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Is Brainstorming a Waste of Time?

Photo by jurvetson

Richard Huntington, Director of Strategy for Saatchi & Saatchi in the UK, has a pathological hatred of brainstorming:

I hate brainstorms.

I hate running them, I hate contributing to them and I hate using them to solve problems.

They waste huge amounts of time and talent and they are no fucking good at delivering decent ideas.

And so six months ago I cleansed my professional life of this trojan horse of mediocrity, favouring aggregated individual working or two person thinking sessions.

I suggest it’s time you gave them the boot too.

Death to the brainstorm. Long live great ideas.

He’s not alone. In spite of the fact that brainstorming is virtually synonymous with creativity in some quarters, there are plenty of people who would love to erase brainstorms from their working life.

In some cases these are people who wouldn’t describe themselves as ‘creative’, who find it embarrassing and slightly intimidating to be asked to come up with wacky ideas in front of their colleagues. But the critics also include some very talented and successful creative professionals, like Huntington or Gordon Torr, formerly Creative Director of J. Walter Thompson, Europe, Middle East and Africa:

by far the most egregious example of creative mismanagement is the brainstorm …[Brainstorming] didn’t work, it never had worked, it never will work, and there was proof that it couldn’t work way back in 1965. If, during all this time, any ideas found their way out of brainstorming sessions and were implemented successfully to the great delight of all, it was in spite of the technique, not because of it.

(Gordon Torr, Managing Creative People)

I’ve heard similar complaints from quite a few creative directors and professional creatives – instead of seeing brainstorming as essential to the company’s creative process, they see it as a chore, something to get out of the way as quickly as possible so that they can get on with the real business of creativity. Particularly in companies where everyone is expected to contribute to the brainstorm – not just the ‘creative team’ – some creative directors have said they see it as a matter of political expediency rather than a source of inspiration: by involving other departments, everyone gets to ‘have their say’, but the really valuable ideas don’t emerge until afterwards, when the creatives start work in earnest.

And as Gordon Torr points out, there’s a lot of ‘proof’ from research to back up the criticisms.

What Exactly Is Brainstorming?

‘Brainstorming’ is such a common word that it’s often used to describe any meeting or conversation designed to generate ideas. But what the critics are really complaining about are formal brainstorming sessions, governed by a set of rules that originated with advertising manager Alex Faickney Osborn, in his 1963 book Applied Imagination. The basic assumption is that by suspending judgement, people free themselves to come up with unusual and potentially useful ideas. The four most important rules are:

  1. Generate as many ideas as possible – the more ideas you come up with, the better chance you have of coming up with good ones.
  2. Don’t criticise – it will dampen peoples enthusiasm and kill their creativity.
  3. Welcome unusual ideas – it’s important to break out of your usual mindset and consider wild and wacky ideas if you want to be really creative.
  4. Combine and improve ideas – instead of criticising ideas, look for way to use them in combination and/or make them better.

A leader is appointed to facilitate the session, encouraging people and making sure they stick to the rules. The leader is also responsible for collecting the ideas, usually by writing them on a whiteboard, flipchart or post it notes. Once ideas have been generated, they are evaluated at a later stage, to see which are worth implementing.

The Case against Brainstorming

There has been a lot of research into brainstorming, most of which confirms the criticisms levelled at the technique:

Not enough good ideas

Studies have compared the quality and quantity of ideas generated in group brainstorming sessions with those generated by individuals working in isolation. The researchers found that groups produce fewer good/relevant ideas than those produced by individuals. According to the researchers, it’s more effective to ask team members to generate ideas individually or in pairs before a group meeting at which ideas are shared and compared.

Lack of critical filters

Brainstorming is said to work because critical thinking is banned, allowing for a freer flow of original ideas. But again, the research raises doubts about this. One study compared classic brainstorming sessions with sessions in which brainstormers were told what criteria would be used to evaluate their ideas and encouraged to use this information to guide their idea generation. The ‘criteria cued’ groups produce fewer ideas, but a larger number of high-quality ideas. The danger with brainstorming is that quantity does not equal quality.

A common source of frustration for professionals is having to sit through brainstorming sessions in which other people generate a stream of ideas that ‘simply won’t work’. Sometimes the subject experts have tried the ideas before, sometimes they just have technical knowledge that allows them to see why the ideas will never work. But because of the rules of brainstorming, they aren’t allowed to say so, as they will be labelled ‘idea killers’.

Inhibition

One theory for the poor performance of brainstorming groups is that people feel inhibited by the presence of others, particularly their boss or other senior workers.

