Innovation with Purpose

In my last newsletter I wrote about an inspiring exhibit from the Cooper-Hewitt Museum: Design for the Other 90%.  The show featured simple innovations for the majority of the world.

It’s got me thinking about all forms of  innovation.  On my radar this week are Crowdsourcing and the Purpose Prize.

Crowdsourcing

The word comes from CROWD + OUTSOURCING.  An organization has a challenge and invites a specific community to solve it.   The practice has broadened to include every aspect of corporate agendas since the word was coined a mere three years ago in a Wired magazine article.

Years ago I had the pleasure of talking with Mark Turrell, CEO and Founder of Imaginatik when he was launching his company and figuring out processes to capture collective intelligence.  If Crowdsourcing intrigues you I can recommend Mark and his company.  His results were impressive ten years ago and he and his colleagues are clear leaders in the field.

The Wisdom of Crowds did a fine job of exploring collective intelligence.  James Surowiecki is a journalist at The New Yorker and relates examples of  collective intelligence–both successes and failures.

Say what you like, but the Audience is usually right on Who Wants to be a Millionaire.

Another firm doing work in this area is Chaordix.  This blogpost from their site has a generous list of many crowdsourcing opportunities. Participate in any number of challenges from designing marketing to forecasting solar activity.

The Purpose Prize

And for those of us in our ‘encore careers’…the Purpose Prize is $100,000 big ones for worthy social innovations.  TEN people will win!  The catch is that you have to be over 60 years of age.  If you qualify you have until March 5th to enter or nominate someone else.  I don’t know about you but I am going to start thinking about it now.

Third Thought Card: Add Love

Creative Habits

Often the challenge of creative individuals is finding that optimal state between dreaming and doing.

My last newsletter focused on Nick Bantock,a author of Griffin & Sabine and many other gorgeous books.  You can read more of his story here.  He is a Creative Producer with a truly solid background and I was intrigued with his routines.  Several things stuck out for me:

1) At the end of each day he leaves something simple undone.  The next morning when he entered his studio it is obvious and simple to get started.

2) He experimented with his physical space, finally arriving at a circular pattern of working.  He literally walks around his piece, getting different perspectives.  Since he started that pattern he has not gotten blocked.

3) Finally, he is organized and disciplined.  Easy to say, harder to do…or maybe I am projecting….

Nick strives to make his art, his life seamless.  That notion reminded Kath F. of this video (thanks Kath!):

Life as Art. Art as Life. Lovely.

Third Thought Card: Make Some Thing

Shift Happens

Multiple versions of this video have been floating around on You Tube and elsewhere.  If you haven’t seen it I’m sure you’ll find it a thought-provoking booster for thinking more globally.

And here’s the link for the wiki

Third Thought Card: Dark Skies

The Charm of Sincerity

This week I am traveling with the Get a Life Marching Band.  I’m a dancer with the band.  We are in Anaheim for gigs at NAMM and Disneyland.

NAMM

The National Association of Music Merchants is one of the largest exhibits in the world for music products.  There are vendors for anything sound and music related….guitars, keyboards, sound boards, horns….and on and on.  The larger vendors feature famous musicians to demo their products.  Thursday I saw a Guitar God wailing for a large crowd (I am but a lowly dancer and did not know his name).  Anyway–big stuff.  We joined the Ferdinand L. Petiot band for their 40th Anniversary appearance at NAMM to open the event.  The song “Thriller” had been selected for us and I choreographed a routine for our dancers.   Quincy Jones, who produced Thriller, led us through the halls.  Quincy Jones! Led us in the parade through the convention halls!

Later in the day we played a stage set.  I saw Lenny ‘Fuzzy’ Rankins and his band perform as we waited.  They could not have been more cool….jazz, R&B and charismatic stage presence.  Very hip band.  Inwardly, I groaned and I thought, “We’re following them?!  We are the opposite of cool!”  I anticipated a painful hour with the audience leaving in droves.

