w
e live in a fast-paced work envi-
ronment where people can easily
feel isolated. But another danger,
of “excessive busyness”, is that
colleagues stop discussing new ideas with one
another because everybody else appears equally
busy.
What happens when the result is a drought
in creative ideas – often the driving force behind
business growth? And how do you break such a
drought?
What kills creativity?
A recent article on wellness at the Huffington
Post warns that: “Perfectionism and fear of
failure often go hand in hand, and they can both
keep you from fully engaging with a creative
project or even starting it in the first place.”
Fear of failure is not all that is killing creativity
- being too pessimistic or trying to think too big
can also be contributing to your creative drought.
Rohit Desai, CEO of Awesome Confidence
Coaching and registered mentor, says the
negativity in the country often spills over into
the mind of the business owner or entrepreneur.
When this happens, they experience stress and
even despair, and their creativity becomes the
victim.
“Many lose their fighting spirit or run out of
ideas because subconsciously they focus on the
negative. It is so easy to fall into the trap because
when you meet fellow businessmen, or have a
talk around the dinner table, it spirals towards the
negative.”
It is difficult, but not impossible, to escape
the trap. He suggests meditation, breathing
exercises, positive affirmations and walking. “If
your mind is calm and at peace, more ideas can
flow into it. It is important to first calm the mind.”
Many entrepreneurs make the mistake of
“owning the product instead of owning the
process” of innovation and creativity, explains
Tshidi Mathibe, post-doctoral fellow at the
Gordon Institute of Business Science.
She says when people are stuck behind their
desks, or are isolated and too focused, they easily
lose perspective.
on the money management
By Amanda Visser
48 finweek 24 October 2019 http://www.fin24.com/finweek
How to stay inspired and
innovative at work
Work environments can be fast-paced and very often stressful. This atmosphere tends to stifle creativity and
collaboration, which is detrimental to employees and businesses.
Tshidi Mathibe
Post-doctoral fellow at the
Gordon Institute of Business
Science
“You have to learn to collaborate. Talk to
people. Expand your networks. Get out and
involve people.”
Desai recommends communicating some of
the business’s challenges with employees. He
suggests an “ideas box” in the office and having
brainstorming meetings. This helps to boost
confidence and empower people. Managers or
business owners are not the only ones with new
ideas.
Vumile Msweli, a career coach and CEO of
Hesed Consulting, says sometimes people feel
like their work “becomes repetitive”.
“You tend to do the same thing over and over
again, despite circumstances having changed,”
she says.
Msweli recommends that leaders,
entrepreneurs and business owners spend time
exposing themselves to a different industry.
She is in the business of consulting, but she
“purposefully” spends time in education through
lecturing. She also creates opportunities to
engage with executives in different industries
to see what they consider to be their “best
practices”.
This engagement enables her to see how
they approach problems and how they service
their clients. “Try to pick up trends from other
industries that you can adapt to your own
industry. That makes you relevant.”
“Diversity in thought and experience is the
quickest way to breed relevance and innovation,”
says Msweli, who strongly advocates the power
of travel to expose yourself to other markets. It
can include visiting another city, another industry,
or another group of people that looks and thinks
differently from you and comes from a different
background to you.
Mathibe says you cannot be in the business of
ideas and be lazy to read. “The more you read, the
more ideas will come. You can read newspapers,
novels, manuals, but keep equipping your mind.
Keep reading.”
Get help
Desai says speaking to other business leaders
and attending seminars to improve your skills is a
Rohit Desai
CEO of Awesome
Confidence Coaching
Photos: Supplied
Vumile Msweli
Career coach and CEO of
Hesed Consulting