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Seven steps to better brainstorming

Most attempts at brainstorming are doomed. To generate better ideas—and boost the odds that your organization will act on them—start by asking better questions.

Companies run on good ideas. From R&D groups seeking pipelines of innovative new products to ops teams probing for time-saving process improvements to CEOs searching for that next growth opportunity—all senior managers want to generate better and more creative ideas consistently in the teams they form, participate in, and manage.

Yet all senior managers, at some point, experience the pain of pursuing new ideas by way of traditional brainstorming sessions—still the most common method of using groups to generate ideas at companies around the world. The scene is familiar: a group of people, often chosen largely for political reasons, begins by listening passively as a moderator (often an outsider who knows little about your business) urges you to “Get creative!” and “Think outside the box!” and cheerfully reminds you that “There are no bad ideas!”

The result? Some attendees remain stone-faced throughout the day, others contribute sporadically, and a few loudly dominate the session with their pet ideas. Ideas pop up randomly—some intriguing, many preposterous—but because the session has no structure, little momentum builds around any of them. At session’s end, the group trundles off with a hazy idea of what, if anything, will happen next. “Now we can get back to real work,” some whisper.

It doesn’t have to be like this. We’ve led or observed 200 projects over the past decade at more than 150 companies in industries ranging from retailing and education to banking and communications. That experience has helped us develop a practical approach that captures the energy typically wasted in a traditional brainstorming session and steers it in a more productive direction. The trick is to leverage the way people actually think and work in creative problem-solving situations.

We call our approach “brainsteering,” and while it requires more preparation than traditional brainstorming, the results are worthwhile: better ideas in business situations as diverse as inventing new products and services, attracting new customers, designing more efficient business processes, or reducing costs, among others. The next time you assign one of your people to lead an idea generation effort—or decide to lead one yourself—you can significantly improve the odds of success by following the seven steps below.

1. Know your organization’s decision-making criteria

One reason good ideas hatched in corporate brainstorming sessions often go nowhere is that they are beyond the scope of what the organization would ever be willing to consider. “Think outside the box!” is an unhelpful exhortation if external circumstances or company policies create boxes that the organization truly must live within.

Managers hoping to spark creative thinking in their teams should therefore start by understanding (and in some cases shaping) the real criteria the company will use to make decisions about the resulting ideas. Are there any absolute restrictions or limitations, for example? A bank we know wasted a full day’s worth of brainstorming because the session’s best ideas all required changing IT systems. Yet senior management—unbeknownst to the workshop planners—had recently “locked down” the IT agenda for the next 18 months.

Likewise, what constitutes an acceptable idea? At a different, smarter bank, workshop planners collaborated with senior managers on a highly specific (and therefore highly valuable) definition tailored to meet immediate needs. Good ideas would require no more than $5,000 per branch in investment and would generate incremental profits quickly. Further, while three categories of ideas—new products, new sales approaches, and pricing changes—were welcome, senior management would balk at ideas that required new regulatory approvals. The result was a far more productive session delivering exactly what the company wanted: a fistful of ideas, in all three target categories, that were practical, affordable, and profitable within one fiscal year.

2. Ask the right questions

Decades of academic research shows that traditional, loosely structured brainstorming techniques (“Go for quantity—the greater the number of ideas, the greater the likelihood of winners!”) are inferior to approaches that provide more structure.1 The best way we’ve found to provide it is to use questions as the platform for idea generation.

In practice, this means building your workshop around a series of “right questions” that your team will explore in small groups during a series of idea generation sessions (more about these later). The trick is to identify questions with two characteristics. First, they should force your participants to take a new and unfamiliar perspective. Why? Because whenever you look for new ways to attack an old problem—whether it’s lowering your company’s operating costs or buying your spouse a birthday gift—you naturally gravitate toward thinking patterns and ideas that worked in the past. Research shows that, over time, you’ll come up with fewer good ideas, despite increased effort. Changing your participants’ perspective will shake up their thinking. (For more on how to do this, see “Sparking creativity in teams: An executive’s guide.”) The second characteristic of a right question is that it limits the conceptual space your team will explore, without being so restrictive that it forces particular answers or outcomes.

It’s easier to show such questions in practice than to describe them in theory. A consumer electronics company looking to develop new products might start with questions such as “What’s the biggest avoidable hassle our customers endure?” and “Who uses our product in ways we never expected?” By contrast, a health insurance provider looking to cut costs might ask, “What complexity do we plan for daily that, if eliminated, would change the way we operate?” and “In which areas is the efficiency of a given department ‘trapped’ by outdated restrictions placed on it by company policies?”2

In our experience, it’s best to come up with 15 to 20 such questions for a typical workshop attended by about 20 people. Choose the questions carefully, as they will form the heart of your workshop—your participants will be discussing them intensively in small subgroups during a series of sessions.

3. Choose the right people

The rule here is simple: pick people who can answer the questions you’re asking. As obvious as this sounds, it’s not what happens in many traditional brainstorming sessions, where participants are often chosen with less regard for their specific knowledge than for their prominence on the org chart.

Instead, choose participants with firsthand, “in the trenches” knowledge, as a catalog retailer client of ours did for a brainsteering workshop on improving bad-debt collections. (The company had extended credit directly to some customers). During the workshop, when participants were discussing the question “What’s changed in our operating environment since we last redesigned our processes?” a frontline collections manager remarked, “Well, death has become the new bankruptcy.”

A few people laughed knowingly, but the senior managers in the room were perplexed. On further discussion, the story became clear. In years past, some customers who fell behind on their payments would falsely claim bankruptcy when speaking with a collections rep, figuring that the company wouldn’t pursue the matter because of the legal headaches involved. More recently, a better gambit had emerged: unscrupulous borrowers instructed household members to tell the agent they had died—a tactic that halted collections efforts quickly, since reps were uncomfortable pressing the issue.

While this certainly wasn’t the largest problem the collectors faced, the line manager’s presence in the workshop had uncovered an opportunity. A different line manager in the workshop proposed what became the solution: instructing the reps to sensitively, but firmly, question the recipient of the call for more specific information if the rep suspected a ruse. Dishonest borrowers would invariably hang up if asked to identify themselves or to provide other basic information, and the collections efforts could continue.

4. Divide and conquer

To ensure fruitful discussions like the one the catalog retailer generated, don’t have your participants hold one continuous, rambling discussion among the entire group for several hours. Instead, have them conduct multiple, discrete, highly focused idea generation sessions among subgroups of three to five people—no fewer, no more. Each subgroup should focus on a single question for a full 30 minutes. Why three to five people? The social norm in groups of this size is to speak up, whereas the norm in a larger group is to stay quiet.

When you assign people to subgroups, it’s important to isolate “idea crushers” in their own subgroup. These people are otherwise suitable for the workshop but, intentionally or not, prevent others from suggesting good ideas. They come in three varieties: bosses, “big mouths,” and subject matter experts.

The boss’s presence, which often makes people hesitant to express unproven ideas, is particularly damaging if participants span multiple organizational levels. (“Speak up in front of my boss’s boss? No, thanks!”) Big mouths take up air time, intimidate the less confident, and give everyone else an excuse to be lazy. Subject matter experts can squelch new ideas because everyone defers to their presumed superior wisdom, even if they are biased or have incomplete knowledge of the issue at hand.

