CREATIVITY 2.E: THE EVOLUTION OF CREATIVITY IS UNDERWAY. WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?
Are you a Planner who thinks about design? Maybe you are a designer who obsesses about the business impact of your designs. Or you might be an Information Architect who thinks about motion, transitions, multimedia, and uses tools like storyboarding and visual scenarios. Or how about a Developer who comes up with the "big idea"?

Anatomy of the new creative mind. Click here for a larger image.
If you haven't noticed, creativity is evolving.
The
perception of creativity itself is slowly but surely transitioning into
a mutated and adapted life form. In the traditional world, a "creative"
person usually meant someone with savant-like talents excelling in a
specific creative discipline defined by fairly concrete parameters.
Copywriters wrote copy. Art Directors directed art. There are still
talented visual designers who can make anything look good. Brilliant
copywriters who can come up with that magnificent tagline which stops
you in your tracks. And don't forget about smart, methodical
Information Architects who devote their existence to usability and
being an advocate for the end user.
These skills,
talents and abilities are needed no doubt about it. But what's also
needed is the evolution of them the next iteration. But what does this
look like? An Information Architect who completely grasps Human
Computer Interaction but can also think fluidly can do things like
rapidly create prototypes, facilitate user testing, understand visual
design and occasionaly write copy. This kind of individual possesses a
multi-dimensional creative brain that has evolved over time.
This
type of mind is capable of creating customer experiences which provide
competitive advantage in a fast moving world where customers are
increasingly calling the shots.
In this world
marketing/advertising/technology/and customer experience all blur
together. So what does this mind look like?
With
consumer behavior evolving toward a more empowered status the
definition of creativity has shifted from one-dimensional skills to a
four-dimensional type of creativity that blends logical thinking with
creative problem solving. Individuals possessing this "New Creative
Mindset" blend Analytical, Expressive, Curious and Sensual qualities
into their thinking process. The result is a holistic approach to
creativity that is effective across multiple touch points and
experiences.
Can an Information Architect embody this
kind of mindset? What about an Account Director? I think as human
beings we are all capable of thinking like this. But as designers,
communicators, marketers and creators of experiences for us, it's even
more critical to become multi-dimensional creative thinkers and problem
solvers. I'm not the only one talking about this. Tim Brown from IDEO
evangelizes "Design Thinking" and "T-shaped People". Both principals
are related. Design Thinking encourages Designers to think past
aesthetics and design simple solutions for complex problems. T-shaped
people have a core competency but branch out into other areas and can
do them well (thus forming a T). And of course there is the new kind of
collaboration that comes with this where we combine people with diverse
skill sets who often times speak very different languages but need to
come together to make their collective and diverse skills work
together. This kind of collaboration sounds easier than it actually is,
because when you get a few T-shaped people together, they tend to "play
in each other's sandbox". Translation? Ego's need to be unlearned. In
short, it's not just about T-shaped people.
It's about
how we work together to create something that people will want to use,
experience and ultimately compel them to take action.
You could call this kind of collaboration T-Shaped Creativity.
I
don't think that any of this is very new. It's been happening for a
while. In my time spent at agency.com, we developed pageless
prototypes, pushed technology like Flash + Ajax and created
human-centered "web applications". But with the rapid and pervasive
nature of Web 2.0 going mainstream it's becoming mandatory to be able
to think and execute like this. Need proof? Take a look at this collection of thoughts + work
from a recent grad of the IIT Institute of Design. Notice anything
about how he approaches his work? He's a "designer", but aesthetics are
only one small part of how he exercises his creativity. In fact, this
brand of creativity is more like creative problem solving vs. the way
many people still traditionally view creativity. And what about the
teams? Aside from this evolved creative individual, what kind of team
is needed to drive the next generation of communication, interaction
and marketing engines? There's not a clear answer to this question, but
signs are heading toward smaller interdisciplinary teams composed of
individuals possessing complimentary skill sets and overlapping
talents.
So where does this all go from here? If you
feel like you fit the bill, you're probably thinking about how
marketable you are right now. And remember, we're not talking about a
"jack of all trades" here. "Creativity 2.E" is not about doing
everything and learning every application under the sun. It's about
being curious, empathetic, analytical, insightful and expressive all at
the same time. It's about being willing to do anything to get into the
heads of your customer/user. It's about adopting new tools, techniques
and artifacts to help make your case for creating the right kinds of
communications, interactions and experiences. So what to do if you're
feeling left out?
Resist the urge to become defensive
and territorial put that energy into developing an acute sense of
curiosity and optimism. Become like a child.
Participate
in the emerging media. Start a blog, update your site or if you don't
have one set it up. Dive into the digital social communities and be
willing to do what your customers do. Try methodology that you might
not ordinarily consider. PowerPoint isn't just for presentations. Flash
isn't just for motion. Move past boxes, arrows, colors, layouts,
charts, funnels, and metrics.
Creativity 2.E is both old
and new and like evolution, will continue to change and modify over
time. The question is will we?
About David Armano
David Armano is a Creative VP at Digitas. This feature originally appeared on his personal blog. It is reprinted with permission.


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