I thought this was a nice idea - http://www.doodlelong.com/ its the longest continuous doodle in the world! - and you can contribute to it. theres already over 12,000 contributors
I wondered just what might happen to the output? wouldnt it be great if you could unravel it and roll it up into one big ball of doodle - i bet it would be too heavy to carry and certainly too black to see. bet you cant find my contribution
so why do people 1) create these things, and 2) contribute to these things. I guess the answer to both those questions might be "because they can"... and so that makes me wonder why we cant have such enthusiastic and dedicated creators and contributors in our workplace?.. what would happen if we simply allowed people to create something they like for thier work "because they can" and see who joins in "because they can".
There must be so much energy and talent in our workplace that simply doesnt see the light of day while were at work - what a waste
Monday, 23 July 2007
dont do it now
Dont do it now - but have you ever tried clicking on the "next blog" button at the top of a blogger blog?
I used to wonder why they put that click up there - why would anyone want to go to a completely random blog? what on earth would be the point?
Well I did click it - and its opened a new world to me. Not only is it addictive, but its insightful and interesting too. And if we are trying to develop our capability to be more creative,.... and if one way to help that is to gather different experiences and perspectives - then clicking through random blogs is an excellent personal development activity
And so i feel quite comfortable now to spend my working day reading random blogs - "but boss, its good for my personal development - I'll get the strategic plan to when ive finished reading about 'the abstract hand embroidery by Takashi Iwasaki. So free and imaginative!' "
I used to wonder why they put that click up there - why would anyone want to go to a completely random blog? what on earth would be the point?
Well I did click it - and its opened a new world to me. Not only is it addictive, but its insightful and interesting too. And if we are trying to develop our capability to be more creative,.... and if one way to help that is to gather different experiences and perspectives - then clicking through random blogs is an excellent personal development activity
And so i feel quite comfortable now to spend my working day reading random blogs - "but boss, its good for my personal development - I'll get the strategic plan to when ive finished reading about 'the abstract hand embroidery by Takashi Iwasaki. So free and imaginative!' "
Saturday, 21 July 2007
excess living
Ive just come back from the cinema. (if your looking to see a great feel good movie - see 'Hairspray' - i loved it :-) We're regular cinema goers in our family and as such every now and then our loyalty card gives us a "free" something. Todays was a large drink and popcorn. I love popcorn me.
As the vendor gave me my sack of popcorn, she informed me that I could get free unlimited top ups! Free topups? crikey, it was already the size of a sack of potatoes! My imeadiate idea was to go into the cinema theater and announce to the collected audience that the popcorn was on me!... which lead me to wonder how much popcorn could i get to feed the hungry homeless outside the cinema? Now i didnt quite go that far, but it didnt take long to realise that if we pinched some of the paper bags from the pick and mix sweet stand, we could fill individual bags for all our family and go back get a refill and some more bags and give popcorn to our freinds there too. lovely!
Now heres the point of my story..... clearly the popcorn costs next to nothing to the cinema, if they can give it away so freely (so why do they charge so much for it in the first place??) As a result of this, the audience eating it dont value it as much (and dont really need as much as they take) which is clearly evident after the movie is over and the audience has left the auditorium.
I am always slightly disgusted at our species when i see the mess left behind us at the cinema.
Now here REALLY IS my point..... why dont they put bins in cinemas? why are we content to leave / throw our unwanted popcorn (and drinks cartons, sweet papers, nacho boxes etc etc) on the floor or seat? what pigs we are.
So heres a thought.... if I was to invent a nutritious reciepe using popcorn as the main ingredient then it would be in peoples interest to take home their left over popcorn to use in tomorrows dinner!
or maybe the cinema could sell popcorn that would make great garden fertiliser? (hmm might need to think that one through!)
As the vendor gave me my sack of popcorn, she informed me that I could get free unlimited top ups! Free topups? crikey, it was already the size of a sack of potatoes! My imeadiate idea was to go into the cinema theater and announce to the collected audience that the popcorn was on me!... which lead me to wonder how much popcorn could i get to feed the hungry homeless outside the cinema? Now i didnt quite go that far, but it didnt take long to realise that if we pinched some of the paper bags from the pick and mix sweet stand, we could fill individual bags for all our family and go back get a refill and some more bags and give popcorn to our freinds there too. lovely!
Now heres the point of my story..... clearly the popcorn costs next to nothing to the cinema, if they can give it away so freely (so why do they charge so much for it in the first place??) As a result of this, the audience eating it dont value it as much (and dont really need as much as they take) which is clearly evident after the movie is over and the audience has left the auditorium.
I am always slightly disgusted at our species when i see the mess left behind us at the cinema.
