get the absolutely best, most creative performance out of your people? It starts with getting the best out of yourself. Reflection, combined with talking it out, is one of the best ways to stimulate new ideas. Take a lesson from Carlos Brito, the CEO of the beer company AbInBev. He religiously carves out time each week when he's not bothered with the day-to-day matters of the company. Fridays are sacrosanct: they are his time for reflection. He lets his mind go, and sometimes brings in thought leaders to discuss bigger picture issues.
    If you want to be innovative, you've got to come out of your silo.
    Another thing I've found in my work with managers is that it's important to be in regular dialogue with people who are not in your industry and to read in areas that are unrelated to your work. Picking up books on history, science, and other large and small topics can get different areas of your brain going. This kind of information building allows you to develop what I call "knowledge nodes"--synergistic conglomerations of data that can be unexpectedly combined to create great solutions. This is how Steve Jobs operated--his wide-ranging interests allowed for a creative lifetime of connecting the dots.
    Leading by example is a great way to inspire others in your organization. Sachit Jain is an exemplar of this. A year behind me in our MBA program at IIM Ahmedabad in India, he graduated to marry into the family that owned Vardhaman Industries in India, a conglomerate that is one of the largest suppliers of high-quality fabric in the world. Like most men who marry into such families, he became a senior manager in his mid-20s.
    Jain was suddenly plunged into dealing with a textile manufacturing enterprise that had experienced so much strife that a lockdown had occurred at the factory and the chairman had almost been killed. Yet, amazingly, he turned the situation around. And not just that situation, but host of them since then.
    How? He started talking to his employees. In India, for a boss to sit at a table with his workers is unheard of. But Jain has persisted in regularly getting down to the shop floor level to find out what's going on. His method for instilling an innovative spirit in an organization is to ask his employees, "What can you do in the workplace to make tomorrow better than today?" He doesn't ask them to think about making things better for the organization. He asks them to think about making things better for themselves.
    On a study trip to India with Stanford MBAs in 2011, I saw a few examples of the remarkable results of this kind of managerial approach. One was the case of a worker who had the equivalent of a third-grade education in the West. He had noticed a problem: changing the thread spindles when they ran out was a physically stressful job. It required a team of two--one pushing a cart with the fresh spindles, and the other constantly having to move the stool, climb up and replace the spindle, and climb down. The guy on the stool was often taking sick leave because of the physical demands, which sometimes led to falls and other injuries.
    In his own time after work, the factory worker began experimenting with how to propel the stool so that the worker didn't have to keep getting up and down. Eventually he had the idea to put wheels on the stool, and then he rigged up an electric motor to propel it. In a final ingenious flash, he adapted a sewing machine pedal to the mechanism so that the worker could stop and start it at will. The results? Less sick time, less injury, and greater efficiency and productivity.
    To support the process, Jain drew on one of the most powerful motivators for innovation: social recognition. The factory worker earned tremendous social prestige by our visit, which included a private meeting with him to hear about how he came up with his idea. Other people in the company began realizing: If he can do it, so can I.
    Democratizing where innovation can come from, encouraging grassroots ideas, and utilizing social recognition are all powerful methods for encouraging innovation. But the most inspiring method is, as Gandhi affirmed, to "be the change." A manager who takes time to feed her own creative side well is the one who
knows how to elicit the creativity of others best.


Baba Shiv is the Sanwa Bank, Limited, Professor of Management Science, Stanford Graduate School of Business

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