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Creativity

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Title: Creativity


1
Creativity Organizational Culture
  • The Strong Culture Debate
  • October 4, 2005

2
Overview
  • Important Announcement
  • Class on November 22nd cancelled. Group
    presentations begin Nov. 17.
  • Topic of the Week
  • Role of organizational culture in promoting
    creativity is controversial.
  • Today we will explore the argument that a strong
    organizational culture stifles creativity.
  • Thursday we will explore the counter-argument.

3
Organizational Culture
  • Definition A system of shared values that
    define what is important and norms that define
    appropriate attitudes and behaviors.
  • Relationship between organizational culture and
    creativity a source of controversy.
  • Specifically, does having a strong culture stifle
    or facilitate creativity?

4
Strong Cultures
  • Definition Culture in which shared norms are
    strongly held (sanctions exist to punish those
    who do not comply) and widely shared (everyone
    agrees about what is important).
  • Many of the most admired companies are cult-like
    in their devotion to an idea and in their methods
    of indoctrinating employees.
  • In such firms dissent ejected like a virus.
  • Examples Disney, Nordstrom, Wal-Mart
  • Can creativity flourish in strong culture firms?

5
Origins of Debate in Groupthink
  • The mode of thinking that persons engage in when
    concurrence-seeking becomes so dominant in a
    cohesive in-group that it tends to over-ride
    realistic appraisals of alternative courses of
    action.
  • Janis, 1971

6
Historical Examples of Groupthink
  • The Bay of Pigs Invasion
  • 1961 Kennedy and advisors tried to overthrow
    Castro by supporting an invasion of Cuba with
    1400 CIA trained Cuban exiles.
  • Believed that troops could retreat to mountains
    that were actually on the other side of the
    island. Troops actually deployed in a swamp and
    were immediately surrounded.
  • Created alliance between Cuba and USSR which gave
    rise to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
  • Also Pearl Harbor, Challenger disaster

7
Symptoms of Groupthink
  • Illusion of invulnerability
  • Many believed that the Japanese would never risk
    attacking the US. Admiral joked about the idea
    right before it happened.
  • Collective rationalization
  • President Johnsons Tuesday lunch group spent
    more time justifying the Vietnam war than
    reflecting upon and rethinking past decisions.

8
Symptoms of Groupthink
  • Belief in inherent morality
  • Kennedy group knew that some cabinet members had
    moral reservations about invading a smaller
    neighboring country but these reservations were
    never explored.
  • Stereotyped views of out-groups
  • Kennedy group convinced themselves that Castros
    army was so weak and popular support so shallow
    that a single brigade could overturn the
    government.

9
Symptoms of Groupthink
  • Direct pressure on dissenters
  • People who disagree are ridiculed. Once, when
    President Johnsons assistant entered the room,
    the president said, Well here comes Mr. Stop the
    Bombing.
  • Self-censorship
  • Following the Bay of Pigs invasion Arthur
    Schlesinger said, my feelings of guilt were
    tempered by the knowledge that any objection
    would have accomplished nothing but gain me a
    name as a nuisance.

10
Symptoms of Groupthink
  • Illusion of unanimity
  • Absence of dissent creates an illusion of
    unanimity.
  • Self-appointed mindguards
  • People who protect the leader from hearing
    disagreeable facts. Top NASA executive who made
    the decision to launch never heard the engineers
    objections.

11
Critical Role of Dissent for Stimulating
Creativity
  • AROUSAL
  • (1). People are very nervous when faced with a
    majority that sees things differentlylimits
    their attention and divergent thinking ability.
  • CURIOSITY
  • (2). When faced with a consistent minority people
    are
  • motivated to understand their position
    (How can
  • they be so wrong yet so confident?) and in
    doing
  • so, they see an issue from many different
  • perspectives. They cant be right, so I will
    look for alternatives.
  • CONFLICT
  • (3). Minority opinions are not adopted quickly
    and the
  • conflict that ensues will force people to
    think more
  • carefully about an issue.

12
Positive Consequences of Dissent
  • Minorities are not the ones thinking in a
    creative way, instead they are stimulating the
    majority (the rest of the group) to think in a
    more creative way.
  • Minority dissent even when wrong is of value
    because it makes a group more creative.

13
Practical Applications
  • Theory has been applied to at least 2 important
    areas in organizations.
  • GROUP CREATIVITY
  • Groups who think divergently are able to generate
    more novel and original ideas and ultimately come
    up with more creative solutions. A foundation
    for understanding innovation.
  • GROUP DECISION MAKING
  • Decision making groups often rush toward a
    premature agreement without considering all the
    available alternatives. Therefore, minority
    influence can improve the quality of group
    decision making by leading a group to consider
    more alternatives prior to making a decision.

14
Cloning Dissent Devils Advocate
  • Clearly organizations should encourage dissent,
    but there are also disadvantages (e.g. cohesion,
    morale).
  • Can an organization encourage dissent without
    experiencing any drawbacks?
  • (Nemeth, et al, 2001)
  • Devils Advocate Dissent can be role-played by
    asking one person to disagree with a proposal.
  • Proposal originally made by Janis.

15
Devils Advocate Experiment
  • Subjects asked to make a decision about rewarding
    money in a personal injury case.
  • Case Washing machine repairman who was injured
    on the job. His lost wages and medical bills were
    paid, but he was suing his employer for pain and
    suffering.
  • Award (1) 1-75K (2) 75K to 150K up to (8)
    more than 525K.
  • Most people would award either (1) or (2).

16
Procedure
  • One member of the group was asked to
  • Devils Advocate
  • Play the role of devils advocate by taking a
    position contrary to the groups decision. The
    entire group knew the person was instructed to
    take this role.
  • Authentic Dissent
  • One person was asked to take a position of high
    compensation to the victim without the group
    knowing of these instructions.

17
Results
  • Authentic Dissent
  • People generated more original arguments in
    favor of their position that went beyond the
    information given.
  • Devils Advocate
  • People generated more arguments in favor of
    their own position without taking into account
    other perspectives on the issue.
  • Bottom Line The Devils Advocate can actually
    make things worse!

18
Strong Culture Controversy
  • KEY QUESTION Does having a strong
    organizational culture stifle creativity in
    organizations?
  • Those who say YES! draw upon research on
    groupthink and dissent.

19
Groupthink and Strong Culture Compared
20
On Thursday
  • Counterargument by proponents of strong
    organizational culture.
  • Watch documentary on IDEOA firm that both sides
    believe proves their argument.
  • Weigh in on the debate Whose side will you take?
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