Now here REALLY IS my point..... why dont they put bins in cinemas? why are we content to leave / throw our unwanted popcorn (and drinks cartons, sweet papers, nacho boxes etc etc) on the floor or seat? what pigs we are.
So heres a thought.... if I was to invent a nutritious reciepe using popcorn as the main ingredient then it would be in peoples interest to take home their left over popcorn to use in tomorrows dinner!
or maybe the cinema could sell popcorn that would make great garden fertiliser? (hmm might need to think that one through!)
Monday, 16 July 2007
on to something? or on the gravy train?
Is it all simply marketing gobbledegook or is there something in this? http://www.vespanomics.com/index.cfm
Vespa (the moped manufacturer) seem to be onto something here by tapping into the New Yorkers new interest of carbon emissions and all things Gore. VESPANOMICS seems to have all the environmental facts and stats you could ever want, to make you want to buy a Vespa.
But the really interesting thing i think is their investment in providing free parking spaces for vespas.
No longer does Vespa see itself simply as a manufacurer of mopeds, now Vespa is becoming a guardian of the environment..... which im sure they hope will help them sell more Vespas
and i still remember the days when all they had to do to make me drool with aspiration for a Vespa was to have a picture of a cool dude (cigarette essential) propped up against one in the sun while he casually chats up a local Bella in a miniskirt
Now if they can convince our mail service to transport everything in Piaggio Apes - then Im convinced about vespanomics
Vespa (the moped manufacturer) seem to be onto something here by tapping into the New Yorkers new interest of carbon emissions and all things Gore. VESPANOMICS seems to have all the environmental facts and stats you could ever want, to make you want to buy a Vespa.
But the really interesting thing i think is their investment in providing free parking spaces for vespas.
No longer does Vespa see itself simply as a manufacurer of mopeds, now Vespa is becoming a guardian of the environment..... which im sure they hope will help them sell more Vespas
and i still remember the days when all they had to do to make me drool with aspiration for a Vespa was to have a picture of a cool dude (cigarette essential) propped up against one in the sun while he casually chats up a local Bella in a miniskirt
Now if they can convince our mail service to transport everything in Piaggio Apes - then Im convinced about vespanomics
Friday, 13 July 2007
Applied Creativity / Everyday Creativity

Ask audiences if they are "creative" and in my experience, only about 10 % of people will raise thier hands. Why is this? For some, they think its a little arrogant to think of oneself a "creative" - thats OK I guess, we dont like arrogant people, but i dont see why people cant celebrate their creativity. For the majority of people with their hands still in thier laps, it seems that they REALLY DONT think they are creative.
This must come down to thier personal definition of creativity, and the context within they view their creativity. For sure if you are good freinds with Thomas Heatherwick (designer, among other wonders, of the roll up bridge) http://www.thomasheatherwick.com/ you might find it difficult to consider yourself "creative" like him. But if you think about the way you might get through the day of hassles and niggles - you might start to impress yourself with the way you creatively duck and dive to solve problems and make quick fixes. Your solutions might not get you in the center spreads of the sunday glossys, but there can be no doubt that you are exersicing your everyday creativity as much as Thomas might be.
For me this picture is the very essence of applied everyday creativity - this person had a problem - no hot water to wash his hands in. He didnt moan about it, he did something about it. And this touches on another potential block to our belief that we are not creative.... our belief that solutions must be perfect, that creative people create beautiful solutions.
Lets start the campaign now... "perfection tomorrow - something now"
otherness

Sometimes things are not quite as they seem, and sometimes things are far more than they might seem
I skipped over this photo when i first saw it on http://www.pizdaus.com/ thinking it was just a quirky font style- and then i realised what it was composed of. - look carefully.
Now i dont know if these pictures are genuine or photoshopped, but it did make me think that there must be hundreds of things we see every day, that if only we werent so limited by our "functional fixedness" (our inability to see beyond the original function or purpose) we might be delighted by the wonderful otherness of our surroundings
Wednesday, 11 July 2007
can you see what it is yet?
can you scribble? sure you can scribble. We ALL can scribble.
All we have to do is put the scribbles in the right places
check out this fabulous display of scribbling
and if you would like to have a go, you might find it interesting to investigate a technique developed by Betty Edwards ( www.seedsofgrowth.com/have-you-tried-turning-it-upside-down )to help us see more clearly what ACTUALLY is, and not what we THINK is.... an absolute fundamental in becoming more creative
All we have to do is put the scribbles in the right places
check out this fabulous display of scribbling
and if you would like to have a go, you might find it interesting to investigate a technique developed by Betty Edwards ( www.seedsofgrowth.com/have-you-tried-turning-it-upside-down )to help us see more clearly what ACTUALLY is, and not what we THINK is.... an absolute fundamental in becoming more creative
Tuesday, 10 July 2007
SMIRTING
SMIRTING - I think thats what it was called.. apparently its the new flirting opportunity in pubs now that smoking is no longer allowed inside ... Asking if she wants to come out for a ciggi (even if you know she doesnt smoke, its a perfectly plausible way to ... well, quite literally... ask a girl out)
You see, it just goes to prove that out of every change, comes new opportunity if you are quick and alert enough to sieze it
If its not SMIRTING, maybe its FLOKING ?