By quarantining the idea crushers—and violating the old brainstorming adage that a melting pot of personalities is ideal—you’ll free the other subgroups to think more creatively. Your idea crushers will still be productive; after all, they won’t stop each other from speaking up.

Finally, take the 15 to 20 questions you prepared earlier and divide them among the subgroups—about 5 questions each, since it’s unproductive and too time consuming to have all subgroups answer every question. Whenever possible, assign a specific question to the subgroup you consider best equipped to handle it.

5. On your mark, get set, go!

After your participants arrive, but before the division into subgroups, orient them so that your expectations about what they will—and won’t—accomplish are clear. Remember, your team is accustomed to traditional brainstorming, where the flow of ideas is fast, furious, and ultimately shallow.

Today, however, each subgroup will thoughtfully consider and discuss a single question for a half hour. No other idea from any source—no matter how good—should be mentioned during a subgroup’s individual session. Tell participants that if anyone thinks of a “silver bullet” solution that’s outside the scope of discussion, they should write it down and share it later.

Prepare your participants for the likelihood that when a subgroup attacks a question, it might generate only two or three worthy ideas. Knowing that probability in advance will prevent participants from becoming discouraged as they build up the creative muscles necessary to think in this new way. The going can feel slow at first, so reassure participants that by the end of the day, after all the subgroups have met several times, there will be no shortage of good ideas.

Also, whenever possible, share “signpost examples” before the start of each session—real questions previous groups used, along with success stories, to motivate participants and show them how a question-based approach can help.

One last warning: no matter how clever your participants, no matter how insightful your questions, the first five minutes of any subgroup’s brainsteering session may feel like typical brainstorming as people test their pet ideas or rattle off superficial new ones. But participants should persevere. Better thinking soon emerges as the subgroups try to improve shallow ideas while sticking to the assigned questions.

6. Wrap it up

By day’s end, a typical subgroup has produced perhaps 15 interesting ideas for further exploration. You’ve been running multiple subgroups simultaneously, so your 20-person team has collectively generated up to 60 ideas. What now?

One thing not to do is have the full group choose the best ideas from the pile, as is common in traditional brainstorming. In our experience, your attendees won’t always have an executive-level understanding of the criteria and considerations that must go into prioritizing ideas for actual investment. The experience of picking winners can also be demotivating, particularly if the real decision makers overrule the group’s favorite choices later.

Instead, have each subgroup privately narrow its own list of ideas to a top few and then share all the leading ideas with the full group to motivate and inspire participants. But the full group shouldn’t pick a winner. Rather, close the workshop on a high note that participants won’t expect if they’re veterans of traditional brainstorming: describe to them exactly what steps will be taken to choose the winning ideas and how they will learn about the final decisions.

7. Follow up quickly

Decisions and other follow-up activities should be quick and thorough. Of course, we’re not suggesting that uninformed or insufficiently researched conclusions should be reached about ideas dreamed up only hours earlier. But the odds that concrete action will result from an idea generation exercise tend to decline quickly as time passes and momentum fades.

The president, provost, and department heads of a US university, for example, announced before a brainsteering workshop that a full staff meeting would be held the morning after it to discuss the various cost-savings ideas it had generated. At the meeting, the senior leaders sorted ideas into four buckets: move immediately to implementation planning, decide today to implement at the closest appropriate time (say, the beginning of the next academic year), assign a group to research the idea further, or reject right away. This process went smoothly because the team that ran the idea generation workshop had done the work up front to understand the criteria senior leaders would use to judge its work. The university began moving ahead on more than a dozen ideas that would ultimately save millions of dollars.

To close the loop with participants, the university made sure to communicate the results of the decisions quickly to everyone involved, even when an idea was rejected. While it might seem demoralizing to share bad news with a team, we find that doing so actually has the opposite effect. Participants are often desperate for feedback and eager for indications that they have at least been heard. By respectfully explaining why certain ideas were rejected, you can help team members produce better ideas next time. In our experience, they will participate next time, often more eagerly than ever.

Traditional brainstorming is fast, furious, and ultimately shallow. By scrapping these traditional techniques for a more focused, question-based approach, senior managers can consistently coax better ideas from their teams.

About the Authors

Kevin Coyne and Shawn Coyne, both alumni of McKinsey’s Atlanta office, are cofounders and managing directors of the Coyne Partnership, a boutique strategy consulting firm. This article is adapted from their book, Brainsteering: A Better Approach to Breakthrough Ideas (HarperCollins, March 2011).

Notes

1 For two particularly useful academic studies on the ineffectiveness and inefficiency of traditional brainstorming, see Paul A. Mongeau, The Brainstorming Myth, Annual Meeting of the Western States Communication Association, Albuquerque, New Mexico, February 15, 1993; and Frederic M. Jablin and David R. Seibold, “Implications for problem solving groups of empirical research on ‘brainstorming’: A critical review of the literature,” Southern Speech Communication Journal, 1978, Volume 43, Number 4, pp. 327–56.

2 For a full discussion about identifying and using a portfolio of such right questions in the generation of personal and institutional ideas, see Brainsteering, the book from which this article is adapted, as well as Patricia Gorman Clifford, Kevin P. Coyne, and Renée Dye, “Breakthrough thinking from inside the box,” Harvard Business Review, December 2007, Volume 85, Number 12, pp. 70–78.

Recommend (230)
  • 15 MAY 2011
    Irina Mishina
    Creativity Consultant
    Ima Blumm
    Barcelona, Spain

    ...if you are after disruptive innovation, you might want to start with out-of-the-blue, outlandish ideas that will need to be elaborated into workable solutions....

    .
    Irina Mishina
    Creativity Consultant
    Ima Blumm
    Barcelona, Spain

    I am afraid that the authors’ concept of “traditional brainstorming” is based on the their own experience of apparently poorly facilitated sessions. Brainstorming is just an ideation technique, and one among many others. It is the facilitator’s job to identify what techniques may render the best results. Whether an ideation session is better suited to be more or less structured depends on the nature of the challenge, the type of the organization, and the cognitive preferences of the group members.

    It is definitely true that asking the right questions is of the utmost importance; actually, in many cases, the best approach is to get the group to identify those questions. It may be the same group that will ideate later, or it may be a different group, but they should be people who would allow for and ensure different perspectives on the organization’s issues.

    As has already been mentioned in some previous comments, an ideation session is just the beginning of the work on ideas. No ideas are born ready to be implemented; they require further and thorough work. Expecting “realistic” ideas coming out of the session might be good if you are looking for an improvement, but if you are after disruptive innovation, you might want to start with out-of-the-blue, outlandish ideas that will need to be elaborated into workable solutions. You don’t get these solutions just by letting the group discuss a “correctly stated question” for 30 minutes. This process should be guided by a skilled facilitator, and requires various techniques and methodologies. Most important, it requires a combination of divergent and convergent thinking with a concurrent suspension of judgment.

