
Provocation: Carrying Out Thought Experiments
How
to use tool:
Provocation is an important lateral thinking technique. Just like
“Random Input”, it works by moving your thinking out of
the established patterns that you use to solve problems.
As explained earlier, we think by recognizing patterns and reacting
to them. These reactions come from our past experiences and logical
extensions to those experiences. Often, we do not think outside these
patterns. While we may know the answer as part of a different type of
problem, the structure of our brains makes it difficult for us to link
this in.
Provocation is one of the tools we use to make links between these patterns.
We use it by making deliberately stupid statements (Provocations), in
which something we take for granted about the situation is not true.
Statements need to be stupid to shock our minds out of existing ways
of thinking. Once we have made a provocative statement, we then suspend
judgment and use that statement to generate ideas. Provocations give
us original starting points for creative thinking.
As an example, we could make a statement that 'Houses should not have
roofs'. Normally this would not be a good idea! However this leads one
to think of houses with opening roofs, or houses with glass roofs. These
would allow you to lie in bed and look up at the stars.
Once you have made the Provocation, you can use it in a number of different
ways, by examining:
- the consequences of the statement;
- what the benefits would be;
- what special circumstances would make it a sensible solution;
- the principles needed to support it and make it work;
- how it would work moment-to-moment;
- what would happen if a sequence of events was changed; and
- you can use this list as a checklist.
Edward de Bono has developed and popularized use of Provocation by using
the word 'Po'. 'Po' stands for 'Provocative operation'. As well as laying
out how to use Provocation effectively, he suggests that when we make
a Provocative statement in public that we label it as such with 'Po' (e.g.
'Po: the earth is flat'). This does rely on all members of your audience
knowing about Provocation!
Edward de Bono's books explore this sort of technique in detail - we review
one of them, Serious Creativity, on our right hand sidebar.
As with other lateral thinking techniques, Provocation does not always
produce good or relevant ideas. Often, though, it does. Ideas generated
using Provocation are likely to be fresh and original.
Example:
The owner of a video-hire shop is looking at new ideas for business
to compete with the Internet. She starts with the provocation 'Customers
should not pay to borrow videos'.
She then examines the provocation:
Consequences:
The shop would get no rental revenue and therefore would need alternative
sources of cash. It would be cheaper to borrow the video from the
shop than to download the film or order it from a catalogue.
Benefits: Many more people would come to borrow videos. More people
would pass through the shop. The shop would spoil the market for other
video shops in the area.
Circumstances:
The shop would need other revenues. Perhaps the owner could sell
advertising in the shop, or sell popcorn, sweets, bottles of wine
or pizzas to people borrowing films. This would make her shop a one-stop
'Night at home' shop. Perhaps it would only lend videos to people
who had absorbed a 30-second commercial, or completed a market research
questionnaire.
After using the Provocation, the owner of the video shop decides to
run an experiment for several months. She will allow customers to borrow
the top 10 videos free (but naturally will fine them for late returns).
She puts the videos at the back of the shop. In front of them she places
displays of bottles of wine, soft drinks, popcorn and sweets so that
customers have to walk past them to get to the videos. Next to the film
return counter she sells merchandise from the top 10 films being hired.
If the approach is a success she will open a pizza stand inside the
shop.
Key points:
Provocation is an important lateral thinking technique that helps
to generate original starting points for creative thinking.
To use provocation, make a deliberately stupid comment relating to
the problem you are thinking about. Then suspend judgment, and use the
statement as the starting point for generating ideas.
Often, this approach will help you to generate completely new concepts.
Source: http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newCT_08.htm