Skip to content
Generic filters
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in excerpt
Filter by Article Type
Papers
Events
Tools
Funding Articles
Case Studies
Resources
Opportunities
Theme Editor Blogs
Filter by Categories
Business model innovation
Ideation and creativity in R&D
Latest news
Managing international R&D
Managing technology platforms
Managing the R&D pipeline
Open innovation
Outsourcing R&D
Project valuation and selection
R&D strategy
Roadmapping
Stage gate processes
Technology intelligence
  • Home
  • About
    • About R&D Today
    • Contributors
    • R&D Publications
    • R&D Today newsletter archive
  • Themes
    • R&D Management
      • Rationale for key themes
      • Ideation and creativity in R&D
      • Managing international R&D
      • Managing the R&D pipeline
      • Open Innovation
      • Roadmapping
      • Technology Strategy
    • Special Features
      • Innovation for a Sustainable Future
      • How to measure the value created by innovation
      • Dynamic capabilities for strategic innovation
      • Would a ‘Strategy Lab’ provide sustainable renewal of competitive advantage?
      • Design Thinking
      • China’s new model for Open Innovation
      • Penetrating the fog of Agile
      • The resurgence of frugal innovation
      • Impact of digital technologies
    • Key Conference Tracks
      • Business model innovation
      • Entrepreneurial Ecosystems, Innovation Ecosystems and platforms
      • Intellectual Property Rights
      • Sustainable Innovation
    • Innovation Leadership
  • RADMA
    • About RADMA
    • R&D Project Exchange
    • Celebrating 40 Years of RADMA
    • RADMA Scholars
    • R&D Management Journal
  • The Pentathlon Framework
    • Strategy
    • Ideas
    • Selection & Prioritisation
    • Implementation
    • People & Organisations
  • Knowledge Hub
  • R&D Management Conference
  • Events
    • Upcoming events
    • Events Archive
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About
    • About R&D Today
    • Contributors
    • R&D Publications
    • R&D Today newsletter archive
  • Themes
    • R&D Management
      • Rationale for key themes
      • Ideation and creativity in R&D
      • Managing international R&D
      • Managing the R&D pipeline
      • Open Innovation
      • Roadmapping
      • Technology Strategy
    • Special Features
      • Innovation for a Sustainable Future
      • How to measure the value created by innovation
      • Dynamic capabilities for strategic innovation
      • Would a ‘Strategy Lab’ provide sustainable renewal of competitive advantage?
      • Design Thinking
      • China’s new model for Open Innovation
      • Penetrating the fog of Agile
      • The resurgence of frugal innovation
      • Impact of digital technologies
    • Key Conference Tracks
      • Business model innovation
      • Entrepreneurial Ecosystems, Innovation Ecosystems and platforms
      • Intellectual Property Rights
      • Sustainable Innovation
    • Innovation Leadership
  • RADMA
    • About RADMA
    • R&D Project Exchange
    • Celebrating 40 Years of RADMA
    • RADMA Scholars
    • R&D Management Journal
  • The Pentathlon Framework
    • Strategy
    • Ideas
    • Selection & Prioritisation
    • Implementation
    • People & Organisations
  • Knowledge Hub
  • R&D Management Conference
  • Events
    • Upcoming events
    • Events Archive
  • Contact

Menu

Key R&D Theme

Ideation and creativity in R&D

Creativity and ideation is a vital part of the R&D process and one that is of great interest to managers. Creativity can seem quite a messy discipline, but it can be useful to categorise it into 4 aspects: process, people, product and place.

Related R&D themes

Loading...
What is agile? flexible organisations

Penetrating the fog of Agile

The Permeable Funnel [click to enlarge]

Open Innovation

Creativity and ideation is a vital part of the R&D process and one that is of great interest to managers.

Creativity can seem quite a messy discipline, but I find it useful to categorise it into 4 aspects: process, people, product and place. This classification is based on the 4P’s of creativity developed by the pioneering US creativity researcher, Mel Rhodes.

Process: This relates to the stages of the creative process, and tools and techniques to help.

This is the aspect of creativity that most people think of first. It encompasses useful descriptions of the stages of the creative process, and a wide variety of structured tools and techniques to help the process of generating new ideas in different situations. The best known tools include Brainstorming, TRIZ, 6 hats and Attribute Association, but creative people like inventing their own creative processes, so there are a lot of these (many only subtly different from each other!). However, in general they are trying to help users break free of fixed patterns of thought, gather new stimuli, make new connections, and tap into deeper (sometimes intuitive) insight into the problem.

People: This describes the traits and characteristics of creative people, and how to help them.

Creativity is a deeply human process, so it’s no surprise that insights from various branches of psychology and neuroscience can be very helpful in understanding how to encourage creativity and the process of ideation. It often takes a lot of work before a “good idea” is recognised as such, so creative people need to develop both persistence and their powers of persuasion. It’s important to realise that people differ quite profoundly in what helps or hinders their creativity. For example, while some people find structured tools useful for enhancing their creativity, the most creative people will often find them positively detrimental, but can be helped to be more effective in other ways. MBTI can give very useful insight into these personal preferences.

Product: This relates to the characteristics of creative “products”, and how to create these.

A product (which could be an artefact, a system or a service) would not be considered as creative if it were not both novel and useful. This is why skilled R&D innovators give high priority to understanding the “problem” they want to solve, particularly the “non-obvious hidden needs”, before starting the process of ideation. Useful techniques for uncovering hidden needs include Repertory Grid and Ethnographic research.

Place: This relates to the environment, within which creativity takes place, and how to improve it.

An idea may start in a single head, but good ideas will require a diversity of knowledge from a number of people, so it’s helpful if the environment encourages useful interactions and experiences. Creative ideas can very easily be stifled by fear of failure, rigid processes and or stringent performance targets, so organisational culture and management style are important. Important thinkers in this area include Amabile, Von Hippel and Takeuchi.

Anne Miller

Contributors

Ieva Martinaityte

Ieva Martinaityte

Ieva is a lecturer in Business and Management at University of East Anglia
Anne Miller

Anne Miller

Anne is an innovator, entrepreneur and Director of the Creativity Partnership

Conference tracks

Innovation leadership

Related articles

Arts Value Map

Arts Value Map: an alternative way to measure creativity

Art thinking - putting the creativity back into innovation

Art thinking – putting the creativity back into innovation

What is the role of social media in new product development?

innovation and academic freedom

Decline in academic freedom is impacting innovation output, warns study

Virtual cafe enables elderly people to participate in fuzzy front end of innovation

Role of virtual spaces to include elderly at fuzzy front end of innovation

Drone delivery

Covid, the ultimate burning platform, tears up the ‘Innovation Playbook’

If you are what you eat feat

If you are what you eat, is what you eat what you think?

Alessandro Narduzzo feat

Innovation by experimentation

Open Innovation can be a power tool

Crowd innovation at NASA solving grand challenges in days

Crowdsourcing innovation – what potential contributors should consider

Predictions for 2022

Focus on antimicrobial resistance and a surge in quantum computing research are R&D predictions for 2022

Aurelie Hemonnet-Gujot, RnD Track Chair

Marketing Innovations: Adoption, diffusion and commercialisation

Have your say / Follow us

Linkedin Soundcloud Twitter Youtube Linkedin-in

R&D Today is the outreach site for the Research and Development Management Association, a charitable organisation that supports research, best practice and innovation.  www.radma.net

Click here to sign up to our newsletter, and
 click here to view our newsletter archive.

© Copyright R&D Today

2025.

All rights reserved.