    .
  • 3 MAY 2011
    Vaidy Bala
    Retired Physicist
    Self-employed
    Edmonton, Alberta Canada

    ...It seems that organized brainstorming is good, then, for organizational development only and not for new, innovative ideas.

    .
    Vaidy Bala
    Retired Physicist
    Self-employed
    Edmonton, Alberta Canada

    The goal of brainstorming is to create new, potential ideas that lead to innovation, productivity, and profit. Scientific findings have revealed these result from out-of-the-box thinking, and rarely in group or organized settings. So, we have a structural problem. Outside-the-box thinking is contemplative but communicable without any restraint of any kind, where intuition occurs unforced, uncontrolled, and unchallenged. It seems that organized brainstorming is good, then, for organizational development only and not for new, innovative ideas.

    .
  • 26 APRIL 2011
    Mark Goldsmith, MBA
    European Category Marketing Manager
    Spectrum Brands
    Manchester, UK

    The basic problem with brainstorming is that most of us are not used to creative thinking....

    .
    Mark Goldsmith, MBA
    European Category Marketing Manager
    Spectrum Brands
    Manchester, UK

    The basic problem with brainstorming is that most of us are not used to creative thinking.

    Instead, we spend our time analyzing huge amounts of data in order to find the one solution. “Why are sales down?” = “Here’s the answer.” “Why is this not working” = “Here’s the answer.”

    Brainstorming, though, is the exact opposite—it starts with one problem and tries to find multiple solutions.

    This change in thought process can make some people feel very uncomfortable, so during the brainstorming session they get a strong urge to revert back to their normal way of thinking and to find the one answer to the problem. However, it’s this analysis that kills the creative process for the group.

    As the article indicates, you can avoid this by splitting brainstorming up into two separate meetings (preferably on different days). The first meeting generates the ideas. The second meeting reviews the outcomes. Never mix them together, though!

    Brainstorming is not about delegating management responsibility for ideas either, so before the follow-up meeting, feel free to choose the ones you like the most, then present them back to the group for further discussion and review.

    .
  • 21 APRIL 2011
    Mark Miller
    Director of Marketing
    Emergenetics International
    Centennial, CO USA

    ...cognitive diversity is important and should be taken into account for a brainstorm to reach its full capacity...

    .
    Mark Miller
    Director of Marketing
    Emergenetics International
    Centennial, CO USA

    One key thing that was not stated here is the idea that cognitive diversity is important and should be taken into account for a brainstorm to reach its full capacity to deliver holistic ideas and solutions that reach conclusions from broad spectrum of influence, focus, or preference.

    .
  • 15 APRIL 2011
    Sunil Malhotra
    Founder
    Ideafarms
    India

    ‘Brainstorming’ is a technique created by and meant for the management types. Not for normal guys....

    .
    Sunil Malhotra
    Founder
    Ideafarms
    India

    ‘Brainstorming’ is a technique created by and meant for the management types. Not for normal guys. Same goes for the current range of buzzwords ‘design thinking,’ ‘innovation,’’co-creation,’ or whatever other jargon.

    I have not found a single other profession or endeavor using the above; doctors, accountants, scientists—all these are older and more mature disciplines that have provided much greater value to mankind than some boardroom tools and techniques.

    .
  • 15 APRIL 2011
    Jibran Masud
    Manager Sales and Marketing
    Teo International
    Islamabad, Pakistan

    Whether it’s parallel thinking or other conventional and not so conventional approaches, the first two points in the article are key for me: know your organization’s decision-making criteria and ask the right questions.

    .
    Jibran Masud
    Manager Sales and Marketing
    Teo International
    Islamabad, Pakistan

    Whether it’s parallel thinking or other conventional and not so conventional approaches, the first two points in the article are key for me: know your organization’s decision-making criteria and ask the right questions.

    .
  • 15 APRIL 2011
    Mr. Shawqi Sajwani
    Shawqi Sajwani Quality Consultants
    Dubai, UAE

    Yes! brainstorming might seem an outdated tool, but depending on how it is used, the principle is valid. Brainsteering would also fall in the same trap if if not conducted professionally....

    .
    Mr. Shawqi Sajwani
    Shawqi Sajwani Quality Consultants
    Dubai, UAE

    Yes! brainstorming might seem an outdated tool, but depending on how it is used, the principle is valid. Brainsteering would also fall in the same trap if if not conducted professionally.

    I don’t see brainsteering as a replcement for brainstorming, but as an additional tool that managers can use.

    .
  • 14 APRIL 2011
    Parichit Sahay
    Student
    Notre Dame University
    South Bend, IN USA

    ...where bosses are teamed up with employees for better interaction. This leads to idea crushers and, moreover, colleagues thriving to impress their boss rather than shooting ideas.

    .
    Parichit Sahay
    Student
    Notre Dame University
    South Bend, IN USA

    I would also like to highlight that some brainstorming sessions are mixed up with team interaction sessions, where bosses are teamed up with employees for better interaction.

    This leads to idea crushers and, moreover, colleagues thriving to impress their boss rather than shooting ideas.

    .
  • 13 APRIL 2011
    KM Narendran
    Writer
    All India Radio
    Calicut Kerala India

    ...To create creativity in human brains is impossible, but it is possible to take out the hidden and unused potentials of creativity of a human brain. For this I have some new ways to suggest....

    .
    KM Narendran
    Writer
    All India Radio
    Calicut Kerala India

    I have noticed that very often, brainstorming sessions of companies end up in the members coming with suggestions which are dull and obvious. This is because the members lack creativity and boldness. To create creativity in human brains is impossible, but it is possible to take out the hidden and unused potentials of creativity of a human brain. For this I have some new ways to suggest. Request the members to forget their company for at least two days and to think only of subjects like 1) their childhood pranks 2) music, art, and literature 3) hobbies, etcetera. In the first session of the brainstorming also they are to speak only on these topics. (Here, I am sure, the company management will have a pleasant shock knowing that many of the members are excellent in topics outside their company affairs.) The next session is the real brainstorming session on matters related to the company. You will find the difference!

    .
  • 5 APRIL 2011
    Jonathan Vehar
    President
    New & Improved
    Evanston, IL USA

    ...Most definitions of creativity center around “new” and “useful.” Are the authors’ principles useful? Yes. Are they new? No.

    .
    Jonathan Vehar
    President
    New & Improved
    Evanston, IL USA

    Having worked with hundreds of organizations in a wide range of creative thinking, problem solving, and new product sessions over the past two decades, I’d have to agree with the authors’ conclusions, even if they have reinvented the wheel.

    A nit: while they’re quick to discount brainstorming and selectively mention research that claims to disprove the effectiveness of brainstorming (even though the methodology didn’t actually measure brainstorming, starting with Taylor’s Yale research in the late-50’s), they’ve proposed many of the same principles that the originator of Brainstorming, Alex Osborn, recommended.

    Most definitions of creativity center around “new” and “useful.” Are the authors’ principles useful? Yes. Are they new? No.

    .
  • 2 APRIL 2011
    Deborah Frangquist
    Principal
    Chosen Futures
    San Francisco, CA USA

    This article doesn’t mention how much difference organizational culture makes. It matters a lot whether participants truly believe that their participation is valued no matter what...