But that didn’t happen.  As our director, Steve, told the story of the band in between classic songs like, “Louie, Louie”, “It’s Hip to be Square” and “We’re an American Band” the audience stayed and came right along with us.

We are not hip.  We are band nerds.  And what comes through when we perform is the sheer joy of the music.  The band LOVES to play and they are pretty darn good.  We dancers, twirlers and flag team love to play with them.

As we rode the bus back to our hotel Steve related a few conversations he’d had with some musicians after we finished our set.  NAMM halls are filled with world-class studio musicians  but the professional musicians said they hadn’t seen anything like Get a Life in 30 years of the convention. Steve and the rest of the group reminded these professionals of when they first began playing…school band, perhaps. He took them to another time and reminded them exuberance and fun that music can bring when it’s not a job.    “I daresay it was an emotional experience for them.”

The sincerity of Get a Life, the unabashed corniness..all this was utterly lovable.  The LA suits, rockers and professional musicians couldn’t help but crack a smile as we performed.

Here’s the lesson I relearned: Follow what you love with a passion.  Be a complete geek about it.  Be unabashed in your pursuit.  Sincerity is disarming.

My name is Maggie and I’m with the Band.

Creativity Spa

Over the weekend I hosted the first Creativity Spa at  the John Palmer House.  Once again, I was touched by the power of a group to generate energy and inspiration for all the members.  From the first hour, when participants introduced themselves and their creative aspiration to the final hour when they declared a specific action they would take we all traveled an intriguing journey together.  The agenda included SoulCollage(TM) and peer coaching and, oh yes, yummy snacks and wine.

SoulCollage(TM) is a consistently effective tool for tapping your intuition and letting go of your logical, linear mind for a time.  Images are a mainline to the psyche.  Here are a few examples from my SoulCollage(tm) deck:


The cards are so versatile and provide a wonderful window to your creative self.

Thanks again to my beautiful Winter Spa participants.  If you’d like to join the Spring Creativity Spa watch this space for dates.

Third Thought Card: Go Backward

Stay Focused on Your Goals

Yesterday I heard a sad statistic: by the end of January more than half of us will have dropped our New Year resolutions.  Sigh.

I get it.  Change is hard.

So how do you support yourself in holding to your goals?  Especially, when your goals are in the creative realm–perhaps more discretionary than goals such as ‘manage my  money’ or ‘lose weight so I don’t get diabetes’.

First, I recommend accepting the fact that change is difficult and you may take a few runs at it.  So what?  Each repeated effort does increase learning and the likelihood of change over time.

Second, accept that working with your creativity requires structure.  Here are some ways to create structure for yourself:

Make an external commitment. Writing in your journal or telling a friend is good.  But what if you book a commission or commit to a presentation?  I’ve promised a weekly newsletter and you can bet I won’t be backing off that.  When you promise something to others it’s somehow more compelling than an internal promise.

Get a coach. Of course, I would love for you to hire me as your Kaizen-Muse coach (specialized coaching for the creatively rebellious–see Building Blocks).  But you can also find a peer coach.  I have a dear friend who is my peer coach. She and I have worked together and she knows how to keep me focused.  Best of all, she does it with gentleness and imagination (love you Arden!).  For starters, meet every other week and alternate roles.

Track yourself. They used to say at Intel that everything can be measured.  I used to say, “Whatever.”  But over time, I came to appreciate the value of noticing progress.  Today, take a little census of your status quo.  Measure your body, your mood, your bank account.  Because, the Intel engineers were right: what gets measured gets done.  Then review your progress with your coach ;)

Finally, if you haven’t made any resolutions (you Rebel) you may enjoy this charming workbook.  I downloaded it over the weekend and it’s much more fun than a spreadsheet.

So pursue your creative goals.

Pursue your mundane goals with creativity.

Go Tiger!  You can do it!  I’m rooting for you!