You see, it just goes to prove that out of every change, comes new opportunity if you are quick and alert enough to sieze it
If its not SMIRTING, maybe its FLOKING ?
All talk - No walk?

"why do they do this?..."
or "how do they do that?..."
Often its "Wow, thats great, I wish i could...."
or simply "thats interesting"
Certainly i am becoming more in tune with my thinking (hmm thats an interesting expression as if "I" and "my thinking" are 2 seperate entities, 2 seperate beings?? Spooky. which one is control? and which is the real me?) but for all that... is this improving my creativity or innovation behaviour?
Ive just been chatting with a friend who was interested in my new office. I was explaining the construction and the trials and tribulations over the past few months, when he commented on my desk - its just a work space that i threw together from some scrap materials as i was running out of time and money, and needed to get into the office and get working - his comments made me stop and look afresh at my creation.
Hes right, its pretty cool. Its made of some left over office timber and a redundant robin reliant windscreen. it cost me less than 2 pints of beer and took less time to create than the return trip to Ikea. However in the rush of getting it done and the gabble of conversation going on in my head, i kind of missed the fact that innovation and creativity is manefesting itself all around me
As great as it is to get focused on thinking about your thinking, it might be useful sometimes for that thinking to just "SHADUP!" so that we can sit back in peace and recognise some of our creative outputs
Sunday, 8 July 2007
Assumptions and presumptions of the Old World
I remember the time when to renew your passport, you had to get your passport photograph verified as a true likeness of yourself by a respected and trustworthy member of the community; A policeman perhaps or a teacher or doctor.
What a jolt then to our deeply embeded assumptions that a terrorist attack could be lead by a bunch of doctors - as appears the case in the recent Glasgow airport incident.
In this new world, no longer can we simply assume that some people are to be trusted and some not. Maybe this is why Harold Shipman could carry out such a long campaign of horror - maybe no one could accept that a doctor could be capable of carrying out such acts of murder - it simply does not compute in our assumption-lead heads
So if the assumption that a doctor is a person of respect and trustworthyness no longer holds true, what creative opportunity now opens up for some creative thinking individuals?
What a jolt then to our deeply embeded assumptions that a terrorist attack could be lead by a bunch of doctors - as appears the case in the recent Glasgow airport incident.
In this new world, no longer can we simply assume that some people are to be trusted and some not. Maybe this is why Harold Shipman could carry out such a long campaign of horror - maybe no one could accept that a doctor could be capable of carrying out such acts of murder - it simply does not compute in our assumption-lead heads
So if the assumption that a doctor is a person of respect and trustworthyness no longer holds true, what creative opportunity now opens up for some creative thinking individuals?
Saturday, 7 July 2007
Friday, 29 June 2007
when does an idea come to being?
I was working with a lady the other day who was great fun and we enjoyed creating some interesting work together. We bounced ideas between us and seemed quite productive.
Later in the day she made a comment that made me think. she said "we make quite a good team, you and I. I come up with the ideas and you develop them"
This suprised me somewhat because I didnt think that she was coming up with "ideas" and nor was i "developing" them. The way I saw the situation was that she was talking about odd things, and I kept finding interesting connections and ideas. She stimulated my thoughts, but i didnt think that she was creating ideas. Interesting!
So if A metions something funny, and B says "Hey! that makes me think of.." is A the ideator and B the developer? or is B the ideator stimulated by a comment of A?
I guess at the end of the day - who cares?! as long as an idea breathed some life for a moment..... but what if B went on to make a million from the idea? Does A have a claim?
Later in the day she made a comment that made me think. she said "we make quite a good team, you and I. I come up with the ideas and you develop them"
This suprised me somewhat because I didnt think that she was coming up with "ideas" and nor was i "developing" them. The way I saw the situation was that she was talking about odd things, and I kept finding interesting connections and ideas. She stimulated my thoughts, but i didnt think that she was creating ideas. Interesting!
So if A metions something funny, and B says "Hey! that makes me think of.." is A the ideator and B the developer? or is B the ideator stimulated by a comment of A?
I guess at the end of the day - who cares?! as long as an idea breathed some life for a moment..... but what if B went on to make a million from the idea? Does A have a claim?
a matter of economics

Ive just had to fit a bracket to something; and to do the job well i needed a couple of spacers. After failing to find anything suitable in my garage, my first thought was to dash off down to B&Q and buy a couple of big washers.