    .
    Deborah Frangquist
    Principal
    Chosen Futures
    San Francisco, CA USA

    This article doesn’t mention how much difference organizational culture makes. It matters a lot whether participants truly believe that their participation is valued no matter what and that ideas may be in competition but people aren’t. A collaborative culture adds even more value to pre-work and follow-up.

    .
  • 1 APRIL 2011
    John Caswell
    CEO
    Group Partners
    London UK

    ...My long-term observations also suggest that unless structured free thinking is developed with an agreed (by the same team) end in mind then it will become quickly diluted....

    .
    John Caswell
    CEO
    Group Partners
    London UK

    Well, a wealth of insight and observation here, and a great debate.

    As someone who uses all the creativity he can to create better ‘brainstorms’ and then executable outcomes, I concur strongly with much of the above. For me, though, unless there is a structure that ‘frames’ the storm, then it will crash and burn into mediocrity and meaninglessness. This structure will be known at a level of mastery by the ‘agent provocateur’ (facilitator).

    My long-term observations also suggest that unless structured free thinking is developed with an agreed (by the same team) end in mind then it will become quickly diluted. The ‘storm’ is also of much higher quality when this context is increased into realistic measures, timescales, and other realities.

    It is particularly important to have this context present in the crucial post-storm (and short-term) contact with reality—unless there is real precision and effort applied to governing these inevitable sober reflections then we will render the entire process invalid.

    Having done the best part of 3000 such assignments, I also still learn something about the above statements each time.

    .
  • 1 APRIL 2011
    Kevin Coyne and Shawn Coyne
    The Coyne Partnership
    Atlanta, GA USA

    Authors Kevin Coyne and Shawn Coyne respond to reader comments:

    ...Among the many interesting thoughts in the comments below, we would like to address two specific themes: the role of social networks and electronic brainstorming...

    .
    Kevin Coyne and Shawn Coyne
    The Coyne Partnership
    Atlanta, GA USA

    Authors Kevin Coyne and Shawn Coyne respond to reader comments:

    Many thanks to those of you who have read our article, to those who have recommended it to others, and—most of all—to the individuals below who have taken the time to comment on it. We especially appreciate your own valuable additions to the discussion: other tools and techniques you’ve successfully employed in your own experience, and other articles and books you’ve read.

    Among the many interesting thoughts in the comments below, we would like to address two specific themes: the role of social networks and electronic brainstorming in generating new ideas; and the role of large-group, single-session efforts in generating new ideas.

    We agree with many of you that social networks and electronic brainstorming are exciting tools whose potential contributions to new idea generation are only beginning to be fully understood. Among many potential benefits, these tools offer the potential to draw upon much greater numbers of individuals for ideas and to allow people to express themselves thoughtfully and in writing when they might not be comfortable speaking up “on the spot” and/or in front of others in traditional brainstorming sessions. Provided that these tools are used wisely as one part of a well-designed, comprehensive approach to idea generation, we believe both could become game-changing additions to the ideation tool kit.

    The space constraints of a brief article make it impossible to explore as many facets of a concept, or provide as full a range of examples, as can be described in even a single chapter of a full-length book. Therefore, while we appreciate the kind words of many readers below (and others who have emailed us directly) indicating that they have found this article to be helpful, we caution against thinking that the only effective means of generating ideas is via large-group, single-session efforts. As indicated by various comment-writers below, and as detailed much more fully in our book, there are obviously many effective ways to generate ideas, including working in groups and working alone, working in single sessions and working in multiple sessions over time. The key in solving any given ideation challenge is to choose—whether from the broad arsenal of tools described in our book or from the many other effective tools described in the various comments below—those tools that best fit the specific demands of your situation and that best leverage the resources at your disposal, whether they are inside or outside your organization.

    .
  • 30 MARCH 2011
    Maximo Aton
    General Manager
    RI
    Philippines

    Choosing the right people to answer the questions, I guess, is the most important part of the brainsteering....

    .
    Maximo Aton
    General Manager
    RI
    Philippines

    Choosing the right people to answer the questions, I guess, is the most important part of the brainsteering. Preferrably, may I add, these individuals should be capable of integrating ideas to come up with a superior idea to answer the questions being asked. There have been several brainstorming participants that missed to come up with superior idea because they missed to integrate their ideas.

    .
  • 25 MARCH 2011
    Dom Ventura
    Global ideation Manager
    British American Toabcco
    London, UK

    To build on this article I would add that the pre- and post-ideation sessions are equally important....

    .
    Dom Ventura
    Global ideation Manager
    British American Toabcco
    London, UK

    To build on this article I would add that the pre- and post-ideation sessions are equally important. Many write about the typical ‘brainstorming’ session, without paying attention to what is required before and after the event.

    I have been organizing and facilitating ‘ideation’ sessions for about two years now. Many of the points highlighted here are perfectly valid, the focus of the creative challenge, the composition of the team, and the small number of people in the subgroups. All good, but the real creative articulation really starts, in my opinion, just after the event has finished. Who picks up the output of the ideation session should be a creative group who is capable to capture all the little thoughts, including post-its and other scribbles, and consolidate them in bigger ‘creative clumps’. This typically takes two weeks. After that the iteration process can start. Building on the proposed ‘creative clumps’ requires another creative effort and starting to structure the ideas in clear proposition, benefits, payoffs. After this, we have something that we could work on.

    .
  • 25 MARCH 2011
    Anoop Kumar CK
    Human Resources
    Expertus
    Chennai, India

    ...If participants feel free to relax and joke around, they’ll stretch their minds further and therefore produce more creative ideas. It require a good facilitator too.

    .
    Anoop Kumar CK
    Human Resources
    Expertus
    Chennai, India

    Brainstorming can be an effective way to generate lots of ideas on a specific issue and then determine which idea, or ideas, is the best solution. Brainstorming is most effective with groups and should be performed in a relaxed environment. If participants feel free to relax and joke around, they’ll stretch their minds further and therefore produce more creative ideas. It require a good facilitator too.

    .
  • 24 MARCH 2011
    Larry Moser
    Analyst
    State Goverment
    St. Paul, MN USA

    This article has a misleading title. This is not about brainstorming, but about ignoring the (very beneficial) brainstorming rule of withholding judgement....

    .
    Larry Moser
    Analyst
    State Goverment
    St. Paul, MN USA

    This article has a misleading title. This is not about brainstorming, but about ignoring the (very beneficial) brainstorming rule of withholding judgement. Brainstorming as defined by Osborne is not intended to result in decisions, but in ideas that can be examined thorough a decision-making process.

    .
  • 23 MARCH 2011
    Andreas Stokas
    Owner - Operations engineer
    Zymosis
    Drama, Greece

    ...Usually middle management is the idea crusher....

    .
    Andreas Stokas
    Owner - Operations engineer
    Zymosis
    Drama, Greece

    The most effective brainstorming arises from the constant engagement of the top management in daily operations and employees. Usually middle management is the idea crusher.

    My experience taught me that when I talk on a day-to-day basis with employees throughout the organizational structure, they come up with great ideas.

    The next step was to call for a brainstorming meeting (3 to 5 employees) using the idea given as the spark for the discussion.

