Archive for the 'Business' Category

“Thinking Outside the Box”, Creativity, Innovation and ADHD et al.

UPDATE I’d given up trying to find this article, which is a great piece about what I’m talking/thinking about by Susan Smalley at The Huffington Post. Check it out: Living And Loving ADHD. This paragraph distills in a less schizophrenic way, what I was trying to say…

Although ADHD is still classified a disorder because of the challenges individual’s face with it, I’m more convinced everyday that it is a way of thinking and processing the world that is so beneficial to humanity, we must turn our attention to it. In many ways, our attention has been focused only on the disorder side of the condition, at the expense of the strengths, and science is just beginning to discover what those strengths might be. There is a popular book out right now, The Black Swan, about how all major changes come from ‘outliers’ in the world of ideas, the strange and misunderstood ideas that don’t fit into conceptual frameworks of the day but prove to shift humanity to new heights.

Innovative Minds Don’t Think Alike - New York Times:

“Look for people with renaissance-thinker tendencies”

Booyah. That article is crappy, but I kept the link since it’s what initially inspired this entry. A better article that talks much more specifically about this connection can be found here. Some quotes (I love the opening:

Robert daydreamed so much that he was put out of school. Frank went into such trancelike dreams that one had to shout at him to bring him back. Equally problematic were Sam’s restlessness and verbal diatribes. Virginia, too, demonstrated a tendency to talk on and on. Thomas experienced school problems, in part because of his high energy. Nick’s tendency to act without thinking caused him to have several scrapes with death and near-tragedies, such as plunging to the earth from the roof of a barn, clutching an umbrella. In these examples we can see how the concentration, high energy, and unique ways of thinking and behaving that were exemplified by Robert Frost, Frank Lloyd Wright, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Virginia Woolf, Thomas Edison, and Nikola Tesla resulted in school problems, dark diagnoses, or worse. These are examples of creative individuals whose behavior could also be interpreted as the inattention, impulsivity, and hyperactivity of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.

Schools and families can best prevent misinterpretation of a child’s behaviors by becoming aware of those indicative of high creativity and attempting to sort out the disabling from enabling ones.

The article then goes on to “look at the particular problems that can beset creative children in today’s schools when their behaviors are mistaken for one of the most frequently diagnosed psychoeducational conditions, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).” Which is not really what I’m getting at. I’m more interested in those individuals who exhibit BOTH the creativity AND the AD/HD, not the misdiagnoses.

Increasingly, I have come acrosstalk of its connection to creativity and unique thinking (on a related note: the idea of differing types of intelligence, vs. the uniform standard promoted today.) The connection between atypical brains, historically, with creativity is also quite strong, as mentioned in the paragraph above. For a fascinating exploration of this issue, read The Midnight Disease: The Drive to Write, Writer’s Block, and the Creative Brain“ by Alice Weaver Flaherty.

People lament the drugging of America’s youth and the stifling of all those bubbling young minds…, that’s another post for another time, but I mention it only to raise this question:
How does medication relate to the positive characteristics of AD/HD-type personalities? (and more generally, the creative effects of other mental illnesses, such as manic depression and bi-polar disorder)

I’d argue from my personal experience that medication can actually promote creativity, since it allows ‘independent thinkers’ to channel their otherwise anarchic mass of ideas into something that can actually be communicated to normal people, and used to impact the world. What good are all those innovative ideas if the person developing them a.) Can’t develop any of them past a few fragments that have meaning only for the innovator, b.) Can’t articulate the ideas so as to communicate them to others, and c.) Can’t stay on the task of coming up with ideas long enough to come up with some ideas!!

So I guess my conclusion from all this is that drugs have their place, though they obviously should not be taken unquestioningly, or without constant reevaluation (only as a last resort). Beyond that, there is a clear place, perhaps even a more valued place for people with this type of thinking, especially in areas that value such spontaneous, outside the box thinking. BUT, such people require innovative management (not in the bureaucratic sense, but in the ”micro“ sense. Like having a boss who understands such a person’s strengths and weaknesses, and how best to let these people exercise their comparative advantage.

p.s. I considered waiting to post this until I edited it into a nicely organized, flowing piece of writing… But I think it’ll be more fun just to post it as-is, in all its attention-deficit glory. TO BE CONTINUED…

also see this post that I wrote wayyy back in 2005

The fake restaurant selling fake DVDs. By Henry Blodget

The fake restaurant selling fake DVDs. By Henry Blodget

This, of course, reveals one of the two fallacies in the media industry’s assertion that file-sharing and DVD piracy are the same as “stealing”: Some of the supposed damages from “lost sales” would never have been sales in the first place. The other fallacy is that the “theft” of digital property is the same as the theft of physical property—which it isn’t. When someone steals a physical product—a car, say, or a DVD from the shelves of Blockbuster—the owner has lost more than a potential sale; he or she has lost inventory. When someone buys a copy of a digital product, however, for which the owner of the copyright has paid nothing, the owner has lost only a potential sale. This doesn’t make file-sharing or DVD piracy OK—there must be some way for producers and packagers to get paid—but it does explain, in part, why millions of people who would never shoplift are so eager to collect pirated DVDs.

Right on.

Reddit ‘white labels’ its software to Slate

Yay! This is awesome!

Reddit ‘white labels’ its software to Slate
Community news site Reddit is integrating its software into Slate.com, the venerable Webzine currently owned by Washington Post. The goal is to give Slate readers “a new way to find and discuss its best content.” Slate.reddit recently went live, “as the first step in bringing the reddit format to Slate readers (integration with the Slate website is on the way).”

Slate.reddit is populated automatically via Slate.com’s RSS feeds - so there are no manual submissions, as on the original reddit.com. All that Slate readers need to do is vote and comment.

[Update: Well, not so awesome. Just kind-of neat… Not all that useful though. Especially since the Slate homepage is so well designed, and packs more info in, and in a logical, easy-to-navigate fashion]

business2blog: B2Day : Questioning the Long Tail

More on the Long Tail…

business2blog: B2Day : Questioning the Long Tail

In other words, by eliminating the costs of inventory and allowing unlimited choice over the Internet, how niche can a product get and still be economic to produce and sell? The answer is you can now go a lot further down that curve.And because there is now economic life further down the curve, niche products can turn into nichebusters and travel up the curve more easily than in the past.




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