Putting Brainstorming in its place
06:42I
find that I've become increasingly irritated with all of the narrow
interpretations and self-serving definitions of what is, or isn't, innovation.
I'm happy to climb up on a soapbox again to talk about one of the most common
scapegoats for innovation, the act of brainstorming. No other activity is more
miscast, more often blamed for failure, or more often denigrated. Strange that
the activity that should be the easiest, most natural activity in an innovation
process is singled out as the most complex, difficult and dangerous. But fact
alone highlights how poorly understood the entire innovation process is. So I
rise today to neither praise nor bury brainstorming, but to place it in its
proper context.
The
Purpose of Brainstorming
Brainstorming
is a technique that allows individuals or small groups to generate ideas.
Brainstorming resides in an activity or phase that we call Idea Generation,
which in turn sits in the larger context of innovation. In an appropriately
defined and designed innovation journey, idea generation is preceded by
activities like trend spotting and scenario planning, to understand the
unfolding future and emerging opportunities, and by customer insight generation,
to gain new understanding about what customers want, need and are willing to pay
for. Conducting idea generation without these leading activities is like
assembling an IKEA desk without the instructions or those crazy little Allen
wrenches. You can do it, it just won't be done well.
Brainstorming
is a group technique to generate, socialize and evaluate ideas. It is not the
only idea generation technique. Any interested person can find other approaches
to generate ideas. Further, brainstorming is not absolutely required for an
innovation activity. You can easily and safely complete an innovation activity
without ever conducting brainstorming. In those cases you may find other means
to generate ideas, or you may be using "open innovation" to undercover ideas,
products or technologies that already exist.
So,
why beat up so much on one tiny step in an innovation activity, that as you can
see is not necessarily required, and where substitutes or alternatives exist?
Why so much hate for brainstorming?
Love
it or Hate it
Brainstorming
is universally mocked because most organizations don't plan for it effectively,
don't conduct it honestly, and most attendees don't treat it as important. Once
everyone has agreed to avoid any investment in brainstorming, what else can it
be than a failure? Brainstorming, or any group idea generation technique, is
only as viable and useful as the planning and commitment that go into it. If we
committed the same time and energy to designing a building that we do to
planning a brainstorm, you'd never safely set foot in another building.
A
brainstorming activity is simply a meeting with a specific purpose - to generate
ideas. Everyone knows this. But what they don't often know is: what kinds of
ideas will be acceptable? How disruptive or incremental should the ideas be?
What research or background has been developed? Are we repeating old ideas or
trying to discover new ones? Can we generate ideas that are really divergent,
or represent other outcomes like business models? Without preparation, everyone
assumes that the least common denominator rules apply, and all ideas are
incremental and boring.
Plus,
many brainstorms aren't meant to generate ideas, they are meant to give cover to
a direction or solution that was already decided. The brainstorming activity is
simply a thin veneer to provide some validation on a course of action that was
previously decided.
Without
preparation, without defining the potentially viable outcomes, without providing
the research or background, and without demonstrating that there is no ulterior
motive, how could any meeting succeed?
Individuals
are better than groups
Now,
someone reading this diatribe is going to say "what about all the research that
shows that people are better individually than in groups at idea generation".
And yes, there is research to show that people are sometimes better at
generating ideas individually than in groups. All that says is 1) brainstorming
can be an individual tool rather than a group tool and 2) in some instances
groups are less functional than individuals. Have you seen the 2016
presidential race? Groups are often poor decision makers where information is
less than perfect.
But
here's the rub: in large organizations it's almost impossible for one person
with a good idea to get anything done. Large organizations require the ability
to create and disseminate ideas, and get people to back the idea. Thus, all
innovation is a group dynamic in a large organization, and group brainstorms
serve other purposes besides generating ideas. They also serve to socialize
ideas, validate and vet ideas and even evaluate ideas in a group setting, where
more people mean more perspectives - assuming of course that you've got a
heterogeneous team, where different perspectives are valued. This is of course
another problem with innovation generally, and brainstorming or group activities
specifically: most teams are far too homogeneous in their formation, thinking
and perspectives.
Fit
for purpose
Ideally,
the best situation you can find yourself in is when the tools you use are fit
for the purpose you have. For example, a pocket knife can help you chop down a
small tree, but how much better is an axe, or even a chain saw to do the same
job? Likewise, if we think carefully about what our actual goals are,
brainstorming and other idea generation techniques are actually very well fit
for larger purposes.
If
your purpose is simply to generate a lot of ideas, use a random number
generator. If your goal is to socialize needs, generate solutions, socialize
and build on those solution, validate and evaluate those solutions and leave a
meeting with more buy-in than was possible beforehand, brainstorming might be
the best fit for purpose.
What
many corporate types want out of a brainstorm is simply words on paper, to be
interpreted in whatever way they eventually want to interpret the "ideas".
Participation is welcome but not necessarily encouraged, especially ideas or
submissions that deviate from the expected path. These meetings don't
emphasize socialization or buy-in, because the sponsors aren't looking for your
support. They have an idea and intend to pursue it, regardless of the
outcomes. And most savvy corporate types can recognize when the fix is in and
play along, hoping one day that the same people will show up to their idea
generation activities and play the same roles.
What
outcomes do you expect
A
brainstorm, like any other tool, can be effectively used or used in a disastrous
way. Those who would blame the tool neglect the old aphorism that states that
only a poor craftsman blames his or her tools for a poor outcome. If you aren't
getting the results you hoped for, check your assumptions. Either you've
defined the activity too narrowly (or not at all), you've failed to provide the
research that will lead to understanding of the problem or challenge, your teams
are too homogeneous or you are using brainstorming to validate an outcome you've
already decided on, rather than discovering something new.
Done
well, with good preparation, good advanced reading and scoping, the right people
with the right commitments and attitudes and effective leadership, good
brainstorming is dynamic and creates ideas that take the team to new places. If
you read the buildup of that sentence you'll realize that all the predicates
(good prep, good pre-reads, the right people with the right commitment) are
prerequisites for any new activity. In other words there's an investment
required to do brainstorming, and it should be placed in its proper context -
just after all the discovery necessary to find emerging needs and validate that
customers have those needs, and just before building out prototypes and testing
them in the market. Again, brainstorming is a connected activity, with
predicates and follow on activities closely linked, not a discrete, one-time,
stand alone activity.
So,
the next time your "brainstorming" fails to deliver, or you are dissatisfied
with the outcomes, instead of searching for validating reasons that describe why
brainstorming is so inept, first consider the role brainstorming plays in your
innovation activity, and whether or not it is fit for your purpose.
0 nhận xét