    This process gave me the tool to achieve great results and incorporate changes that seemed impossible otherwise.

    .
  • 15 MARCH 2011
    Simon Moran
    Hd of Process and Change
    London Underground
    London - UK

    ...We have also started using negative brainstorming which really engages people, as it is often easier for people to think of the negatives first and then we build from there, as the burning platform has become very clear.

    .
    Simon Moran
    Hd of Process and Change
    London Underground
    London - UK

    I would agree around points 1 and 2, knowing your organisation and what will really stick is critical and also as discussed finding the right questions (this is really where the prep comes in). I still haven’t found anything that touches the end-to-end process of a very collaborative thinking/brainstorming approach than the method called “Pinpoint.” It has been around for a while, but really works. It’s inclusive, collaborative, very versatile, delivers results, touches different learning styles, and more than that, done right it’s a lot of fun. I have now used it in a number of companies and the results are always positive. We have put a large number of people through the training and built it into the culture of how to run workshops/meetings.

    We have also started using negative brainstorming which really engages people, as it is often easier for people to think of the negatives first and then we build from there, as the burning platform has become very clear.

    .
  • 15 MARCH 2011
    Devendra Arolkar
    Joint General Manager
    Larsen & Toubro Limited
    Mumbai, India

    One of the tools that I have successfully used in the past to elicit participation and generate ideas is a “round robin” system...

    .
    Devendra Arolkar
    Joint General Manager
    Larsen & Toubro Limited
    Mumbai, India

    One of the tools that I have successfully used in the past to elicit participation and generate ideas is a “round robin” system, wherein each member of the group is required to contribute; it could even be adding to the idea generated by someone else. Thus, once a person is “drawn in”, he continues to contribute to the discussions meaningfully.

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Liz Gaudet
    Principal
    Health Plan Visions, LLC
    Albany, NY USA

    ...Current process rule-breaking exercise is an additional technique that can assist. Working collaboratively has other rewards, but a brainsteering or storming program, if not managed properly, can cost without reward and even damage morale....

    .
    Liz Gaudet
    Principal
    Health Plan Visions, LLC
    Albany, NY USA

    This type of exercise can and should be used across a broad variety of contexts. Value can be derived when an organization is trying to uncover how to execute it’s strategy, when faced with tough gaps in meeting customer needs/operating budgets, or simply in trying to remain competitive and vibrant with a fully engaged team. Key components to follow include assembling the right participants, employing the right group management rules, establishing clear boundaries/objectives in a success governance framework someone is managing, all steeped in the secret sauce of awakening alternate perspectives and enabling time to explore. Current process rule-breaking exercise is an additional technique that can assist. Working collaboratively has other rewards, but a brainsteering or storming program, if not managed properly, can cost without reward and even damage morale. Executive team commitment is required for success.

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Andrew Nemiccolo
    Owner
    Seven Story Learning
    Overland Park, KS USA

    ...research now suggests that traditional live brainstorming in groups tends to limit, rather than enhance, creativity, due to the concept of “fixation.”...

    .
    Andrew Nemiccolo
    Owner
    Seven Story Learning
    Overland Park, KS USA

    The authors’ point about “Asking the Right Questions” sounds right on target. However, some evidence-based support for some of the other suggestions in this article would be welcome. For example, research now suggests that traditional live brainstorming in groups tends to limit, rather than enhance, creativity, due to the concept of “fixation.”

    Evidence-based approaches suggest:

    1. Initial brainstorming is best done in advance, prior to any group meetings. These are big questions! Give people a week to think it over.
    2. Anonymous submissions.
    3. Employ a trained facilitator to cultivate conversation and eliminate “fixation” and other negative effects.

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Sandor Schuman
    Group Facilitator, Collaboration Specialist, Storyteller
    Executive Decision Services
    Albany, NY USA

    ...Alex Osborn’s thorough description of brainstorming in Applied Imagination (Scribner, 1957) goes far beyond what most people practice today....

    .
    Sandor Schuman
    Group Facilitator, Collaboration Specialist, Storyteller
    Executive Decision Services
    Albany, NY USA

    “Brainstorming,” like “Kleenex,” “Band-Aid,” and “Xerox,” is a “brand name” that has been widely adopted as a generic term. Alex Osborn’s thorough description of brainstorming in Applied Imagination (Scribner, 1957) goes far beyond what most people practice today. Like many generics, the brand names they replace were of higher quality.

    Nonetheless, the authors are correct in asserting that research has since shown newer methods to be superior in their ability to produce a larger number of unique ideas (although some have questioned the degree to which experimenters have faithfully employed Osborn’s technique in creating their baseline for comparison). For a more up-to-date analysis, I would suggest reading “Facilitation of Group Brainstorming” by Paul B. Paulus and Toshihiko Nakui in The IAF Handbook of Group Facilitation (Jossey-Bass/Wiley 2005).

    Also interesting to note is that the research has shown electronic brainstorming to be highly effective. This continues to be an active area of research.

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Darivs Lopez
    CSIO
    CKNOWATION
    Buenos Aires Argentina

    Has the proposed approach considered the characteristics of companies in so-called emerging economies?...

    .
    Darivs Lopez
    CSIO
    CKNOWATION
    Buenos Aires Argentina

    Has the proposed approach considered the characteristics of companies in so-called emerging economies? The characteristics of these companies and the economic environment in which they operate, the results of a brainstorming may exceed the interests and expectations of employers.

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Alexander Smith
    CEO
    Living Eulogy Ltd
    UK

    ...Has anyone else used Appreciative Inquiry for creativity and innovation?

    .
    Alexander Smith
    CEO
    Living Eulogy Ltd
    UK

    And I have been looking for ways around what I perceive to be an inefficiency of brainstorming where outputs don’t fit the culture of an organisation and hence go nowhere. I am trying an Appreciative Inquiry approach on the basis that what emerges will have already worked in some form in the organsiation before, and so fit is less likely to be a barrier. Has anyone else used Appreciative Inquiry for creativity and innovation?

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Hari R
    USA

    ...In my opinion, Brainstorming should only have an objective and nothing else. It is possible to get some very out-of-the-box ideas dropped off because of the guidelines listed here....

    .
    Hari R
    USA

    When I looked at the subject, I was expecting a fundamental shift in the way we do brainstorming, because a strategy firm suggesting a brainstorming refinement should be strategic. Instead I think these are little shades of the existing process.

    In my opinion, Brainstorming should only have an objective and nothing else. It is possible to get some very out-of-the-box ideas dropped off because of the guidelines listed here. It may be true that these can generate quicker ROI, but the purpose of unearthing something within the organisation may be lost.

    Also, what if brainstorming is to change the decision making criteria/process itself?

    .
  • 14 MARCH 2011
    Andrew Alexander
    Manager
    Australian Research Collaboration Service
    Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

    Brainstorming covers so many objectives, different processes deliver different results, and the skill of individuals to pick and execute that is a significant factor. However, I appreciated the common sense approach listed.

    .
    Andrew Alexander
    Manager
    Australian Research Collaboration Service
    Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

    Brainstorming covers so many objectives, different processes deliver different results, and the skill of individuals to pick and execute that is a significant factor. However, I appreciated the common sense approach listed.

