Did you ever get an idea for a solution to a problem and then couldn't get it to work?
We can fall in love with our ideas and in so doing miss what they're missing. Maybe they don't actually meet our solution criteria. Maybe our team members aren't equipped to implement them. Maybe our constituents have no appetite for the changes the solution will bring about.
No one wants to implement a solution that won't work.
Test ideas carefully against your problem solving constraints. Qualify them.
Yes, it's another layer of analysis after a wide open time of creativity -- but that's the breath of centered problem solving - the flow between convergent (creative) thinking and divergent (analytical) thinking. We need both.
We can fall in love with our ideas and in so doing miss what they're missing. Maybe they don't actually meet our solution criteria. Maybe our team members aren't equipped to implement them. Maybe our constituents have no appetite for the changes the solution will bring about.
No one wants to implement a solution that won't work.
Test ideas carefully against your problem solving constraints. Qualify them.
Yes, it's another layer of analysis after a wide open time of creativity -- but that's the breath of centered problem solving - the flow between convergent (creative) thinking and divergent (analytical) thinking. We need both.
--- Doug Smith
Front Range Leadership: High performance leadership training
doug smith training: how to achieve your creative goals
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