Because creativity is such
an important factor of success in business today, play should be part of every
CEO’s mandate, and companies should be rated according to the level of
playfulness in their culture in the same way as they are rated as a great place
to work or as a socially responsible organization. A number of practical
steps can be followed to navigate this cultural shift towards play.
Think about what play
looks like. It is personal, engaging, and interactive. It is often
exuberant and messy. It is filled with light, color, and sound.
When you think about play, you may instinctively think about a children’s
playground or children’s toys. Now, think about corporate offices, or,
more specifically, corporate boardrooms. There are lots of straight lines
in boardrooms, (or perhaps an artistically, elegantly curved accent wall);
there is typically an imposing table made from fine polished wood or sleek
metal. That table likely suggests a hierarchical seating arrangement that
people intuitively understand: the boss will sit at the head of the table and
the chief advisor will sit next to the boss or perhaps will anchor the other
end. The rest of the employees will fill in the sides of the table.
So, before the meeting even starts, everyone knows his or her relative
importance. And everyone knows that polite behavior is expected: sit up
straight, papers stacked neatly in front of you, a pen at the ready, smartphone
close by in case of an emergency.
These rigid boardrooms are
where major strategic decisions are being made about innovation and the future
of our organizations. They represent a very logical environment geared
toward conscious conversations that will unfold in a very linear and efficient
way. They appeal to the 20 percent of our intelligence that lives in our
conscious mind with its wealth of creative ideas, and the intelligence that we
can reach through play.
Dr. Marian Cleeves
Diamond, one of the world’s foremost neuro-anatomists, advocates the
establishment of “playful environments.” I too believe that we need to create
offices, boardrooms, and activities that engage our playful nature—a corporate
sandbox or playground. We are playful by nature and efficient by necessity.
So let’s embrace our nature, and less effort will be needed for the
same, or better, results. When we do this we can break through the mental
barriers that are keeping us stuck. Certain corporations are already doing
this.
Three key things that you
can do to create a play-friendly atmosphere include:
–
Allocating significant time in which employees
are explicitly encouraged to play
–
Creating, or giving employees access to,
physical spaces that are conducive to play
–
Giving employees implicit and explicit
permission to “fail” or be “unproductive” in their pursuit of innovation.
Try these and notice how
the implicit culture change affects your employees’ levels of creativity and
innovation.
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