Creativity Is Thinking New Things

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Creativity is thinking new things, and innovation is doing new things

Creativity is the ability to develop new ideas and to discover new ways of looking at problems
and opportunities.

Innovation is the ability to apply creative solutions to those problems and opportunities in order
to enhance peoples lives or to enrich society

Entrepreneurship = creativity + innovation

Creativity is the ability to develop new ideas and to discover new ways of looking at problems
and opportunities.

Innovation is the ability to apply creative solutions to those problems and opportunities in order
to enhance peoples lives or to enrich society.

Researchers believe that entrepreneurs succeed by thinking and doing new things or old things
in new ways .

Entrepreneurship is the result of a disciplined, systematic process of applying creativity and


innovation to needs and opportunities in the marketplace.

New ideas are much more than just random, disjointed tinkerings with a new gadget.
Entrepreneurs are those who marry their creative ideas with the purposeful action and structure
of a business.

There are four phases which can help to remove idea blocks to and enhance creative thinking.

The four phases with their important activities are as follows:

1: background or knowledge accumulation e.g. reading, professional conferences, talking, visit


to library

2: incubation process e.g. sleep on it, exercise,

3: idea or eureka experience, usually this phase slowly but surely formulates the solution

4: evaluation and implementation e.g. prototypes, advice.

Characteristics of successful entrepreneurs generally include a positive self-image, being


motivated by challenging problems, being sensitive to the world around them, and being good
at gathering different ideas in a short amount of time.

It is not necessary to possess all of these characteristics to be successful.

Developing creativity is a process of changing the way you look at things. To do this you must
look for different or unorthodox relationships between people and things.

Another way to be more creative is to view people and things in terms of how they can be used
to satisfy needs (both as resources and problem solvers).

The following questions are designed to spur the imagination and can help develop creativity:

1. Is there a new way to do it?

2. Can you borrow or adapt it?

3. Can you give it a new twist?

4. Do you merely need more of the same?

5. Do you just need less of the same?

6. Is there a substitute?

7. Can the parts be rearranged?

8. What if we do just the opposite?


9. Can ideas be combined?

10. Can we put it to other uses?

11. What else could we make from this?

12. Are there other markets for it?

Be aware that there are numerous barriers to creativity, including:

1. searching for the one right answer

2. focusing on being logical

3. blindly following the rules

4. constantly being practical

5. viewing play as frivolous

6. becoming overly specialised

7. avoiding ambiguity

8. fearing looking foolish

9. fearing mistakes and failure

10. believing that Im not creative

There are four distinct types of innovation, these are as follows:

Invention - described as the creation of a new product, service or process

Extension - the expansion of a product, service or process

Duplication - defined as replication of an already existing product, service or process

Synthesis - the combination of existing concepts and factors into a new formulation

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