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3 Creative Brainstorming Activities,
Games and Exercises For Effective Group
Problem Solving
Just because you call thirty minutes in a room-full of people and a flip chart a
brainstorming activity, doesn’t make it successful. For problem solving
brainstorming to be effective, a little bit of coaxing will make all the difference.
Here are three brainstorming activities, games and exercises to transform your
problem solving sessions.
Brainstorming Activity 1 – Night and Day
Busy people need routines and shortcuts to make it through the day. If we had to
consciously think about the steps involved in making a cup of tea, we’d have
exhausting our thinking energy before we’d even left the house in the morning.
Routine thinking may save time and energy, but seriously hampers creative
brainstorming, so use this exercise to challenge traditional thoughts and
encourage creativity.
Make a list of common words e.g. night, smart, heavy, quick, apple. Get your
team to list the first opposite meaning word that springs to mind e.g. day, stupid,
light, slow, pear. This will flush out the obvious, routine words. Challenge your
team to come up with at least 3 further opposite words for each word e.g.
Night = day,sun,white,awake, …..
Smart = stupid, scruffy, shabby, in-elegant, clumsy, gawky
You’ll find some similar meaning words creep into your list – that’s fine as these
can spark further opposite meaning words. Remember ideas breed ideas and to
keep critical, analytical thinking in check. Limit the time spent on this activity to
10-15 minutes, to keep it fresh and focused.
Now it’s time to introduce the “real” brainstorming activity. Write your problem
statement clearly and simply, and let those creative minds go to work on
generating new and non-routine ideas to solve the problem.
Brainstorming Game 2 – What Can You See?
Sometimes you’re so close to a problem you can’t see how it will ever be solved.
This situation is so common, it even has it’s own cliché – “you can’t see the wood
for the trees”. Here’s a brainstorming game to help you see things differently,
and aid the problem solving process.
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Show these shapes to your team, and ask them to individually write down what
they can see. You may find descriptions such as; three coloured shapes, or a
green circle with a diagonal line, a red hexagon and a yellow thought bubble etc.
Some may have made a small creative leap and seen the top left figure as a
green “forbidden” road sign. Others may have taken bigger creative leaps and
see a winking, bearded face or an imminent solar eclipse on a cloudy day. It
doesn’t matter if you can or can’t see these more outlandish images – there’s no
right or wrong answer.
Looking at things in a fresh, new way can trigger a whole train-load of thoughts,
and that’s the essence of effective brainstorming.
Get the team to look at the shapes again and see how they describe them
differently, second time round.
Now, focus on your problem, and encourage your team to look at it with fresh
eyes or “in a different light”. How would they describe the problem to a non-
English speaker, a child or a Martian?
Use this process to encourage objectivity and distance from a problem, and start
a more creative problem solving process.
Brainstorming Exercise 3 – Who’s Line Is It Anyway?
“Normal” behaviour is encouraged at work, as this is the easiest, most efficient
way to get things done. As a result, our creative self often is hidden away, getting
flabby from under-use. Then along comes a manager demanding we do some
brainstorming to come up with an innovative solution. Ouch! Like un-used
muscles, creativity improves with exercise, so here’s a brainstorming exercise to
warm-up those under-used creative muscles.
Just like the TV show, the principle of this brainstorming exercise is simple –
improvisation. Collect 5 random props from home, the office or from the problem
solving team e.g. belt, toy dog, post-it notes, lunch box and paper clip. Leave
these props in the middle of the room and encourage people to come up with
different uses for the props e.g. the belt could become a Japanese warrior’s head-
band or the toy dog is hidden from the group and is “dog-gone”. You get the drift!
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Give this exercise a time limit of 10-15 minutes and encourage all team members
to take part. Even the shyest will have some creative use for the props!
If you’re aiming to develop a new solution, take your existing product or process
and see how you could use it or look at it in a different way. The whackier the
better at this stage – remember you’re aiming for quantity not quality – and take
note of the ideas generated. It’s only later that we put our critical hats back on,
and rate the ideas and assess their suitability
And that’s only the beginning! These three creative brainstorming activities,
games and exercises will get even the most traditional, set thinkers to approach
problems differently and come up with creative, innovative solutions or
approaches.
By Lyndsay Swinton
Owner, Management for the Rest of Us
Use this 7 Brainstorming Rules & Techniques To Get More From Group
Problem Solving article on your website!
This article may be reprinted on your own website providing the following text
and hyperlink is included on the same page as the article:
By Lyndsay Swinton, 'Management for the rest of us' (link to www.mftrou.com)
Become an experienced manager, overnight!
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