.... but then I stopped and thought.....
As much as i love to go to B&Q, it is very expensive.... those 2 washers were bound to be close to a couple of quid, and then there is the petrol cost of getting there. And I was short of time too. I thought about how easily i would accept spending a couple of quid to get me out of a fix.... and then it struck me, a couple of pound coins would do the trick beautifully! and so 2 fat ones were drilled!
Now i know that defacing the queens coinage is against the law... but i figured so was the speed that i was going to have to drive at to get to B&Q in time.... and this way meant no one gets hurt and i save the cost of petrol
Thursday, 28 June 2007
You'll always find me in the kitchen at parties
Ive been doing it for years.... and now someone has launched a product and called it "innovative"
http://www.springwise.com/style_design/white_goods_morph_into_whitebo/index.php
fridges make great drywipe communication spaces - and its right there, right now - where all the juicy conversation and debate happens - in the kitchen!
bigger and better than that is the patio windows - great planes of writing space - there simply is no excuse not to scribble out ideas with each other.
And for those ideas on the go, i love to use the windscreen in my car!
a quick word of warning - check that your existing fridge and other whitegoods are drywipe pen compatible - some powder coatings are porus and drywipe pens become permanent! so you'd better make sure its a damn good idea that you scribble up
http://www.springwise.com/style_design/white_goods_morph_into_whitebo/index.php
fridges make great drywipe communication spaces - and its right there, right now - where all the juicy conversation and debate happens - in the kitchen!
bigger and better than that is the patio windows - great planes of writing space - there simply is no excuse not to scribble out ideas with each other.
And for those ideas on the go, i love to use the windscreen in my car!
a quick word of warning - check that your existing fridge and other whitegoods are drywipe pen compatible - some powder coatings are porus and drywipe pens become permanent! so you'd better make sure its a damn good idea that you scribble up
Tuesday, 26 June 2007
openness and tolerance encourages creativity
A colleague sent me an email about innovation and creativity (I think originally from
Management Advantage Ltd) ..... I thought the following extract was really interesting
" .......Another researcher has focused on questions of diversity. Richard Florida (Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University) studied major US cities such as San Francisco, New York and Chicago. Using something he called the ‘gay concentration index’, Florida demonstrated a close correlation between tolerance and high-tech firms. This is not because gay people attract technology companies – but rather that a place where the gay community feels comfortable is also a place where a wide variety of people feel comfortable – and it is that tolerant, open atmosphere which encourages creativity.
In a nutshell: “Cities with thriving arts and cultural climates and openness to diversity of all sorts … enjoy higher rates of innovation and high-wage economic growth.”[3] Again, innovation derives from a context, not the clear blue sky. So, if we want to encourage innovation, we should foster cultural, economic and political diversity rather than trying to find a safe haven in a predictable, unchanging and, above all, homogenous, world."
and it made me wonder where we might find these "thriving arts and cultural climates and openess to diversity of all sorts" within our own organisations? might we find these innovation hotspots within other marginalised groups?
Management Advantage Ltd) ..... I thought the following extract was really interesting
" .......Another researcher has focused on questions of diversity. Richard Florida (Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University) studied major US cities such as San Francisco, New York and Chicago. Using something he called the ‘gay concentration index’, Florida demonstrated a close correlation between tolerance and high-tech firms. This is not because gay people attract technology companies – but rather that a place where the gay community feels comfortable is also a place where a wide variety of people feel comfortable – and it is that tolerant, open atmosphere which encourages creativity.
In a nutshell: “Cities with thriving arts and cultural climates and openness to diversity of all sorts … enjoy higher rates of innovation and high-wage economic growth.”[3] Again, innovation derives from a context, not the clear blue sky. So, if we want to encourage innovation, we should foster cultural, economic and political diversity rather than trying to find a safe haven in a predictable, unchanging and, above all, homogenous, world."
and it made me wonder where we might find these "thriving arts and cultural climates and openess to diversity of all sorts" within our own organisations? might we find these innovation hotspots within other marginalised groups?
Saturday, 23 June 2007
MMail Message
(Fire Fighting)Would fires b put out more quickly if the fire brigade used sparkling water? H2O and CO2 Surely twice as good
Wednesday, 20 June 2007
MMail Message
(Walk On Glass)I am watching a man walk on glass. apparently he can do it because he has let go of his fear.. I wonde
Friday, 15 June 2007
MMail Message
(Now Will B Our Past)People watching. Dont some people dress funny? Wonder what fashion is going 2 one day define this decade
What a great quote
“I can change. I can live out my imagination instead of my memory. I can tie myself to my limitless potential instead of my limiting past.”
-- Stephen Covey
So easy to say, so difficult to do..... but not impossible
-- Stephen Covey
So easy to say, so difficult to do..... but not impossible
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