Freeloading

In a group situation, lazy individuals can get away with contributing little to the discussion, allowing noisier colleagues to do all the work. If asked to produce ideas in isolation, everyone has to contribute their share.

Taking turns

In sessions where people have to take turns to speak, this can slow down the idea generation process. If you think of an idea while someone else is speaking, you have to wait your turn to share it with the group. By the time your turn comes round, you may have forgotten it or lost interest. Even if you manage to remember it, the chances are the effort of remembering will have stopped you thinking of other ideas in the meanwhile.

Groupthink

In spite of being encouraged to come up with wild or wacky ideas, there’s a tendency for groups to converge on similar kinds of idea. Once this starts to happen, it can be hard for an individual to propose a radically different idea, and risk going against the flow. If not properly managed, a brainstorming session can lead to ‘creativity by committee’, in which good ideas are diluted by consensus and compromise.

In Defence of Brainstorming

So the case against brainstorming is pretty damning. Or is it?

Stanford Engineering School Professor Robert Sutton is critical of the critics:

Here’s the problem: Most academic studies of brainstorming are rigorous, but irrelevant to the challenge of managing creative work. They argue that people brainstorming alone speak more ideas (per person) into a microphone during a 10-minute period than those in a group brainstorm. A “productivity loss” of group brainstorming happens because people take turns talking and therefore can’t spew out ideas as fast.

But comparing whether creativity happens best in groups or alone is pretty silly when you look at how creative work is actually done. At creative companies, people switch between both modes so seamlessly that it is hard to notice where individual work ends and group work starts. At group brainstorms, individuals often “tune out” for a few minutes to sketch a product or organizational structure inspired by the conversation, and then jump back in to show others their idea…

Many academic experiments into brainstorming are fake. They usually involve people who have no prior experience or training in group brainstorming. They often are led by undergraduates in psychology classes who are briefly presented a list of “rules” and then instructed to spend 10 or 15 minutes generating novel ideas about topics that they know – and most likely care – nothing about. A common question in these experiments is: “What would happen if everyone had an extra thumb?” This might be fun but isn’t a problem that they will ever face.

For Sutton, the problem isn’t with the technique but the way it’s applied: ‘when brainstorming sessions are managed right and skillfully linked to other work practices, they can promote remarkable innovation.’

Tom Kelly agrees with Sutton. And as Kelly is General Manager of IDEO, the world-famous design consultancy whose work for clients such as Apple, Kodak, Pepsi and Gap has racked up over 1,000 patents and more design awards than any other company, he should know what he’s talking about:

the problem with brainstorming is that everyone thinks they already do it. … many business people treat brainstorming as a checkbox, a threshold variable, like “Can you ride a bicycle?” or “Do you know how to tie your shoes?” They overlook the possibility that brainstorming can be a skill, an art, more like playing the piano than tying your shoes. You’re always learning and can get continuously better. You can become a brainstorming virtuoso …

Brainstorming is practically a religion at IDEO, one we practice nearly every day. Though brainstorms themselves are often playful, brainstorming as a tool – as a skill – is taken quite seriously. And in a company without many rules, we have a very firm idea about what constitutes a brainstorm and how it should be organised.

(Tom Kelly, The Art of Innovation)

What’s going on here? How come the academics can’t agree on the evidence for and against brainstorming as a tool for creativity? And how come there are outstanding creative practitioners arguing passionately on both sides of the debate?

EDIT: Bob Sutton has written a great post on his blog in response to this one. I particularly like this bit:

brainstorming only makes a difference if it is part of a larger creative process, as you see at IDEO, Pixar, and other places that do real creative work.

Over to You

Do you think brainstorming is a waste of time?

Or do you think it just needs to be done properly to be effective?

Come on, let’s get as many responses as we can – just type the first thing that comes into your mind! 🙂

About the Author: Mark McGuinness is a poet and creative coach.

Mark McGuinness: <em><strong>Mark McGuinness</strong> is a an award-winning <a href="http://www.markmcguinness.com">poet</a>, a <a href="https://lateralaction.com/coaching">coach for creatives</a>, and the host of <a href="https://lateralaction.com/21stcenturycreative">The 21st Century Creative Podcast</a>.</em>

View Comments (64)

  • Just as with any other technique it depends on the people involved and how it's applied. I haven't found brainstorming to be very productive myself, but I can understand it working well for other people

    • I have found Brainstorming to be a waste of time and recommend publications of Horowitz or Goldenberg about the ASIT method as a much better approach.

  • (just typing first thoughts here!)

    Maybe it depends on the type of problem if brainstorming is successful or not?

    Maybe it depends on the people who are in the room?

    Maybe depending on your Myers-Briggs profile you'll either love brainstorming or hate it...??

