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What creative project do you have in the back of your mind? Writing that novel?
Putting together a bluegrass band? Painting the sunsets over the Rio Grande? How
about starting a business?
When you think of the term creative endeavor, does launching or running a business
come to mind? To most creative people, business is the antithesis of creativity.
Yet slowly, ever so slowly, the nature of business is changing. The need for
innovation in business is gradually overtaking the need for control as the resource
that makes the difference between success and failure.
Really? But isn't business essentially about control? Controlling resources
and controlling people? Yes, but business is also about innovation and communication,
both of which live at the heart of creativity.
There are two reasons why I believe creativity will become increasingly valued
in business. Control is certainly critical in business, both resources and people
need to be managed carefully. But control is easier to teach than innovation.
Given an equal need for both innovation and control, control is the easier skill
or talent to find and implement. Thus innovation rises in value because it's
more difficult to find and utilize effectively.
Are innovation and control equal needs? They certainly haven't been in the
past. Control has been the leading force in business since the beginning of
the industrial age. That age has ended however, and we now live in an service-based
information world of commerce. This means the resource that needs to be controlled
is more likely to be information rather than, say, coal. Information can be
managed easily across electronic wiring and storage media. That means important
work of business will be creating and disseminating information, and that requires
a creative mind.
The other reason I believe creativity will rise in importance in business is
that in our information-based economy, the resources required for business are
fewer and less costly. If you can run a storefront on the Internet that can
reach millions across the globe, you don't need capital to build a store that
sits in a city and reaches thousands. The juice it takes to make the Internet
company successful is not capital so much as the creative ability to reach and
build a customer base over an infrastructure that's effectively free.
Napster was a wonderful example of this. A teenager was able to create a service
that was quickly utilized by millions upon millions of users. Of course Napster
had a glaring flaw: the company was trading in products created by others, and
trading without the consent of those who produced the products. But the heart
of the matter is that someone without substantial resources could build a highly-used,
well-recognized brand out of little more than a creative idea. Using the same
infrastructure, surely someone will come up with another intriguing idea that
will capture our imagination and a big audience, and it will probably happen
soon. And the next wave of creative Internet entrepreneurs will have learned
from the Internet crash and its aftermath.
The Internet isn't dead. It's just stumbling a bit while taking its toddler
steps. Internet start-up ideas will continue to attract creative people, simply
because the free infrastructure invites innovation and resists control. Control
is the deathword to creativity. Creative people have shunned business for that
reason alone. Yet in a world where creativity and innovation become the critical
elements for success, you bet creative people will begin to see commerce as
an avenue of expression.
During the high days of Internet exuberance, I used this column to make the
claim that business will be the creative medium of the early 21st century. I
still believe it's true, simply because the basic elements still exist a encourage
a creative approach to business. The resources to support a new company do not
require control so much as creative manipulation. Given this free and open canvas,
creative people will rush in, despite the lingering notion that business is
somehow anti-creative.
About the Author:
Rob Spiegel is the author of Net Strategy (Dearborn) and the upcoming Shoestring
Entrepreneur's Guide to Internet Start-ups (St. Martin's Press). You can reach
Rob at spiegelrob@aol.com |