    .
  • 13 MARCH 2011
    Robert Brands
    Innovation Coach, Author
    InnovationCoach
    Coral Springs, FL USA

    No revelation here, but have seen guaranteed results starting with “Brain Writing” followed by Brainstorming and the proper ranking and follow through.

    .
    Robert Brands
    Innovation Coach, Author
    InnovationCoach
    Coral Springs, FL USA

    No revelation here, but have seen guaranteed results starting with “Brain Writing” followed by Brainstorming and the proper ranking and follow through.

    .
  • 13 MARCH 2011
    Stepan Afanasyev
    Procurement Director
    Natur Produkt (pharmaceuticals)
    Russia

    ...brain-steering would be the right tool for early phases of new product development, where normally company leaders try to look for silver bullets without consideration of company long-term strategies...

    .
    Stepan Afanasyev
    Procurement Director
    Natur Produkt (pharmaceuticals)
    Russia

    I am sure that such development of a traditional and indeed “frozen” format of brainstorming is demanded by many companies nowadays. No matter if those companies are small, poorly innovative—e.g. trading operators or service providers—they are all required to focus their thinking activities on the right questions.

    Especially, brain-steering would be the right tool for early phases of new product development, where normally company leaders try to look for silver bullets without consideration of company long-term strategies, capabilities, and core competences.

    Brain-steering members are frequently picked up based on “roles and positions”, rather then knowledge, experience, and skills, especially on the developing markets. It slows down companies’ development.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Andrea Simon
    President
    Simon Associates Menagement Consultants
    Yorktown Heights, NY,USA

    ...The right tools are those that help people visualize alternatives. Unless they have an “aha” moment, it is all external to their brains and the ideas don’t go very far...

    .
    Andrea Simon
    President
    Simon Associates Menagement Consultants
    Yorktown Heights, NY,USA

    I found the comments as interesting as the article. When we realize how hard it is for the brain to change and how it holds tight to what it knows, we have to be more reflective of how to change the way people think and more respectful of their brain’s resistance to change. The right tools are those that help people visualize alternatives. Unless they have an “aha” moment, it is all external to their brains and the ideas don’t go very far past the sessions themselves. Tying this into the neurosciences might help us understand why we are so predicitably irrational, Dan Ariely style.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Satyabroto Banerji
    Technology Coordinator
    Safety Brigade
    Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

    The useful steps mentioned in this article may yield top outputs if we can free our minds first. Most people interrupt and ridicule novel ideas, which inhibits group thinking....

    .
    Satyabroto Banerji
    Technology Coordinator
    Safety Brigade
    Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

    The useful steps mentioned in this article may yield top outputs if we can free our minds first. Most people interrupt and ridicule novel ideas, which inhibits group thinking. I have found de Bono’s methods of lateral thinking, provocative operations, and suspended evaluation to stimulate profitable creativity. He has written a book on how this can be a structured process in an organization.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Lynne Levesque
    Founder and Managing Partner
    Lynne Levesque Consulting
    Boston, MA USA

    ...I would, however, like to add one other consideration that would further enhance idea generation—one that recognizes individual cognitive differences....

    .
    Lynne Levesque
    Founder and Managing Partner
    Lynne Levesque Consulting
    Boston, MA USA

    The Seven Steps are a terrific improvement on traditional brainstorming. As I have long advocated with my clients when consulting on developing more creative leaders, truly creative efforts require clarity around objectives and success criteria. By recognizing this important ingredient, the Coynes have developed a well-structured approach that will greatly enhance idea generation.

    I would, however, like to add one other consideration that would further enhance idea generation—one that recognizes individual cognitive differences. Not everyone is comfortable or at their creative best in a group setting with everyone talking. By adding techniques that allow for quiet reflection, such as journalling, brainwriting, or Bryan Mattimore’s brainwalking, either inside the sub-group session or preferably outside the session, a team leader will tap into the more introspective side of an individual’s creativity and allow everyone to maximize their creative contribution!

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Max Havelaar
    Talent developer
    Maxsolutions
    Netherlands

    ...Different researches have shown that these companies are significantly more successful then others. In these companies, brainstorming is replaced by continuous creative networking.

    .
    Max Havelaar
    Talent developer
    Maxsolutions
    Netherlands

    In organizations where they share core values and a noble cause, all knowledge, experience, and ideas automatically align to serve the customers and company’s best interest. Ideas are continuously shared and brought forward without boundaries or restrictions. In fact, you could say that brainstorming is integrated into the daily operations. The language people use is ‘We-Us-Our’ instead of ‘I-Me-My.’ Ideas flow on a permanent basis and are not only weighed on immediate return on investment but on the degree in which they contribute to shared values and the noble cause. Different researches have shown that these companies are significantly more successful then others. In these companies, brainstorming is replaced by continuous creative networking.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Leonard Koningswijk
    Owner
    New Dialogues
    Amsterdam, Netherlands

    I believe that brainstorming as described here is a bit outdated—the article does not mention the opportunities social media offers to take brainstorming to the next level....

    .
    Leonard Koningswijk
    Owner
    New Dialogues
    Amsterdam, Netherlands

    I believe that brainstorming as described here is a bit outdated—the article does not mention the opportunities social media offers to take brainstorming to the next level. My experiences with online tools are very positive. It allows for the input from smaller to very large groups (up to 1500), where participants can bring up ideas and discuss these in a very safe environment. Participants are anonymous, so there is no distortion from rank, social status, etcetera. And participants can contribute without having to travel to a single location. It makes it very easy to involve participants from different backgrounds, for example, different functional departments, ranks, regions, beliefs, etcetera, which can improve the quality and quantity of the outcome enormously.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Keehong Lu
    Performance Consultant
    Integrated Performance Assocaites (iPA)
    Singapore

    On “Know your organization’s decision-making criteria,” this is heresy in some sense....

    .
    Keehong Lu
    Performance Consultant
    Integrated Performance Assocaites (iPA)
    Singapore

    On “Know your organization’s decision-making criteria,” this is heresy in some sense. To be creative, you cannot start with “fixing the box.” Unless, as some readers commented, we are looking at incremental limited ideas and solutions.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Rajesh Kishanpuria
    CEO
    Ideazfirst Events
    Kolkata, India

    A book by Ken Hudson, The Idea Accelerator can be used with the above article. For us, the 120-second challenge in the book works the best during the brainstorming sessions.

    .
    Rajesh Kishanpuria
    CEO
    Ideazfirst Events
    Kolkata, India

    A book by Ken Hudson, The Idea Accelerator can be used with the above article. For us, the 120-second challenge in the book works the best during the brainstorming sessions.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Alifadian Yuhaniz
    Consulting
    Yogyakarta Indonesia

    When I lead a discussion for new ideas, the first thing I do is ask every member of the group to explain the situation from their own perspective....

    .
    Alifadian Yuhaniz
    Consulting
    Yogyakarta Indonesia

    When I lead a discussion for new ideas, the first thing I do is ask every member of the group to explain the situation from their own perspective. Then we can guess where the idea will go. So, we can make the right questions to guide to the best idea.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Bill Proudfit
    Principal
    Knowledge Management Services
    Hong Kong

    ...I’m reasonably certain traditional brainstorming requires that submitted ideas are anonymous. At least this is how I do it...

