Its a kind of problem all of us are intrinsically are interested in, we wanna be more creative, we want to come up with better ideas, we want our organizations to be more Innovative.
What are the spaces that have historically led to unusual rates of creativity and innovation? What i found in all these systems, there are these recurring patterns that you see again and again, that are crucial to creating environments that are unusually innovative.
One pattern, I call the slow hunch. The break through idea almost never come in a moment of great insight or sudden stroke of inspiration, most of the important ideas take a long time to evolve and they spend long time dormant in the background.
It is until the idea had 2 or 3 years or sometimes 10 or 20 years to mature that it suddenly becomes successful to you, useful to you.
And this is partially because good ideas come from a collision of smaller hunches so that they form something bigger than themselves. So you see a lot in the history of Innovation cases of someone who has half of an idea.
The other thing that is important when you think about ideas this way is that when ideas take form in this hunch state, they need to collide with other hunches. Often times the thing that turns a hunch into a real breakthrough is another hunch that’s lurking in somebody else’s mind. And you have to figure out a way to create systems that allow those hunches to come together and turn into something bigger than the sum of their parts. That’s why, for instance, the coffee house in ‘The Age of Enlightenment’ or the Parisian salons of Modernism were such engines of creativity. Because they created a space where ideas could mingle and swap and create new forms.
When you look at the problem of innovation from this perspective, it sheds a lot of important light on the debate we’ve been having recently about what the Internet is doing to our brains. Are we getting overwhelmed with an always connected, multi-tasking lifestyle? And is that going to lead to less sophisticated thoughts as we move away from the slower, deeper contemplative state of reading, for instance?
And so yes, it’s true we’re more distracted, but what has happened that is really miraculous and marvelous over the last 15 years is that we have so many new ways to connect and so many new ways to reach out and find other people who have that missing piece that will complete the idea we’re working on, or to stumble serendipitously across some amazing new piece of information that we can use to build and improve our own ideas. That’s the real lesson of where good ideas come from. The chance favors the connected mind.
– Steven Johnson
Image Credit: Esther Aarts, Shelton Clinard
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