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Innovate or Die: Why Creativity Is Economic Priority Number One

So you’ve met Lou, Jack and Marla, and you can see they’ve experienced a relative change of fortunes in recent years.

Once upon a time Lou, with his MBA and finely-tuned productivity system, was the darling of the corporate world. Meanwhile creative types like Jack and Marla were not taken seriously, at least in the workplace. Now Lou’s one step from the scrapheap and people are falling over themselves to work with Jack and Marla.

Something is happening here, but Lou doesn’t know what it is.

Why is it that creativity and individuality, which used to be anathema to the corporate world, are now in great demand? Did all those hard-nosed business people suddenly decide there was more to life than capitalism and give up chasing dollars so they could express their artistic soul?

Not exactly.

The exciting new land of creative opportunity is actually the tip of a very large economic iceberg. To understand these opportunities, we need to look beneath the surface.

Abundance, Asia, Automation – and America

In his book A Whole New Mind Daniel Pink argues that we’re ‘moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age’.  Economic advantage and professional success no longer come from the logical, analytical skills of knowledge workers but from creative, conceptual, and relationship skills. So the lawyers, accountants and MBAs who ruled the roost during the 20th century are now giving way to ‘artists, inventors, designers, storytellers, caregivers, consolers, big picture thinkers’.

Writing for a US audience, Pink identifies three fundamental reasons for this change:

  • Abundance – In a rich country like the USA nearly every market is over-supplied with functionally adequate, reasonably priced goods. Faced with such abundance, consumers have become more discerning and demanding. They now expect products to be beautiful – or funky, funny, sexy or otherwise distinctive. And producing distinctive products requires creativity.
  • Asia – ‘Made in China’ is old news. Western nations are used to seeing manufacturing jobs crossing the oceans to Asia. Now the same is happening to knowledge work such as computer programming, engineering, accounting, copy-editing and law. ‘The main reason,’ says Pink, ‘is money. In the United States, a typical chip designer earns about $7,000 per month; in India, she earns about $1,000.’ The results ‘are scaring the bejeezus out of software engineers and other left-brain professionals in North America and Europe’.
  • Automation – In 1987 chess grand master Garry Kasparov boasted ‘No computer can ever beat me’. In 1997 he was beaten by the IBM computer Deep Blue. More recently Kasparov said ‘I give us only a few years. Then they’ll win every match’. For Pink, Kasparov is symbolic of legions of knowledge workers such as lawyers, programmers, accountants and even doctors who now find at least part of their work taken over by machines and software. Why pay an attorney $200 an hour to produce a standard legal document you can obtain from a website for a fraction of the price? According to Pink ‘Any job that depends on routines – that can be reduced to a set of rules, or broken down into a set of repeatable steps – is at risk. If a $500-a-month Indian chartered accountant doesn’t swipe your comfortable accounting job, Turbo-Tax will’.

To survive in the Conceptual Age, Pink advises us to ask ourselves three questions:

1. Can someone overseas do it cheaper?
2. Can a computer do it for you?
3. Is what I‘m offering in demand in an age of abundance?

If your answer to question 1 or 2 is yes, or if your answer to question 3 is no, you’re in deep trouble.

Hey Lou! What’s up? Why the long face?

From this perspective, creativity isn’t a nice-to-have or a fun-to-do, it’s a matter of economic survival. Complex, challenging creative work is (so far) difficult to automate or outsource cheaply overseas. Creativity is what transforms utilitarian products into distinctive artifacts that are a pleasure to look at and a joy to use. It’s what makes people queue for days to get their hands on an iPhone, ignoring the clever friend who tells them they can get a ‘technically superior’ alternative for half the price.

No wonder those who can deliver creativity have the potential to reap financial rewards. And no wonder the brightest creative talents – people like Marla – are treated like rock stars.

The View from London

Earlier this year I attended the Innovation Edge conference in London, organised by the UK’s National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts (NESTA). The theme, common to such diverse speakers as Tim Berners-Lee, Bob Geldof and the Prime Minister Gordon Brown, was that creativity and innovation are critical to the future of the UK economy. Or as the NESTA Total Innovation report puts it in more academic terms:

In an increasingly competitive global economy, innovation – the ‘successful exploitation of new ideas’ – is regarded as the major source of competitive advantage for mature economies like the UK.

Like the US, the UK has seen other nations undermine its traditional strengths in manufacturing. Like the US, we like to see ourselves as a nation of innovators. The Creative Industries and the ‘Cool Britannia’ image have been important features of the New Labour government over the past decade. London is recognised as a leading creative centre, with nearly 20% of its workforce employed in the creative industries, which rival its financial services in economic importance.

One of the conference sessions I attended was called ‘Where the UK leads…but for how long?’ and focused on the challenges of maintaining our tradition of innovative industry in the face of worldwide competition. Like the US, we know we can’t take creative pre-eminence for granted.

Bottom line: if we carry on like Lou, we too will be screwed.

From ‘Made in China’ to ‘Created in China’

On the face of it, the idea of focusing on the sexy creative work while shipping routine production overseas might be appealing to Westerners with a creative bent. Appealing but dangerous. Last year a Fast Company article about China’s New Creative Class challenged the idea that the Chinese will be happy to ‘stamp out a widget, or knock off a DVD’ while the West leads the world in creativity.

China is not content to serve as factory to the globe. Call it economic foresight, or cultural pride, but despite the stratospheric growth of its economy – 10.7% last year – China knows that cheap labor alone can’t sustain the boom. While a flurry of activity (and, yes, a government five-year plan) has stressed scientific and technological innovation, look a little closer and you’ll see that creativity in art and industry – in design, fashion, media, and the like – is fast becoming a driving national mission.

