Curiosity eats creativity for breakfast
Illustration by midjourney, prompt by the author.

Curiosity eats creativity for breakfast

The reason we struggle to come up with original ideas is not because of a lack of creativity but a lack of curiosity.

“Every year we go into the same room with the same information and the same questions .. what do you think happens? Every year we come out with the same ideas” — frustrated workshop participant

I assume this scenario is quite common. We overestimate creativity's value as a means to solve our problems because we miss its greatest weakness:

Creativity is limited to what we already know, it is only the re-combination of available information and experiences. Creativity is not magic, it doesn’t produce ideas out of thin air.

Now, also add to this the following insight: most companies think the same way, because they use the same methods, models (customer journeys anyone .. ) and questions to find the same insights and understand the market in the same way.


Every company is using the same tools, methods and questions to come up with the same insights to see and understand the market in the same way looking for new opportunities.

How to win?

We won't outperform our competition by being the most creative. We win by asking and answering questions nobody else is.

"We win by seeing something nobody else can"

The current trend is that "data will save us": to apply a lot of data to calculate our way out of our humdrum*-problem (*lacking excitement or variety). Hoping that the machine will magically see connections our human brains can’t.

But machines are only reflections of our own values, ideas and biases (1 ). If we are staring down one rabbit hole the machine will only help us dig deeper.

One opportunity therefore and a low hanging fruit for most organizations is to simply rethink and redesign their creative processes to curiosity processes. From today's common creative format of combining participant and pre-read information into new ideas, to exploring questions we need to ask and information we don’t have.

Explore new questions we need to ask and insights we do not have ("what we don't know we don't know" - D.Rumsfeld)

My recommended approach is using Riskiest Assumptions Testing [RAT] (2) combined with experimentation (4).


A. Riskiest Assumptions Testing

With Riskiest Assumptions Testing [workshop] participants simply ask: “what has to be true for x to be true” (3), where x is your strategy, an existing product, something you are already doing .. anything.

"what has to be true for x to be true?"

This introduces a wealth of important assumptions that the team can prioritize. From this prioritization they identify which assumptions are unknown and risky enough to be tested.

The selected assumptions get put forward into experimentation.

B. Experimentation

One of the most productive ways to learn something new is experimentation.

The purpose of an experiment is not to confirm that you are correct (sometimes it is), but it should most often be used to surprise you (8).

The main purpose of an experiment should be to help you learn something you didn’t already know-to surprise you

And the way to do that is to reduce the cost of an experiment to almost zero (because if experiments are expensive the organization is more likely to prioritize experiments that only confirm their existing knowledge).

"The real measure of success is the number of experiments that can be crowded into 24 hours" — Thomas Alva Edison

With cheap and fast experiments the company can explore assumptions they never tested before, learn new things, capture new insights, venture into new areas.

And then the team can use their creativity to find solutions to opportunities nobody else is aware of.

In short:

We only know what we know, and we know very little.

We need to shift our focus from creativity to curiosity and from certainty to uncertainty.

"Researchers suggest it is uncertainty, or when you think you know something then discover you don’t, that leads to curiosity and learning outcomes". — Celeste Kidd, assistant professor of psychology at UC Berkeley, Neurosciencenews.com

Riskiest Assumptions Testing and Experimentation are low hanging fruits and a fast track approaches we can use to see and solve opportunities nobody else knows exist.


Recommended places to start your experimentation journey:

(1). Models are opinions reflected in mathematics, Cathy O'Neil

(2). The MVP is dead. Long live the RAT, Rik Higham

(3). What would have to be true, Roger L. Martin

(4). Experimentation works, Stefan H. Thomke

(5). How managers can build a culture of experimentation, Frank V. Cespedes and Neil Hoyne

(6). Why Business Schools Need to Teach Experimentation, by Elizabeth R. Tenney, Elaine Costa, and Ruchi M. Watson

(7). Get Comfortable Breaking Your Product, Rik Higham

(8). What good experimentation looks like


George Agriesti

Harness the power of people, purpose, analytics, questions, and technology thru digital platforms to create value and trust across a collaborative ecosystem... to deliver a mutually beneficial, end-to-end CX journey.

3 个月

Very informative! G

Mary Mellino

I Help Organizations Solve Complex Problems & Seize New Opportunities | Cracking the Code on Transformation ?? | Expert in AI, Emerging Trends and New Work Systems | Building the Future of Invisible Work & Well-Being ??

3 个月

oh how i love this

Andy Greene

Improving Collaboration and Ways of Working | Capability Consultant | Executive Coach

3 个月

Beautiful repurposing of the Drucker quote he never actually said. I'm not sure larger businesses are really committed to broad curiosity like they used to be. The stories I hear from many of the large corporates is that they decimated local research budgets to only cover tracking and consumer panel data. Monies that used to be allocated to country insight studies have been rationalised into regional studies 'owned' by region. Regional and Global teams have taken responsibility for the 'strategic thinking' asking countries simply to become operators. Curiosity is simply no longer a core attribute expected. Really appreciate the point about every company using similar models and tools. Customer Journey Mapping being a prime example of how a concept has been mis appropriated, misunderstood and misused by so many.

MARK INGLEBY

Creative Director. Brand Communications. Words.

3 个月

You can't have creativity without curiosity.

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