1 Creativity will improve your workplace

 

Writing on a wall that says "Get the creativity flowing"
Get in the flow by Tim Mossholder, Unsplash, is licensed under Unsplash License.

Creativity is the ability to produce new, diverse and unique ideas. Thinking creatively means looking at things from a different perspective and not being restricted by rules, assumptions, customs, or norms. For example, the ability to look at the same thing that everyone else is looking at but seeing something that no one else can see.

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Watch this presentation about why creativity benefits the workplace.

Advocating Creativity at the Workplace https://youtu.be/qO7Np9gXgow

 

Creativity is the valuable life blood of any workplace and, if it is nurtured and supported properly, it can bring many benefits to the people working at that workplace as well as the organization as a whole. On the other hand, if creativity is stifled and suppressed then any workplace can become very difficult to work in and organizations could seriously suffer. Creativity does this by allowing new ideas to be implemented to improve the various aspects of a workplace and solve problems that may arise. All workplaces need to keep pace with changes in their environments and without a healthy creative environment, workplaces will become stagnate and unpleasant places to work. Also, creativity can make work enjoyable and motivate all of us to invest more of our energies into getting our jobs done, no matter what it is.

Watch this video presentation about how creativity is a valuable life skill.

Creativity as a Life Skill: Gerard Puccio at TEDxGramercy https://youtu.be/ltPAsp71rmI 

Here is a list of the 100 most creative people is business in 2020. Review the list. Do you see anyone you know? How valuable were these people to their workplace?

I have worked in many different workplaces within many organizations over my career. I have only enjoyed and thrived in those workplaces where creativity is encouraged and supported. Naturally, I chose to remain in those workplaces as long as I could and always looked forward to going to work. On the other hand, I have also worked in workplaces where creativity was controlled and suppressed. I felt smothered in these workplaces and that my talents were not valued. This lead to great frustration and I did all I could to remove myself from those workplaces. Unfortunately, I have to admit, the focus of my energies were more on surviving the job instead of excelling in the job. What kinds of experiences have you had in the jobs you have had?

Here is a list of the 50 most innovative companies in 2020. Do you know any of these? Would you like to work for any of these? Why?

As I reflect back on some of my experiences, I realize that the fault was not with the organizations I was employed by, but rather with supervisors that apparently didn’t understand how creativity is an important element in the workplace. Actually, I find that although most organizations claim to value and support creativity and innovation in their workplaces, some middle managers don’t seem to understand how to do this and tend to employ controlling managerial strategies that break trusts and drain the enthusiasm of most of the people involved. Some of the symptoms of this include lethargic employees, high absentee and employee turn-over rates, and basically a pretty undesirable place to work. Can you relate to this observation?

You can apply creativity in your workplace under any conditions that are either favourable or adversarial. The latter likely may require more creativity to prevent unpleasant reactions from others, but once you push through that and prove to others how valuable a worker you are, you will be recognized for what you can contribute. Sometimes, that reward comes in the form of new responsibilities and related benefits or sometimes in finding a better employment opportunity to move to.

Watch this following video presentation about 10 ways to make your workplace more creative.


Top 10 Ways to Make Your Workplace More Creative https://youtu.be/poN2BXkpRwI
 

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Principles of Creativity in the Workplace Copyright © 2023 by Rod Corbett & Kris Hans is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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