That was certainly the impression I got from the stunning China Design Now exhibition at London’s V&A Museum – a glittering showcase of graphic design, fashion and architecture in the run up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Although there was plenty of evidence of Western and Japanese influence, there were also many startling and memorable works stamped with a distinctive Chinese identity.  We’ve heard a lot about China’s unfolding economic potential, but what struck me about the exhibition was the vast cultural wealth China has to draw on as it rediscovers its pre-revolutionary heritage, which should be a rich source of inspiration for its modern creatives.

In a recent book Michael Keane argues that Chinese government and business leaders are now focused on replacing ‘Made in China’ with ‘Created in China’:

A great new leap forward is imminent. The ‘world factory’ is no longer the default setting for development. China aspires to be a serious contender for the spoils of the global cultural and service economies.
(Created in China)

Keane stresses that there are significant barriers to innovation in the Chinese economy and political system. So Western industry currently enjoys a creative head start, reflected in the fact that of the new Olympic buildings on show at China Design Now, only one was designed by Chinese architects. But given that China has signaled its creative ambitions, it might be rash to bet against it realising them long term. And China is not the only ambitious country in Asia.

A New Global Game

Wherever you go in the world, the pieces will be seen from a different angle, but globalisation means we’re all now playing the same game. Whether it’s Chess, Xiangqi, Shogi or a whole new board game depends on your point of view. No single country or culture gets to decide the rules. And collaboration may well be a more effective strategy than naked competition. Jack is coming along nicely as a player. Marla is approaching the status of a Grand Master (or Mistress).

Like it or not, work migrates to where currency and labour markets make it most efficient and profitable. You can only charge a premium for something that cannot be obtained easily and cheaply elsewhere. So if you want to avoid the ‘race to the bottom’ of a price war, it makes sense to develop those skills and qualities that are hardest to commodify – namely creativity and innovation.

Abundance, Asia and Automation are key drivers of change, but they are not the only causes. Others include the development of digital technology, which facilitates quick and easy creation and distribution of ‘virtual’ products, and the internet, which enables collaboration over vast distances. The result is the emergence of a new creative economy – which we’ll look at more closely in the next post.

About the Author: Mark McGuinness is a Coach for Artists, Creatives and Entrepreneurs. For a free 25-week guide to success as a creative professional, sign up for Mark’s course The Creative Pathfinder.

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 (43)

  • Yes, so many countries see their creativity as the key to their success. At The Creativity Centre we take creativity very seriously and yes I agree it can be taught!

  • Brilliant article Mark - consumately research and articulated. Agree with broad brush argument - but still concerned that the 'creative nation' approach, be it NESTA/UK government or China is a lot about propaganda, and perhaps it's all cold war again, but this time the space race is the race to be "the world's creative hub" (how this would be defined, who knows).

    The only serious big growth area in creative sector, in many places outside of London at least, is not in the 'sexy' creative jobs like writing, acting, film making but in computer software and web development/design.

    Yes we all need to be creative in buisness - and yes we're in danger of everything being outsourced to BRIC territories or wherever, but our animators, film makers, games developers, web designers, copywriters and researchers are in, I think, far more grave danger of this than our accountants and lawyers who offer a more localised and tangible value proposition than many creative services.

  • Thanks Susi. I share your concerns about propaganda - John Tusa has a brilliant phrase when he says that the word creativity has become 'political margarine to spread approvingly and inclusively over any activity with a non-material element to it'. Attempts to claim creativity for any country or culture are doomed to failure. Creativity thrives on collaboration not exclusivity. Interesting point about the localised services of accountants and lawyers vs the outsourcing of creative services - one more reason to keep our creatives on their toes!

  • Lovin what's happening here - can't wait to see what comes next. As a highly creative child of a multi-entrepreneurial father I performed my first act of social entrepreneurialism in 1989. At the time I was tutoring adult ESL students with grade school readers because no materials written for adults existed. Eighteen years later, the three books of stories by students, for students that I published are still being used. Now these kinds of solutions actually have a name!

    While I resisted having the creativity sucked out of me by our school system, I was dumb enough to listen to the advice of the day and gave up acting & painting and generally being creative when I left high school. While I've had a good run in business management for 20 years I have also felt completely un-authentic and unfulfilled.

    I am now actively applying my creativity in solving business problems in achieving the change they want - in my own way.

    I have worked in two industries which no longer exist due to new technology and outsourcing but agree wholeheartedly that creativity cannot be outsourced (but it can definitely be taught and trained, like a muscle).

    Keep up the great work gentlemen!

  • Mark,

    Fantastic post! I first met Pink when he spoke at a conf in Ohio I attended on behalf of a client. His insight was astounding. You do a great job of expanding the concepts and making them practical.

    I was in China for about a month in '07 and early '08. The Chinese are not yet skilled at creating visual and emotionally appealing products that appeal to a Western world. But if you see all that they have created that is artistic for themselves over previous centuries, the notion that they may eventually make the transition to connect with the Western world is unsettling.

    Your entire post should be a call to action for us.

    Thanks,

    Shane

  • Thanks Shane, glad you liked it and interesting to hear your perspective from having visited China. Interesting times indeed ...

  • Creativity trivialized, its meaning distorted, warped. Capitalist minds dazed as they are carried along by the immense momentum built up by burgeoning capitalist system. Hurriedly trying to push the brakes but to no avail. An imminent crash ahead.

    You can not just put creativity into the place of finely-tuned productivity. Dress-up creativity with the suit of a hard-nosed businessman. Creativity will simply replace hard-nosed productivity.

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