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Sympathy
Knowledge
Rearrange
Openings

 

The Benefits
Sparking Creativity

The Role of Empathy
Creativity from Knowledge
Rearranging Elements
Innovative Openings

Rearranging Elements

Given the perspective of sympathy and knowledge of how systems work, using classical strategy's system of innovation, you simply change parts of the system and see what happens. The most common elements that you experiment with are not the physical parts of a machine, but the steps in a process. You experiment by rearranging the steps or changing them slightly to see what happens. 

Though Sun Tzu's approach is simple and has been around for 2,500 years, it is surprising how seldom people try it. Everyone hears the story of Thomas Edison's experiments when inventing the light bulb. All he did was try different filaments, and eventually he got it to work. Despite this simple example, how many people are comfortable doing this? Very few.

The defining aspect of being human is our ability to create. We could all be experimenting every day to create our own innovations. We can all rearrange what we do to try the steps in a different order. We can make small changes in procedures to see what happens. If we did so in an intelligent manner, we could improve every aspect of our lives.

If innovation is as easy as that—and it is—the big question is: why don't people experiment more?

The answer is that people are afraid of making mistakes. Part of this is training. While meaningless forms of creativity are encouraged in school as "self-expression," the real creativity of trial and error in changing working systems is neither taught nor encouraged.  When it comes to areas of hard information and solid knowledge, people are consistently punished for their mistakes. They are never taught the joy of using wrong answers to find the path to the right answer. The result is that people never learn how to experiment except when they play video games. This is why video games are so popular and school is not.

Sun Tzu's classical strategy offers a number of other rules for experimentation, but the need to try slightly different approaches to see what happens is at the heart of the entire system. Specific elements of both opportunity development and situation response are built on it. Learning these two systems provides both a method and a guidebook for strategic innovation. You never know where the resulting innovation will take you.

 


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