Outside The Box
Outside The Box
Thinking "outside the box" or as it is sometimes called,
"coloring outside the lines" is a popular idea in the business
world today. People and organizations are told to think outside
the box or color outside the lines as a way to stimulate
creativity when they need to solve problems like streamlining
production, establishing a new product, or developing a new
process. And it's true that creativity and innovation often
arise from unexpected and unconventional thinking.
But there is a serious problem with trying to apply such
thinking too broadly.
For instance, creativity is valued in art and advertising, but
not in banking and accounting. An accounting firm recently ran
an ad suggesting that it could think "outside the box." Do you
really want your business to be associated with creative
accounting? Aren't accountants supposed to put the numbers in
the right box? Wasn't creative accounting a serious problem for
Enron?
In reality, clear thinking and the creativity that it produces
are rarely a matter of thinking outside the box. And coloring
outside the lines is for the most part just sloppy workmanship.
The art of clear thinking is a matter of putting thoughts in to
the right boxes or categories. Clear thinking is a matter of
mental organization. Conversely, sloppy thinking involves the
confusion of categories, of putting ideas into the wrong boxes
or not putting them in order at all. Is a child who will not
straighten his or her room creative or just sloppy? There is a
significant difference. While creativity sometimes looks sloppy
to an outside observer, it does not issue from sloppiness.
Picasso was a creative artist.
But his creativity was not a matter of the art he produced. In
reality his abstract work is technically sloppy. It looks like
the work of a child. Picasso could sell his abstract art only
because he had previously established himself as an artist who
could color inside the lines very well. Had he not first proven
his artistic talent in the traditional way, his abstract art
would have been worth much less. He used his reputation as a
traditional artist to establish a new direction in art. He
didn't so much color outside the box, as he expanded the
boundaries and definition of the box. But the point is that his
abstract creations were valuable only because of his proven
abilities in the traditional arts.
Contrast my own efforts to establish myself as an abstract
artist. My art has gone unnoticed because I have not been able
to prove myself as a traditional artist. Not that I actually
tried to do so, but I am using myself as an example to make the
point. The creativity of a novel idea requires the discipline of
order and structure to be valuable. Picasso's art is valuable
because he was an accomplished painter who intentionally colored
outside the lines. My art is not valuable because I am not an
accomplished painter and I accidentally color outside the lines.
While the two products may look similar, the difference is
critical.
Creativity is more than breaking the rules.
Similarly, Joseph Heller was able to break the rules of English
grammar in his book, Something Happened (Scribner, 1974), only
because he was intimately familiar with them. Having taught
English at the University of South Carolina, he was a master of
grammar. And only out of his expertise could he creatively
exploit, expand and redefine the boundaries of grammar. And so
it is with regard to thinking outside the box.
Thinking outside the box apart from being able to think inside
the box is worthless.
Such thought is just plain sloppy. Thus, the suggestion that
creativity lies in the ability to think outside the box is
mostly nonsense. Creativity issues from talent, ability and
discipline. Talent must be forged and shaped on the anvil of
discipline in order to develop ability. Great ability is always
the result of study, discipline and practice.
Creativity is more a matter of seeing that the boxes themselves
are inadequate and suggesting a better arrangement or a better
definition. Creativity doesn't simply discard the boxes, it
redefines and/or rearranges them after becoming intimately
familiar with them. Real creativity is always the fruit of
discipline and order. Creativity, in order to be genuinely
creative and not simply sloppy disorganization, must emerge out
of discipline and order as an intentional effort.
While a creative idea often comes unbidden out of unexpected
places, it requires discipline, study and order to make
something of it. Apart from discipline and order, what passes
for creativity is nonsense, and to suggest otherwise actually
undermines and/or weakens the creative process.
What does this mean for our industry? Distributors and suppliers
should apply themselves to mastering the basics before
attempting to break the rules in the name of creativity. Don't
start outside the box. First, establish your ability to think
within the box. Master the rules before you suggest breaking
them. For example, before a distributorship presents a wild,
innovative concept to a client for a campaign, it should first
establish its expertise with campaigns and/or ideas that have a
track record of yielding good ROI. Designers, artists, and copy
writers should establish their mastery of basics before
experimenting outside the box. For the most part the important
stuff is inside the box.