2. •Agree that brainstorming is bad
•Understand the weaknesses of brainstorming
•Identify potential alternatives
•Work toward a better “brainstorm”
BY THE END OF THIS PRESENTATION,
WE WILL:
3. “Evidence from science suggests that business people must be
insane to use brainstorming groups”
!
- Adrian Furnham, organizational psychologist
4. The only people enthusiastic about joining a “brainstorm
meeting” are the interns.
!
Typically, everyone else comes prepared with blank stares and
better things to do.
9. Well, an ad man. Alex Osborne, the O in
BBDO, coined the concept in the 1950’s to
solve a problem vexing his creative teams.
They were smart enough, generally creative,
but they, like all of us, were not immune to
criticism in group work.
!
Thus, brainstorming was born.
10. 1. Don’t criticize.
2. Freewheel - encourage all ideas.
3. Go for quantity. More is better.
4. Build on others’ ideas.
BRAINSTORMING CAME WITH RULES
Osborne gave us four principles for creating a nonjudgmental atmosphere.
11. So how did Osborne know he had solved his
problem?
13. “The quantitative results of group brainstorming are beyond
question.”
!
“One group produced 45 suggestions for a home-appliance
promotion, 56 ideas for a money-raising campaign, 124 ideas on
how to sell more blankets.”
14. “The quantitative results of group brainstorming are beyond
question.”
!
“One group produced 45 suggestions for a home-appliance
promotion, 56 ideas for a money-raising campaign, 124 ideas on
how to sell more blankets.”
!
Quantity. He knew people were coming up with ideas.
17. •People working independently come up with more, and better, ideas.
•Performance drops as the group size increases.
•There’s one exception - online brainstorming groups work well.
We’ve since learned:
Research has disputed the value of
brainstorming since 1963.
18. Online brainstorming works really, really well.
Look at Wikipedia.
!
When managed, the group’s performance actually improves as
more people contribute.
!
Why? It could be the screens blocking us from peer review.
19. Still a brainstorming-believer?
!
It’s ok. Research also proves brainstorm-participants believe that
their group performed far better than it actually did.
21. 1. Social loafing: someone tends to sit back and let others do the work
PSYCHOLOGISTS OFFER 3 EXPLANATIONS
22. 1. Social loafing: someone tends to sit back and let others do the work
2. Production blocking: only one person can talk at once
PSYCHOLOGISTS OFFER 3 EXPLANATIONS
23. 1. Social loafing: someone tends to sit back and let others do the work
2. Production blocking: only one person can talk at once
3. Evaluation apprehension: fear of looking stupid in front of peers
PSYCHOLOGISTS OFFER 3 EXPLANATIONS
24. Another point to consider:
Just because you tell people not to judge others’ ideas doesn’t
mean they won’t feel judged by others. It’s human nature.
25. So, how can we truly combat these 3 failures of
brainstorming?
27. The following 5 ideas are thought
starters for the new agency “brainstorm”
28. 1. Social loafing
2. Production blocking
3. Evaluation apprehension
Keep these challenges in mind:
The following 5 ideas are thought
starters for the new agency “brainstorm”
29. Like a creative brief, but with room to fill things in.
What’s the background? Objectives? Timing? Budget?
!
Things to leave blank:
Examples from other brands, ideas that meet X objective, ideas that
meet Y objective, ideas we as an agency would be excited about
1. WORKSHEETS
Thought starter
30. Brief in the larger group, then split everyone into pairs.
!
Request ideas by EOD, not EOmeeting.
2. DYADS
Thought starter
31. Can we create an anonymous Google Doc?
!
Are there resources already available to accommodate this?
3. ONLINE PORTALS
Thought starter
32. Post our “brainstorm” topics in the agency kitchen.
!
Let people contribute at their own pace. Incentivize participation by
rewarding the winning idea. Starbucks giftcards?
4. BULLETIN BOARDS
Thought starter
33. Can we pass out blank notecards for people to fill in ideas before
the meeting, then shuffle them and discuss as a group?
!
Make contributions anonymous, and encourage discussion.
5. NOTECARDS AND VOTING
Thought starter
34. It should help with the evaluation-apprehension if we all look
ridiculous.
6. BEER AND COSTUMES
Thought starter