When innovators talk about thinking outside the box, they mean coming up with creative ways to solve problems - new ways to look at things. How do they do it? How can you do it too? We first have to ask what the "box" is. Then we can look at how to get outside of it.


The "box" is the   normal way of doing things and looking at things. It is the assumptions   that almost everyone involved is making. The best way to start thinking   out of the box then, is to identify and challenge all the assumptions   that make up the box.

As an Example, one   of the major liquor brands was faltering years ago, and they just   couldn't boost sales. Promotions, lowering the price, getting better   shelf placement - among other "in the box" solutions - simply didn't   work. Then someone challenged the prevailing assumptions, by asking,   "What if we stopped promotions and just raised the price?"The price was  raised as an experiment, and sales soon doubled. As it turns out, some  types of liquor are bought quite often as gifts. Buyers don't want to   purchase the most expensive item, but they also don't want to your profit margins when you raise the price and double the sales. That's the power of thinking outside of the box.

Ways To Get Outside The Box

Challenging assumptions is a powerful creative problem solving technique. The difficult part is to identify the assumptions. If you are designing a new motorcycle, write down assumptions like "speed matters," "it has to run on gas" and "it needs two wheels," not because you expect to prove these wrong, but because challenging these can lead to creative possibilities. Maybe the time has come for an electric three-wheeled motorcycle.

Another way to get to creative solutions is to "assume the absurd." This is either fun or annoying, depending on how open-minded you can be. All you do is start making absurd assumptions, then finding ways to make sense of them. The easiest way to do it is by asking "what if."

What if a carpet cleaning business was better off with half as many customers? It seems absurd, but work with it. Hmm...less stressful, perhaps. More profitable if each customer was worth three times as much. Is that possible? Commercial jobs that involve large easy-to-clean spaces (theaters, offices, convention halls) make more money in a day than houses, with fewer headaches. Focusing on getting those accounts could be the most profitable way to go - not so absurd.

Another way to more innovative ideas is to literally do your thinking out of the box. Get out of the house or the office. Look around at how others are doing things. On busses in Ecuador, salesmen put a product into everyones hands and let them hold it while they do a sales pitch. Then you have to give back "your" product or pay for it. It is very effective. How could you use the principle in your business?

Origin via wareresources.com