How to Turn Obstacles Into Opportunities for Curiosity

How to Turn Obstacles Into Opportunities for Curiosity

Space is a heck of a place to run into problems.

In the 1995 movie Apollo 13, there’s an iconic scene in which NASA Flight Director, Gene Kranz, (played by Ed Harris) draws a map of the Earth and Moon on a blackboard.

It had been two days into the mission when an oxygen tank failed aboard the spaceship causing an explosion in the main service module. Without the module operating, the crew had to move to the lunar landing module as a lifeboat.

In the scene, Kranz gathers the mission operations team and draws a map of the flight trajectory that the damaged Apollo 13 would need to track to return back to Earth safely. It was a simple map for a complex problem.

Gene Kranz, played by Ed Harris, drawing Apollo 13's orbit back to Earth

Over the course of the next five days, they would have to navigate a series of obstacles that required the crew and the mission operations team to find creative solutions. Anything and everything was on the table.

Every time a new problem emerged, Kranz gathered his team around the blackboard to discuss the challenge around their central goal: get the crew back home safely.

A Simple Activity to Spark Curiosity

It’s easy to spend a lot of time thinking about what’s going wrong or what could go wrong. But maybe there’s a better way of looking at obstacles? 

Problems themselves can be an opportunity for creativity and innovation. When teams gain clarity about the problem and break it down into questions, they create the space for innovation to happen.

Luckily, there’s a simple activity to help your team move into this space of creativity and innovation called Starting at the End. The activity should take between 30-60 minutes, and I’ve broken down the steps below. 

Here’s the first question to pose to the group:

1. Why are we working on this project or problem?

Take your time with this question. Beyond the obvious answers around hitting certain metrics or deliverables, there may be some deeper whys that emerge that create an emotional connection to the problem you’re solving. Just like the mission operations team rallied around “get the crew home”, this will be your team’s core motivator.

2. Where do we want to be 12-18 months from now?

Depending on the scope of the problem, you may want toggle with the timeframe here. Maybe it’s 6 months or even 5 years? Personally, 12-18 months is a sweet spot if you’re looking for a balance between an aspirational goal while also being focused on tangible milestones you want to achieve.

3. Imagine we travel into the future and our project failed. What caused it to fail? What went wrong?

Now we switch gears. In the first two questions, we painted a picture of what success might look like. Now we want to look at the obstacles.

Note that after you pose this question to the team, it's natural that the energy in the room might dip. Uncertainty is uncomfortable especially if it’s a mission critical project. But it's important to embrace this tension and make sure everyone in the room has a chance to share what they might be worried about before we move onto the final step. As the team leader, it might be helpful to name any fears you might have. By being open and vulnerable, you’ll help your team share their own worries which will help uncover potential challenges before they bubble up at a later date (and they always do).

4. To reach our goals, what questions do we need answered?

This is the last, and the most important step.

Now that we have a list of challenges we might encounter, we’re going to reframe them into questions. Problems create uncertainty but interesting questions help activate curiosity.

Problems create uncertainty but interesting questions help activate curiosity.

Here’s how you’re going to phrase the questions: "How Might We…” 

How Might We (HMW) questions transform the mindset of your team by helping them consider the possibilities. We're all so wired to fix things, but what innovation needs is more curiosity and space to explore. Here are a couple of examples of transforming some existing obstacles & assumptions into HMW questions:

Examples of "How Might We" questions.

Solving a Big Problem? Consider a Five-Day Design Sprint.

The activity above comes from a process designed by Jake Knapp and John Zeratzky called a Design Sprint. In fact, it's one of the first activities you’d do in the sprint to gain clarity on what you’re trying to solve.

Here's what that process looks like:

No alt text provided for this image
  1. You spend the first day identifying your goals and mapping the current process for your key stakeholders. 
  2. On the second day, you focus on ideating and unleashing your team's creativity. 
  3. On the third day, you decide on the ONE area you want to prototype a solution for. 
  4. Finally, by the time Friday rolls around, you're testing your solution with real clients and collecting feedback.

Thinking five days is too short to prototype a new solution? Take this example of an insurance company that condensed 6 months of meetings & discussions to come up with a prototype in 5 days.

The best part is that not only are you reducing risk, you're saving time. One of the characteristics of the VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous) world we live in is that the rules change quickly. If your launch timeline isn't reaching your audience quickly, the project itself may be too late.

How Are You Thinking About Problems?

On April 17th, 1970 - five days after the launch - Apollo 13 splashed down in the South Pacific. Although fatigued from dehydration, the crew was alive and in good condition. It was an amazing feat that highlighted human ingenuity and collaboration between the crew and NASA’s mission operations team.

We might not need rocket scientists to solve our problems back here on Earth, but we can learn from the experience from Apollo 13. If you’re just about to launch a project, give the activity above a shot and see if you can reframe your obstacles into HMW questions. Your team will thank you for the simple switch in the mindset from uncertainty to curiosity!

P.S. I’m running my second workshop on October 23rd for creative leaders (like yourself!) to bring more fun and innovation to solve your BIG problems. Registration is capped at 10 people and the last session sold out. So grab your ticket early and I hope to see you there!

This article was originally published on www.peternakamura.com at https://peternakamura.com/2020/10/08/how-to-reframe-obstacles-as-opportunities-for-curiosity/

Miriam (Mim) O'Flynn

Founder at Elephant Hive, early stage AI startup. Consultant & AI Developer #AI #Innovation #NoCode

4 年

Great article Peter, and I've booked a ticket. Looking forward to your workshop :) Michelle Ang this workshop could help in your upcoming activities!

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Pascale Kavanagh

Resilience and Creativity Coach at Bold Soul Coaching. Novelist at PE Kavanagh.

4 年

"Problems themselves can be an opportunity for creativity and innovation." I think that the constraints a problem or obstacle brings is the ONLY place from which something new can spring. Thanks for such a clear, systematic way to look at this. Curiosity is my friend! And make your way to Peter's next workshop. It's gold!

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Heather Chavin, MA (Personal Development)

? Ditch Overwhelm for Meaningful Work (Coach 10+ Yrs) | Free Virtual Coworking Community: GoGoDone (6+ Yrs) | Productivity Newsletter with Inspiring Visuals

4 年

This is my favorite: "Problems create uncertainty but interesting questions help activate?curiosity." I need to remember that when anxiety wakes me up in the middle of the night and throw down some questions in my journal.

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