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Innovation and the importance of critical thinking...

  
  
  
  
Critical Thinking
Image courtesy of Wileytoons.com

The more I hear from innovators (some successful and others not-so successful) on the importance of being able to make snap decisions based on intuition alone during critical stages of the innovation process, the more I’m convinced that perhaps, just the opposite may be true. Maybe, what really matters in determining success of the innovation effort is not so much intuition skills but rather, having a more systematic approach--something that resembles classic critical thinking skills. What I’m talking about here is a systematic approach to critical thinking made popular in the 1960s and 70s by researchers such as Charles Kepner and Benjamin Tregoe (just to name a few). These classic methods that link problem solving and decision making have been all but discarded by innovators today because of being deemed too cumbersome, laborious and certainly not suited to rapid demands of the innovation world of today.

Yet Kepner and Tregoe would today argue that the pitfalls of relying on intuition for problem analysis and decision making are significantly increased during today's typical fast-paced, high pressure innovative environment. It’s when time is short and the stakes are high, that the innovator desperately needs an efficient method to successfully and consistently solve problems.

According to Kepner and Tregoe,

The manager has to know, specifically, what the problem is, and then proceed to trace down the cause. Not until he (or she) has verified the cause can the decision be made on what is the best action to correct the problem--for “best” implies getting the job done most efficiently. In the sequence from problem to cause to decision, the work of problem analysis closely resembles the search for clues, a kind of “whodunnit.” The good innovator, like a skilled detective, will spot the relevant information and use it, point by point, to narrow down the search for the real culprit (cause).

Doing this efficiently under pressure is not easy. But it can be done fast, and the more systematic and logical the method, the faster and more efficiently it will work. A systematic way of doing something is always more efficient and less time-consuming than a disorderly approach that may require doing the same thing over several times in order to get it right.

Here's the takeaway: Make no mistake, relying on intuition to make the critical decisions necessary for a successful innovation project is a bad strategy. Critical thinking--the most important skillset an innovator needs to possess--is what determines success from failure in today's fast-paced, high pressure innovation environment.

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Comments

Short, sweet, and right to the point. I still value intuition, which in the mind of a capable, innate innovator is merely the expression of probably deep and complex thought processes. However, once you have intuited, it's time to constrain the output of these bursts of creativity in order to convert them to actionable, successful solutions. 
 
It's good to be reminded that there are two sides to the innovation coin. Thank you.
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 6:57 AM by Bob Jacobson
Well put. A well thought out approach which starts with a root cause, is the most sustainable way to innovation. Too many times knee jerk responses lead to short sighted solutions to systemic problems. Typically, these short sighted ideas are shelved after many financial and human resources have been exhausted.  
 
 
 
While I do agree that intuition plays a role it is only one dimension of the innovation process. 
 
 
 
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 7:12 AM by Kerri
Well said. I wish critical thinking were a requirement taught every year from first grade through high school. It's as important as language and history, because critical thinking makes both useful. Intuition, I think, it the ability to process experience and information quickly--in other words, to think critically rapidly--and come to a conclusion. At least it is for me.
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 9:44 AM by QuinnCreative
Critical thinking is the engine that drives the proficiencies expected in all aspects of decision making; CRM; TEM. Without it,one is limited by procedural outcomes which are time consuming and often not specific to the circumstance or situation. CT enables proactive, predictive, and assessment practices which produces better judgements.
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:15 AM by Richard T. Barcheski
We would recommend disciplined innovation, with market research and analysis on the competition for several reasons: 1) research is easy to do, with the internet,2) one gets good ideas through analysis 3)chances of failure are greatly mimized. Intuition can be the final go/no go decision if research is inconclusive. 
 
John Heinrich 
 
President, The Solutions Forum LLC 
 
www.thesolutionsforum.com
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:49 AM by John Heinrich
This is true. Trusting intuition still needs facts to defend even the best defined problems. My $20 Challenge students prove this to themselves when they take time to define a REAL problem so to identify the solution as easy. With skills, this can be done quickly and with practically no resources.
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 6:19 PM by David Sandusky
@Bob,   
   
I think your statement regarding it being "time to constrain the output of these bursts of creativity in order to convert them to actionable, successful solutions" is spot-on.   
   
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment. 
 
Pat 
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:07 PM by Patrick Lefler
@Kerri,   
   
Your comment regarding having a "well thought out approach that starts with a root cause" being the key to having sustainable innovation success is key. Unfortunately, it's a skill set that seems to be missing from a lot of today's innovators. 
 
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment. 
 
Pat 
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:08 PM by Patrick Lefler
@Quinn,   
   
I learned critical thinking not in school (certainly not at Wharton), but during my time as an officer in the Marine Corps. While we didn't think much of it at the time, most of our daily tasks involved using (and sharpening) this valuable skills.   
   