  • FIrst I think the techniques used depend on whether you are trying to create little c or Big C creativity ideas. What follows is for little c and maybe some middle sized C solutions.

    .I have successfully applied brainstorming many times to solve problems or improve our systems. But we do it differently. We make everyone aware of the problem and discuss briefly the critical factors to success (so in essence - get to know your problem using critical thinking). We then ask them to go off and think of ways they would solve the problem. aka individual brainstorming. When we regroup we discuss everyone's ideas and add to them or tune them if needed. Then we usually go off and test one or two possibilities (aka validation).

    We don't ask everyone to have a solution. A trainer usually won't know how to solve a software performance problem. But a trainer will be able to hear and figure out of a solution will impact users (critical success factor).

    Since most of these are for little c and middle sized C solutions we don't need wild and crazy ideas mostly. But at times we have applied what seemed like crazy ideas successfully (like maybe we just cancel the project, are they really using this system anyway?)

    Important in the process is to put time and distance between the getting to know your problem phase and the bring ideas back to the group. This incubation phases is usually more critical then the brainstorming that people do in advance of incubation and after. This is where the real work is done in the Right Brain.

    Thanks for the post. Its important to discuss what works for people and what does not work.

    Eric

  • Companies that thrive on ideas genuinely need braintorms. However, companies that only rely on this technique will miss great ideas and - worse - ones that run brainstorms badly will suffer from creative inertia.

    I can understand the ad agency perspective - indeed, I work with agencies and have friends who work in creative teams there. In adland, small, creative teams of two people tend to generate the ideas underpinning award-winning work. For instance, an art director and a copywriter. However, in companies that require a larger chunk of the workforce involved in ideas and innovation, processes like brainstorms are mission-critical. However, a creative wizard is essential to help make trhese processes work.

    Virtuoso orchestration is absolutely vital. Where would an Oscar-winning movie be without an ace director or producer at the helm? Brainstorms needs someone with wisdom to extract ideas, energy to make the sparks fly, and verve to channel others' energies are crucial skills. So many companies get it wrong. Some simply feel they HAVE to run brainstorms after a meeting in order to justify having so many people in the same place at a particular time.

    In the PR industry, where I work, everyone who works with clients has to think laterally to generate ideas, angles, innovations on a daily basis. However, most of their time is dominated by vertical thinking. As such, a brainstorm is an important tool to help people shift mental gears. Done right, the session overpowers left brain thinking, meaning people can access their imaginative side more. The technique helps to institutionalise creativity.

    There are other ways - inspired thinking by individuals, parroting, and assembling Beatles-style groups of people who, as a team, can produce outstanding ideas without a formal, generative situation. Ok, in the hyper creative music world, the jamming sessions that produce the best material depend on getting the right group + chemistry + desire + a bunch of other elements, and one wrong band member can derail the session - just ask Slash from Guns n Roses. And yes, some companies have their own Picassos, individuals who thrive on their own creative bent, churning out work for the sheer love of it.

    In the end though, the most innovative companies are the ones that know how to tap into the range of creative processes - and people - optimise them. Rubbising brainstorm says more about your inability to make them work, rather than generate great ideas.

    • Scot

      You're completely excused for any grammar and spelling errors. Coming up with the term "appalling mauling" more than makes up for any such errors!

      :-)

  • My experience leading brainstorming sessions is that many good ideas can indeed be generated. This of course can be very important to the organization, but I found that very possibly the largest benefit of well led brainstorming sessions was buy in from various stake holders in the company. When everyone feels involved and valuable then everyone performs better. Also, various talents and skill sets approach problems in different ways, seeing this and experiencing this in action can lead to greater inter-department understanding and communication.

    Wayne

  • "Don't criticize"

    Such a small, but vital aspect of successful brainstorming, and one I've seen overlooked far too often.

  • I always have problems when I'm asked to brainstorm because I have a fairly passive personality. When someone else is speaking, I wait for them to finish before I start talking. However, in a brainstorming situation, everyone talks into one another and I never end up expressing the ideas I've come up with before I forget them! I do a lot better individually, and the group I work with tends to use many suggestions that I've come up with on my own time.

  • are you asking us to "brainstorm"?

    My best ideas always come after the event, usually "triggered" by something someone said at the event...

    I don't normally contribute much in a "brainstorming session" and feel pressure...later in a more relaxed state of mind is when I get creative.

  • Although brainstorming is supposed to be free-flowing thought, there still has to be some structure.

    Set time limits, control the scope of the discussion, and have someone in charge leading the discussion.

    Sounds to me that the failed brainstorming mentioned about was out of control.

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