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Sunday, May 24, 2020
The Power of Why
The Power of Why Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'f0H_QAqORl1JmM3lTgA2mg',sig:'nUasiH7DHmGXp5ilVQQNmD1jQurFBRcQHbyBYgR99DM=',w:'491px',h:'348px',items:'548553965',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); Of all the traits I value in a team member, curiosity is one of the highest. For me, itâs tied to intelligence, ambition, and of course, creativity and innovation. A healthy sense of curiosity is what separates a great worker from an uninspired drone. If youâre looking for a spark to light up your company, consider looking for curious people. Amanda Lang is the author of âThe Power Of Why: Simple Questions That Lead to Success,â and she believes curiosity is the most important driver of what she calls âcreativity with a small C.â She writes: âMost social scientists differentiate between two distinct types of creativity: big Câ"the kind of inventive genius that Jobs, Mozart and da Vinci hadâ"and small c, the more common variety of innovative creativity that a session musician or a good surgeon or, for that matter, [an inventor] might have.â But creativity comes in small packages, too, and thatâs where most of us find our own. We tinker with things that already exist, trying to make them smoother, faster, easier, better in some small way. Lang says researchers describe this tinkering mentality as âmini c, the kind that people demonstrate when theyâre concocting a recipe or solving a math problem.â Creativity, innovation, and most improvements come from people who are interested in why â" and how â" things work. Their favorite questions begin with âwhyâ and sometime, âwhy not?â In fact asking a good question is the first step to making anything better. Why didnât this work the way we thought it would? How could I design this so someone outside the company could use it? What else could benefit from this tweak? One good question can start your improvement, but asking only one question can also be your downfall. Itâs sometimes too easy to stop when you have the first plausible answer. Lang writes: âJust stopping at the first plausible response is how a lot of us get stuck and find ourselves unable to solve problems, both at work and at home. The rush to get the questions over with and land on an answer is also why we can wake up one day and realize that weâre trapped in the wrong line of work, the wrong relationshipsâ"the wrong lives, even.â So even when you think you have the answer, itâs important to continue to question what you see, feel, or think you know. The problem is that weâve lost the knack for asking questions. Itâs not our fault. Weâve had the joy of asking questions beaten out of us at an early age. We start out as babies with boundless curiosity â" itâs how we learn about the world and master new skills. But as we get older, parents, teachers, and other adults get tired of answering our endless stream of âwhy?â and gradually teach us that weâre better seen and not heard. Later, in school and from our peers, we learn how asking questions can make us feel uninformed, even stupid, and we learn to let some other poor guy ask first. We simply lose the habit of curiosity, and by high school, we sit in numb silence, waiting for teachers to tell us what we need to know for the test. Needless to say, this is not a recipe for stetting the world on fire. Lang asks: âWhy, when itâs so easy and natural for little kids to question and challenge and test everything, have so many adults lost these habits? Why do we equate âchildlike wonderâ with naïveté, when itâs clearly linked to success in ways that are tangible and quantifiable in the world of business? Is it possible to retrain ourselves and reignite our natural curiosity?â Iâll provide some of her answers in future posts.
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