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment.   
   
Pat 
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:08 PM by Patrick Lefler
@Richard,   
   
Great point regarding critical thinking being the engine that drives the proficiencies expected in all aspects of decision making. It does all start with critical thinking.   
   
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment.   
   
Pat 
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:08 PM by Patrick Lefler
@John, 
 
I'd like to hear more about your disciplined approach to innovation. Does it involve more than just critical thinking? Are there other areas where a disciplined approach is necessary? 
 
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment. 
 
Pat
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:11 PM by Patrick Lefler
@David, 
 
Curious about your "$20 Challenge students" and what that involves. 
 
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment. 
 
Pat
Posted @ Monday, April 11, 2011 10:12 PM by Patrick Lefler
Sure Pat, My Creative Problem Solving Students learn early each semester how to find problems as a group they can learn to solve.  
 
Critical thinking skills are learned in fact finding and defining the actual problem. They learn skills such as how to defer judgement and anticipate reactions from, in this specific case, when they pitch me for an interest free $20 loan applied to bootsrapping a solution.  
 
Then the practice taking action and generating a profit to that $20 loan. Many details between with group dynamics and other related real world learning while producing in a college project.
Posted @ Tuesday, April 12, 2011 12:49 PM by David Sandusky
@David, 
 
Thanks for the explanation - it sounds really interesting. I think if there is one area that college students need to master prior to graduating, it's problem solving. I can't tell you how many new graduates (and small ones at that) I run across who do not have the proper critical thinking skills--or for that matter, even know what critical thinking really is. 
 
Thanks again for your comments. 
 
Pat
Posted @ Tuesday, April 12, 2011 9:10 PM by Patrick Lefler
@Bob... 
I liked the article, but Loved Bob's comment. Spot on!  
Studies have proven that we feel before we think. Now, more than ever, intuition and critical thinking for the WHOLE, is needed. 
Listening to our intuition is not enough, we must act for change and there comes the magic. 
Thank you for the article. 
Patty D
Posted @ Friday, April 15, 2011 6:26 PM by Patty D
Great topic for a great blog. My bookshelf is packed for of books on "Thinking." And I go way back with the K-T methods, say 1987 or so. Regarding intuitive decision making, study Malcolm Gladwell's book, Blink "The Power of Thinking Without Thinking." Also Edward De Bono's Serious Creativity, where he introduces Lateral Thinking provocations. I was really impressed with Michael Gelb's Thinking for a Change. And more than one person has recommended that I read Winning Decisions by Russo & Schoemaker, and so I have. I bring these books to light as "intuition" based on experiences, both remembered and forgotten, good and bad, imagined or real, or experienced by me or made known to me by someone else... add to the “insight” database in your brain. This "insight" ultimately is accessed, sorted and integrated near instantaneously (intuition) and plays a valuable role in effective decision making especially when time is of the essence. This is why the military rehearses, rehearses, rehearses situations... so when the stuff hits the fan the act on instincts based on previous insights. This is why athletes visualize as much as they practices as the brain sees little difference between the two, and in critical moments of the contest this instinct kicks in. I agree that Critical thinking is necessary and should be practiced, until it becomes an “instinct” that intuition can tap into – or one misses the benefit of what they just experienced or are about to experience. It is also my belief that critical thinking is not a pure or necessarily improved substitute for experiential reflexive thinking, AKA intuitive decision making. President Obama would be a great case study of a “Critical Thinker” versus “Intuitive Thinker.” Lacking experience his “intuitive side” continues to fail him, when given time and experienced advisors (minus a political agenda) he does “exceptional.” More on this later if you like.
Posted @ Tuesday, April 26, 2011 8:03 AM by Rich MacInnes "Mac" '80
Well put, Rich MacInnes.  
 
In our research at SRI using the VALS system, we commonly found Innovators (a class characterized as people who envision and then get things done, about 7% of the population) to be capable of both intuitive and critical thinking. If you think about it critically, and not with an bias against intuitive solutions, intuition is the sum of prior experiences plus the flash of invention. An innate innovator's intuition is most often abbreviated critical thinking applied in the moment. An analogy might be a capable designer who grasps an effective solution to a problem more quickly than a non-designer unskilled in design's ability to apply constraints and solve problems. Intuition and critical thinking bob up and down on the tides of current trends, but ultimately innovation that succeeds and makes a difference -- in a product, a service, a POV, a paradigm shift, whatever -- is the result of sagely combining intuition and critical thinking. Neither alone provides satisfactory outcomes, but together they are an unbeatable pair.
Posted @ Tuesday, June 28, 2011 3:21 PM by Robert Jacobson
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