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Inside the Box
Drew Boyd
Jacob Goldenberg
其他書名
A Proven System of Creativity for Breakthrough Results
出版
Simon and Schuster
, 2014-06-10
主題
Business & Economics / Entrepreneurship
Business & Economics / Management
Business & Economics / Management Science
Business & Economics / Skills
Business & Economics / Personal Success
Education / Decision-Making & Problem Solving
ISBN
1451659296
9781451659290
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=5IS4AwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
“The ‘inside-the-box approach’ can reveal key opportunities for innovation that are hiding in plain sight” (Daniel H. Pink, author of
Drive
).
The traditional attitude toward creativity in the American business world is to “think outside the box”—to brainstorm without restraint in hopes of coming up with a breakthrough idea, often in moments of crisis. Sometimes it works, but it’s a problem-specific solution that does nothing to engender creative thinking more generally.
Inside the Box
demonstrates Systematic Inventive Thinking (SIT), which systemizes creativity as part of the corporate culture. This counterintuitive and powerfully effective approach to creativity requires thinking
inside
the box, working in one’s familiar world to create new ideas independent of specific problems. SIT’s techniques and principles have instilled creative thinking into such companies as Procter & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, and other industry leaders.
Inside the Box
shows how corporations have successfully used SIT in business settings as diverse as medicine, technology, new product development, and food packaging.
Dozens of books discuss how to make creative thinking part of a corporate culture, but none takes the innovative and unconventional approach of
Inside the Box.
With “inside the box” thinking, companies of any size can become sufficiently creative to solve problems even before they develop and to innovate on an ongoing basis. It’s a system that works!
“Boyd and Goldenberg explain the basic building blocks for creativity and by doing so help all of us better express our potential” (Dan Ariely, author of
Predictably Irrational
).