    .
    Bill Proudfit
    Principal
    Knowledge Management Services
    Hong Kong

    There are lots of good facilitation techniques. The problem is that people ‘brain-storm’ with no facilitation training what-so-ever. I recommend many of the ones already mentioned by Jack Hipple above, plus the Cognitive Edge Practitioner training available through David Snowden’s group in Singapore. Knowledge sharing techniques at the beginning are very useful and too often not used, see David Gurteen ‘knowledge cafe’ or the ‘World Cafe’ sites.

    I’m reasonably certain traditional brainstorming requires that submitted ideas are anonymous. At least this is how I do it; write them down on slips of paper, mix them up and post them on a wall and let people read them. Asking people to speak up at such a session is self-defeating; the talkers talk and the listeners listen. There are some computer apps that let you link computers together so people can share ideas anonymously in real-time. These work best with big and expensive screens that everyone is watching at the same time.

    Some of the points are a bit shallow but still useful. I always like to be reminded of the obvious. Be prepared, make a list of questions, know the organization decision-making structure, small break-out groups, follow-up quickly on both the accepted ideas and the ones rejected.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Lukasz Roszczyc
    MBA Candidate
    Hult International Business School
    San Francisco, CA USA

    ...Team/Department leaders should create “happenings” with a casual atmosphere and “food for thought” to make employees create and discuss new ideas among each other....

    .
    Lukasz Roszczyc
    MBA Candidate
    Hult International Business School
    San Francisco, CA USA

    Instead of a structured approach to idea generation (through a highly-planned brainstorming session), companies should inspire teams to generate ideas. Team/Department leaders should create “happenings” with a casual atmosphere and “food for thought” to make employees create and discuss new ideas among each other. For example, it might be in the a form of a happy hour with a review of latest, best practices with different, but still similar dynamics, industry, or inviting experts from other disciplines to share the newest trends. During such casual settings leaders should spot the idea generators and try to work with them individually, or create an informal group of idea generators to work on assigned problems.

    .
  • 12 MARCH 2011
    Diane Marentette
    Co-Founder
    The New Brain for Business Institute
    La Jolla, CA USA

    ...brainstorming in any form simply does not generate the best creative thinking from participants....

    .
    Diane Marentette
    Co-Founder
    The New Brain for Business Institute
    La Jolla, CA USA

    This approach will undoubtedly get ideas and discussion, but we now know that brainstorming in any form simply does not generate the best creative thinking from participants. Getting different people in the room and asking different questions is not going to significantly improve the thinking process of any organization. Einstein said it: “We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them” and the concept of brainstorming, we now know, will likely NOT move you away from using the same kind of thinking.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Bret Larson
    Freelance Consultant
    Wuxi, China

    ...In China mainland, for example, where the traditional Chinese business culture in some MNCs and SOEs can almost require subordinates to remain quiet or solely support their superior’s ideas, brainstorming can be a waste of time....

    .
    Bret Larson
    Freelance Consultant
    Wuxi, China

    On brainstorming in China: Brainstorming or “Brainstreering” gets significantly more complicated when traditional culture must be taken into account, but can be extremely successful if designed correctly.

    In China mainland, for example, where the traditional Chinese business culture in some MNCs and SOEs can almost require subordinates to remain quiet or solely support their superior’s ideas, brainstorming can be a waste of time. Through experience, even in these situations, if called upon to conduct a brainstorming session, the above guidelines, especially, Ask the Right Questions and Divide an Conquer, can help to overcome a stale and predictable outcome due to culture-related silence or group think.

    Also helpful in these situations is to offer anonymity for participants until they are comfortable in taking ownership of their ideas and contributions. This can really only be accomplished in the small-group sessions discussed in this article. Many Chinese and international companies operating in China have long since overcome the requirement for this, but if you are working in a traditionally closed-off environment, the above strategies can work successfully and if implemented correctly can be part of a much broader change in communications company-wide.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Jim Newcomer
    Partner
    Edge-work
    Portland, OR USA

    As a trained OD professional and facilitator of many successful brainstorming meetings (and participant in a few that were failures), I am appalled at this shallow list....

    .
    Jim Newcomer
    Partner
    Edge-work
    Portland, OR USA

    As a trained OD professional and facilitator of many successful brainstorming meetings (and participant in a few that were failures), I am appalled at this shallow list. There are ways to insure successful brainstorming meetings, but these people have left out the most fundamental ones.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    James Smith
    CEO
    Enterprise Management Group
    Seattle, WA USA

    ...I liked this approach, their results are impressive, but I’m not much of a fan of the enterprise return from brainstorming....

    .
    James Smith
    CEO
    Enterprise Management Group
    Seattle, WA USA

    I agree, this article represents yet another approach to facilitation, of which there are so many to choose from I don’t know how any one figures out which to pick. I liked this approach, their results are impressive, but I’m not much of a fan of the enterprise return from brainstorming.

    For over fifteen years, our firm has followed a different approach to generating innovation. Our proven process can best be described as suspending the client’s culture and politics for ten weeks. When this step is taken, we have difficulty processing all the input. In one case, after an employee-targeted sacred cow was shot by the CEO, employee input went from 800 in three weeks to 7400 in four and a half weeks, 3900 of which were acted upon for a sustainable $300 million reduction in SG&A and $200 million reduction to approved capital.

    None of this was facilitated, the process was introduced over one week and the employees wait for something unusual to happen, for example, waiting for a sacred cow to fall, and then no further facilitation is required. Facilitated brainstorming rarely overcomes the middle management cork in the bottle, so yes, things trickle up the organization, however when you remove the cork entirely from the equation, innovation rushes up the organization.

    Human nature always seems to prevail. Managers protect their turf, employees protect their careers. When you remove all the risks, human nature takes over and employees (from the janitor through the officers)just naturally speak up.

    The biggest challenge with the facilitation approach is the public nature of the brainstorming. Regardless of how the facilitator represents the safety of open group discussion, each employee will deal with their perception of the risk before stumping for an unpopular idea, regardless the value.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Joris Claeys
    Managing Director
    ACCELERATE-gscs | CAPix-Asia
    Philippines

    ...Only surprised the old sticky notes were not mentioned...they still work! But even that requires good facilitation and appropriate selection of participants to the sessions.

    .
    Joris Claeys
    Managing Director
    ACCELERATE-gscs | CAPix-Asia
    Philippines

    From brainstorming to brainsteering, or is it facilitation? Anyhow, this article provides some good insights in how to prepare a brainstorming session and what to avoid. Any good change facilitator should have those techniques mastered well.

    As Kevin and Shawn point out, the practice is more straight forward than the theory—the examples explain very well what is sought after.

    Only surprised the old sticky notes were not mentioned...they still work! But even that requires good facilitation and appropriate selection of participants to the sessions.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Hrair Mesrobian
    professor
    Medical College of Wisconsin
    Milwaukee, WI USA

    I am hoping Mr Hipple can share these approaches in a little more detail so we can learn from him: CPS, DeBono Six Hats(R), Theory of Constraints, and lastly “TRIZ” Inventive Problem Solving.

