Saturday, September 14, 2013

SIDES OF A CIRCLE

If people aren't calling you crazy, you aren't thinking big enough. Richard Branson

In 1967 Rollin king approached a Texas attorney with an idea for starting an interstate airline. It was an idea that someone crazy enough to understand the potential could actually make it happen. That person was Herb Kelleher, one of the most innovative entrepreneurs of our time, who turned Southwest Airlines into the most profitable Airline in the world. When Kelleher was asked in a 2009 interview at Stanford University, “Is there anything about the spirit of innovation, that can be taught and learned or do you think it is congenital, that you’re born with it?” Kelleher replied, “I think you have to have that spark in your DNA to start. You’re a little bit of a risk taker, you’re a little bit of a visionary, and you’re a little bit of an idealist.”

Thinking big is only a small part of the strategy that money makers implement into their business plan, but a closer look at the strategy reveals a unique and enduring trait that is matched to money makers (Rauch and Frese, 2007). Some may call it innovation and others identify it as out-of-the-box thinking. Edward De Bono (1967) described the trait as something more than mere innovation. He coined the term, “Lateral thinking,” which was not only manipulating existing pieces, but seeking to change those very pieces. It focuses on the perceptual part of thinking. (De Bono,1969).
Lateral thinking is not a natural way to think. Our brains make sense of new experiences by relating it to meaningful patterns. Furthermore, Gestalt psychologists suggest that cognitive processes begins with innate patterns of sensory information and we relate new sensory input to fit our mental patterns. Our brains tend to be self-regulating mechanisms, so when sensory input doesn’t appear to fit mental patterns we adjust the information. Some people will adjust a picture that is slightly crooked, even in a stranger’s house, to fit their perceptual patterns of what they consider normal. Lateral thinkers naturally perceive the world from a different perspective. Perhaps it’s a preference for right hemisphere processing or an innate cognitive structure that causes them to adapt existing information to fit their worldview.

Lateral thinking often presents us with solutions to problems that is not initially appreciated by the general public. Only when the idea “works” and sometimes revolutionizes the industry is it recognized as useful. Education tends to follow cultural trends, and lateral thinking leads the trends, so for this reason, lateral thinkers often struggle in higher education. According to Pauwe and Williams (2001) Higher education inadvertently suppresses intuitive, creative, lateral, emotional, and other dimensions of nonlinear thinking, suppressing the innovative nature of aspiring entrepreneurs.

How many sides to a circle? It depends on how you see the world. In most people’s minds the cognitive structure of a circle has no sides, but to a person who thinks laterally a circle has an inside and an outside.

1 comment:

  1. The fundamental issue of out of the box thinking is of self confidence. Now this may seem a little odd to some. However when you need "evidence" for your decisionmaking, you are saying "I do not have the confidence in my own judgment to form this decision, therefore I need a crutch" (sorry, that should read 'evidence'). When all you've ever known is people telling you what to do in your life, just how much self confidence does this develop? When your answers are marked out of ten by someone in authority means that you slowly lose the ability to say that you are right. Because someone else is doing it for you.

    As a friend of mine said, "logic is for beginners".

    People who cannot think outside the box will lack discrimination - simply because they have not been told how to discriminate. It's one of those nasty feedback loops where if you can't, you do less of it and so lose the ability. Most of us have done that with our thinking by the age of 10.

    There are ways out, but I warn you it takes time and patience. And no small amount of courage. Because there ain't anything outside that box. Yet, in a classic example of Zen, there's everything.

    ReplyDelete