• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Tracy Stanley

Consultant | Author

  • Articles
  • Services
  • Books
    • Cannes Encore!
    • Soft Nut Bike Tour of Burma
    • Change Stories
    • Creativity Cycling
    • Engagement Whisperer
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletters
  • Contact

Creativity

Someone else’s shoes

August 18, 2019 by Tracy

Photo credit: Unsplash MD Zahid Hasan Joy

A simple and powerful technique for thinking differently is metaphorically stepping into someone else’s shoes and living their experience. This someone else could be a customer, a supplier, a competitor or another team inside your organisation.

In this blog I’m going to outline a process for metaphorically stepping into someone else’s shoes. This process is similar to the Fresh-Eyes process where you get a perspective from an outsider who may or may not have a stake in the problem being examined.

To start you need to consider a number of questions?

  • How well do I know the people impacted by this problem?
  • What are their needs and fears?
  • What would the best resolution of this problem look like for them?
  • What would be the worst outcome for them?

It’s always important to check yourself to ensure that you are considering their perspective and not your own.

In this activity you will gather and review the information you have about the problem. Then you will participate in a role play being one of the parties affected by the problem. This is a powerful way of building empathy for each stakeholder.

[READ MORE]

Filed Under: Creativity Tagged With: Creativity, thinking differently

How socialization influences our reluctance or enthusiasm for being creative

August 13, 2019 by Tracy

Photo by mostafa meraji on Unsplash

For many of us the things that influence the way we think and see the world are invisible to us. Just like the proverbial goldfish not seeing the water it is swimming in.

So how do we see what was previously unseen?

Do you remember the first time you went overseas and how bizarre it felt when people looked and behaved differently to those folks at home?

Or maybe you had started a new job and the way things got planned or meetings were convened made you feel like you were from another planet?

These experiences help us to identify what we perceive as ‘normal’ behaviour in our usual world. 

I heard a wonderful story about socialisation when I was interviewing people for our book Creativity Cycling: Help your team solve complex problems with creative tools. My interviewee told a story about when he was an exchange student with an English family. He was French. He expressed his surprise at seeing how English people always have their hands under the table before a meal started. This was a small thing but bizarre for him and so different to his own cultural orientation. It wasn’t until he was confronted by a different type of behaviour that he could see his own more clearly. His English friends were equally confronted by a strange cultural experience when they came to stay at his house where they were equally overwhelmed by the amount of kissing going on.

[READ MORE]

Filed Under: Creativity

How the best leaders encourage creativity

August 5, 2019 by Tracy

Photo credit: Hudson Hintze on Unsplash

Can you remember a leader who encouraged you to think differently?
What questions did they ask? How did they behave with you and with others?

Your responses to these questions will give you insights into how leaders make it feel safe for you to speak up or to experiment with a new idea. Having the right environment is key for creativity to flourish and the leader’s behaviour is key to creating this environment. In the right environment team members will be curious, ask lots of questions and seek out new information.

Barbara Wilson and I have put together some useful insights into the role of the leader as a coach and facilitator that may help you in your efforts to encourage creativity. If you are the leader of a team you have multiple roles such as facilitator and coach. Let’s look at these roles in turn.

Leader as facilitator

Facilitation is an important and often undervalued competence. As a facilitator you will typically use a combination of individual reflection and group processes to get the best ideas and to help eliminate conformity of thinking.

[READ MORE]

Filed Under: Creativity, Writing

Footer

Social media hangouts

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Goodreads
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Threads
  • YouTube

Recent Posts

  • Learning, laughter and letting go of your writing fears…
  • Travels with my husband
  • Favourite Change Tools, Templates and Processes
  • Measuring organisational change
  • What makes a great job? The CLARA model.

Services

Driving change

Engaging employees

Facilitating creativity

Actioning innovation

Leveraging knowledge

Copyright © 2025 · Author Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in