    .
    Hrair Mesrobian
    professor
    Medical College of Wisconsin
    Milwaukee, WI USA

    I am hoping Mr Hipple can share these approaches in a little more detail so we can learn from him: CPS, DeBono Six Hats(R), Theory of Constraints, and lastly “TRIZ” Inventive Problem Solving.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Kenneth Armitage
    Lt Commander
    Suffolk, East Anglia, England

    This sounds like a combination of brainstorming and team-building. Whatever, such events are better organized away from the workplace and away from every day distractions...

    .
    Kenneth Armitage
    Lt Commander
    Suffolk, East Anglia, England

    This sounds like a combination of brainstorming and team-building. Whatever, such events are better organized away from the workplace and away from every day distractions from pinging telephone calls, e-mails, mobile phones, and even facsimile messages and the general bustle of office or shop floor life, That way participants are more likely to relax and be prepared to get involved. However, before you reach that stage it is imperative to be completely open and honest and spell out the reasons for any such exercise; and, to be successful, senior managers and the facilitator should, for example:

    - Have a prepared agenda with the objective or objectives clearly stated.
    - Prepare a list of questions to be answered.
    - Brief everyone beforehand and tell them how the programme will be conducted and the areas to be covered.
    - Invite everyone to write down their ideas in response to each question or, invite round the table, off-the-top of the head comments and have two or three people write down responses or, divide the gathering into groups of say four or five and let them brainstorm their replies and then present their ideas to the gathering.
    - Set a time period for groups to come back with ideas in order to keep the process moving along.
    - Encourage any kind of response. Sometimes wild ideas have merit and can turn out to be something very worthwhile.
    - Emphasize quantity to stimulate lateral thinking.
    - Do not worry about detail; you can sort the wheat from the chaff later.
    - Encourage contradiction but discourage clear and outright criticism unless constructive.
    - Do not be arrogant – by that I mean give the impression you already have the answers and that they are present to confirm your pre-determined views.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Joy Joseph
    Vice President
    SymphonyIRI Group
    Stamford, CT USA

    ...I find Mind-Maps an excellent tool to spur spontaneity of thought, especially in a diverse group. The tool leverages radiant thinking...

    .
    Joy Joseph
    Vice President
    SymphonyIRI Group
    Stamford, CT USA

    I completely agree with the authors—effective brainstorming needs preparation (and a process to nurture an effective engagement model). You especially need more structure when it is more “crowd-sourcing” than brainstorming. While this article lays a great foundation for effective brainstorming, I think it doesn’t go into the effectiveness of some tried and tested tools. Maybe the book goes into it. For instance I find Mind-Maps an excellent tool to spur spontaneity of thought, especially in a diverse group. The tool leverages radiant thinking, with a central idea branching off into related, or complimentary concepts. Another great tool is a Prioritization matrix—a large group is bound to produce a myriad of ideas and at some point of time it will become important to rank order them in terms of value versus effort.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    J. Douglas Bate
    Co-Founder
    The Visterra Group
    Boston, MA USA

    ...There is an important role for both brainsteering and brainstorming in every company. Thanks for highlighting the distinction.

    .
    J. Douglas Bate
    Co-Founder
    The Visterra Group
    Boston, MA USA

    Brainsteering sounds like a great way to get short-term, incremental, action-oriented ideas that can address tactical problems in any company. The focus on criteria, key questions, knowledgeable participants, and small groups will keep the thinking and ideas in a narrow, feasible range for easy implementation.

    Brainstorming should only be used where innovative, game-changing ideas that create new markets and change the basis of competition is required. The open, fast-flowing discussions with a mix of energized people creating a new future will more likely result in longer-term strategy innovation.

    There is an important role for both brainsteering and brainstorming in every company. Thanks for highlighting the distinction.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Paula Wilder
    Senior Partner
    WilderWeber Leadership Group
    Blacksburg, VA USA

    ...What can we do (such as de Bono’s tools) to create focused ideas? I will add another proven approach: appreciative inquiry...

    .
    Paula Wilder
    Senior Partner
    WilderWeber Leadership Group
    Blacksburg, VA USA

    Thanks to the Coynes for reminding us that brainstorming in and of itself is often random and off-strategy. I agree with many that in today’s economic environment, our imaginations are “withering.” What can we do (such as de Bono’s tools) to create focused ideas? I will add another proven approach: appreciative inquiry, to create positive images of the future and then innovate around those images—in a structured way that energizes. No stone faces in appreciative inquiry summits!

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Anne Marie van Gerwen
    manager Marketing and Communications
    europeana
    The Netherlands

    ...A suggestion I would like to add is to form groups in such a way that hierarchical and/or political patterns are neutralized....

    .
    Anne Marie van Gerwen
    manager Marketing and Communications
    europeana
    The Netherlands

    What a relief it will be to free ourselves and our staff from some brainstorming cliches that, deep down, we always felt were poor! This will rescue the best ideas from being buried under a pile of mediocre ones.

    A suggestion I would like to add is to form groups in such a way that hierarchical and/or political patterns are neutralized. Group members sometimes tend to support ‘good’ ideas or reject other ones for the wrong reasons.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Deborah Reiff
    Principal
    ClearPath Resolutions
    Boston, MA USA

    Another criteria for better brainstorming is using a trained facilitator who is not invested in the outcome....

    .
    Deborah Reiff
    Principal
    ClearPath Resolutions
    Boston, MA USA

    Another criteria for better brainstorming is using a trained facilitator who is not invested in the outcome. Facilitators can give subtle or blatant cues about which ideas they think are good. When team members see that some ideas are more equal than others they are less likely to be able to think creatively and less likely to share their ideas.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Jack Hipple
    Principal
    Innovation-TRIZ
    Tampa, FL USA

    ...Brainstorming is a 60-year-old tool that has been replaced, in order of efficiency and efficacy, by CPS, DeBono Six Hats(R), Theory of Constraints, and lastly “TRIZ” Inventive Problem Solving....

    .
    Jack Hipple
    Principal
    Innovation-TRIZ
    Tampa, FL USA

    Though I can’t quarrel with your suggestions about improving brainstorming, I am astounded that this is the primary emphasis. Brainstorming is a 60-year-old tool that has been replaced, in order of efficiency and efficacy, by CPS, DeBono Six Hats(R), Theory of Constraints, and lastly “TRIZ” Inventive Problem Solving. If McKinsey is going to comment on creativity and innovation tools, it should focus on what’s new and up to date versus “optimizing,” which is an inherently inefficient process.

    .
  • 11 MARCH 2011
    Cicely Brown
    VSO Volunteer - Business Advisor
    previously Fantsuam Foundation
    Nigeria

    VSO trains all of its volunteers in facilitation techniques designed to both plan and execute development interventions. What’s described above looks like facilitation to me.

    .
    Cicely Brown
    VSO Volunteer - Business Advisor
    previously Fantsuam Foundation
    Nigeria

    VSO trains all of its volunteers in facilitation techniques designed to both plan and execute development interventions. What’s described above looks like facilitation to me.

    .
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