Innovation - A Tool for Prosperous Growth

Homepage  | Add to Favorites

 

Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Featured Articles

Innovation Management – Diversity Can Make All The Difference
Companies are welcoming a diverse range of employees (The Sunday Times, April 10 2005). Doh! It is incredible that this concept is getting coverage in 2005. I mean, how many new ideas, novel ideas and divergent thinking is going to come from an...



Creativity And Innovation Management - Core Competencies And Competitive Advantage
Following is a brief definition of core competencies and competitive advantage and their fit with creativity and innovation management. Core Competence: A core competence is one which critically underpins the organisation's competitive...

Marketing Is a System, Not an Event
Small business marketers love the chase. Love the new fangled way to make the phone ring. They love to think of a marketing promotion as a single event. But it’s precisely this view of marketing that holds most small businesses back. They fall...


High Tech Wars
By Freddie Mooche - Axcess Business News A Japanese warship equipped with a high-tech Aegis missile detection system left for the Indian Ocean on Dec 9, a controversial move some analysts say signals support for a possible U.S.-led attack on Iraq. ...

 
Google
Creativity, Innovation – Competition versus Collaboration

There is much confusion as to whether competition or collaboration is most beneficial to creativity and innovation. Though there are negatives to collaboration and it is not easy separating the effects of time pressure and group activity, in general collaboration beats competition. This article will set out some of the arguments.

a)     Competition forces some individuals to produce a greater number of ideas than they would do otherwise. But crucially, competition forces other people to shut down.   Exactly who raises their game and who shuts down depends on the game, the rules, the competencies, the level of evaluation anxiety and other factors. People choose which areas they want to compete in.

b)     When forced to produce, through competition, people are more likely to be non-synergistically extrinsically motivated – that is they may produce to fulfil an ulterior motive but the activity leaves them feeling controlled and dependent and they do not tend to engage in the task to the degree necessary for rich insights.

c)     Competition causes individuals to withhold information and thus reduces the degree of intellectual cross-pollination, networking and collaboration required to achieve the best ideas.

d)     Most competition doesn’t allow the mind to incubate problems long enough for truly rich insights to emerge. Some of the richest insights have occurred when the individual is distant from the problem, rested and engaged in unrelated activities.

e)     Competition increases evaluation apprehension, which causes a reduction of expression


and lower risk taking and higher levels of conformity. This is not conducive to good idea generation.

f)       Competition causes individuals to generate ideas according to the value system indicated at the start, reducing lateral thinking, decreasing the number of diverse and novel ideas and lowering the separation of creative from critical thinking.

g)     Collaboration is much more valuable during the innovation stage (idea selection, development and commercialisation), where the competencies of many people are required to successfully commercialise.

These topics are covered in depth in the MBA dissertation on Managing Creativity & Innovation, which can be purchased (along with a Creativity and Innovation DIY Audit, Good Idea Generator Software and Power Point Presentation) from http://www.managing-creativity.com. You can also receive a regular, free newsletter by entering your email address at this site.

Kal Bishop, MBA

You are free to reproduce this article as long as no changes are made and the author's name and site URL are retained.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kal Bishop is a management consultant based in London, UK. He has consulted in the visual media and software industries and for clients such as Toshiba and Transport for London. He has led Improv, creativity and innovation workshops, exhibited artwork in San Francisco, Los Angeles and London and written a number of screenplays. He is a passionate traveller. He can be reached on http://www.managing-creativity.com.


 


Visit these sites in the Information Organizers Network
Unusual Baby Names | Home Based Business Ideas | Business Home Income Online Opportunity | Small Business Management | Government Grants for Small Businesses | Management Articles | Grants Civic Engagement | Great Affiliate Sites | Environmental Funding Organizations | Fix My Bad Credit | Foundation Funding Children | Foundations Giving Grants | Health Foundation Grants | 100 Best Small Business Ideas | Government Grants for Youth | Cool and Unique Baby Names | Grants for the Arts | Starting an Online Small Business | Community Building Grants | Uncommon and Unique Baby Names | Reseller Web Hosting | Human Services | Best Online Websites Philanthropy | 100 Popular Baby Names
Edited by:Michael Saunders

©2008 Information Organizers, LLC