Creativity and Problem Solving (The Brian Tracy Success Library) by Brian Tracy
Author:Brian Tracy [Tracy, Brian]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Business & Economics, Decision-Making & Problem Solving, Workplace Culture, Self-Help, Creativity, Skills
ISBN: 9780814433171
Google: MLzGAwAAQBAJ
Publisher: AMACOM
Published: 2014-10-15T21:45:07+00:00
TWELVE
Practice Lateral Thinking
Lateral thinking forces the mind out of comfortable or conventional ways of thinking. It was pioneered by Edward de Bono in England. One way to illustrate lateral thinking is to remember that when people find themselves in a hole, their natural tendency is to dig the hole deeper. However, the solution may be to go somewhere else and to dig a totally different hole.
Lateral thinking is used to break your pattern of habitual thinking, or the tendency to fall into the trap of the comfort zone and continuing to do things the same way you have always done them in the past.
Reverse Keywords
One method of lateral thinking is the reversal of keywords or phrases. For example, as I mentioned previously, refer to a problem as an opportunity. With that in mind, treat the problem as though it has been sent to you as a gift. Examine it for the opportunity that it might contain.
Instead of saying âOur sales are down,â say, âPurchases are down.â It isnât that we are not selling enough, but our customers are not buying enough. This changes the whole focus of the situation and leads to completely different solutions from the original definition.
Another method of lateral thinking is to use random association. Here, you pick words and then force them to fit your situation. Take a word such as orange or artichoke and describe your business, product, or problem as that word.
For example, you could say, âOur business is like an orange because . . .â On the outside it looks pretty smooth, but as you get close you see a lot of bumps. Inside you find a lot of seeds and membranes and divisions of the orange into a series of separate departments that may not communicate with each other. Of course, there are some juicy parts of our business (the most profitable parts) that we may not be paying close enough attention to. The practice of random association often triggers creative thinking in a way that you had not expected.
The Dominant Idea
Another approach in lateral thinking is called âthe dominant idea.â If the dominant idea is that we have a real problem here, the lateral thinking alternative should be that we have a real profit opportunity or cost-cutting opportunity.
Shift your thinking away from the dominant idea. For example, rather than saying âWe need to sell more,â say âOur customers need to buy more.
Maybe a failure you are experiencing or a loss that you are suffering is natureâs way of telling you that you are on the wrong road. Perhaps you should be doing something different, with a different product or service, selling to a different market. Maybe a loss that youâre suffering today will enable you to make a profit by doing or changing something else.
To practice lateral thinking, you should look at the other personâs viewpoint and try to see and describe the situation through that personâs eyes, especially your customers. Lawyers do this when preparing a case for court. They
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