30297 - MANAGING CREATIVITY
Department of Management and Technology
PIER VITTORIO MANNUCCI
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
The course is structured in two parts, strongly connected to each other.
In the first part, students will focus on themselves, and acquire knowledge regarding (1) what creativity is, (2) how to build, feed, and stimulate creativity, and (3) the journey of an idea from inception to implementation.
In the second part, students will acquire knowledge on (1) how to manage creativity in organizations, (2) how to work effectively in creative teams, and (3) what does it mean to lead effectively for creativity.
Some of the questions we will address include: How do creative ideas happen? How can we foster our creativity and the creativity of those around us? What are the paths of creative development of individuals who are successful in their creative endeavors? What are the obstacles to creativity? What is the nature of creativity in teams and organizations?
Please note that sessions will be held on Thursdays (13.00-16.15) and Fridays (13.00-16.15). Please check the online agenda for more details about dates and rooms.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Recognize the importance of creativity for personal and professional growth, and its key role for organizational competitiveness
- Identify opportunities and threats for creativity
- Identify processes and practices associated with different phases of the idea journey
- Recognize the key ingredients of creativity-friendly leaders, cultures, and organizations
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Analise creativity in different organizational settings.
- Compare international best practices of creativity and innovation management.
- Apply the appropriate tools and models to develop better organizational choices to foster and manage creativity
Teaching methods
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Individual works / Assignments
- Collaborative Works / Assignments
- Interaction/Gamification
DETAILS
The learning experience of this course includes, in addition to face-to-face lectures, the use of individual exercises and group assignments throughout the course. These assignments allow students to:
- Challenge their own perspectives on creativity as for example to debug the “myths” surrounding the creativity process.
- Describe the main concepts covered in class and critically explain the main relationship between processes and practices associated with creativity in different organizational settings.
- Apply tools and models explained during the course to stylized real cases to be presented and discussed in class.
- Students are encouraged to bring their own views and to share their insights as well as guided to learn how to ask and give effective feedbacks during such discussions.
In addition to one-on-one lectures, the course includes one or more guest speakers from a selection of creative industries such as social media, fashion and more traditional ones aimed at better understanding how creativity is fostered, evaluated, and managed in the everyday life of an organization.
Case studies will also be used in class. Different cases are used to identify and illustrate different individual, group and organizational elements able to sustain or hamper creativity.
Taken together these activities allow students both to identify and compare best practices across different international contexts and to apply concepts covered in class to develop solutions to potential problems presented in the cases and in the experiences provided by the guest speakers.
At the end of each of the course’s main two sections, a formal assessment of students’ preparation is provided with the aim to evaluate their knowledge about the concepts, tools and models and their relationship with creativity and their application in different contexts.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
The status of attending students will be granted based on the simultaneous satisfaction of three conditions: 1) the average of two written exams should be a passing grade (18 or above); 2) participation to the team project; and 3) having reached the 75% attendance threshold. Attendance is mandatory and will be recorded through the new university online procedure.
With the purpose of measuring the acquisition of the learning outcomes, attending students’ assessment is based on four main components:
- In-class participation (20% of the final grade) aimed to assess the students’ ability to interact in a constructive way, to complete exercises in a diligent and creative manner, to think critically, and to develop their ability to speak in public and defend one's ideas. In-class participation allows to achieve (and, thus, assess) the following learning outcomes:
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Recognize the importance of creativity for personal and professional growth, and its key role for organizational competitiveness
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Compare international best practices of creativity and innovation management
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- Creativity log (10% of the final grade). Students will be required to keep a log of their creative activities. The log should record their creativity-related activities for the whole duration of the class, at least on a weekly basis. Logs can come in form of diaries, drawings, graphs, videos … Whatever students feel comfortable with (Creativity is, of course, encouraged). Logs will be graded based on effort and the degree of self-reflection. The creativity log allows to assess the following learning outcomes:
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Recognize the importance of creativity for personal and professional growth, and its key role for organizational competitiveness
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Identify opportunities and threats for creativity
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- Written exam (30% of the final grade), consisting of multiple-choice questions. The aims are to assess students’ ability to recognize and apply the knowledge referring to the concepts, models, guest lectures and cases discussed in class. The exam consists of two written exams taken during the course lectures. In this case, the weight is 15% for the partial midterm exam and 15% for the partial end-of-term exam. The written exam allows to assess the following learning outcomes:
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Recognize the importance of creativity for personal and professional growth, and its key role for organizational competitiveness
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Identify opportunities and threats for creativity
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Identify processes and practices associated with different phases of the idea journey
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Recognize the key ingredients of creativity-friendly leaders, cultures, and organizations
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- The field project (40%) consists of developing an in-depth analysis of a real organization chosen by the students in order to identify, illustrate and analyze the main elements and aspects of the company’s organization and approach to creativity management. The students have to focus on different levels of analysis - namely individuals, teams, and organization - and to answer to questions such as: How does the company get organized to support the generation of new ideas/ products/services /experiences? What are the strengths and weaknesses of the company’s approach? Does the company have a competitive advantage in creativity? If so, is it sustainable? Additionally, they need to provide a brief analysis of a different company pertaining to the same industry where the approach to creativity strongly differs from that of the company they have chosen. Finally, they are asked to wear the consultant hat and to provide actionable recommendations to the company in terms of fit between the strategy and the way creativity is managed and how to sustain it in the future. These projects are used to verify the following learning outcomes:
- Analise creativity in different organizational settings. Specifically, the project should showcase students' ability to identify and examine the main problems regarding the management of creativity within the organizations.
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Compare international best practices of creativity and innovation management. Specifically, the project should showcase students' ability to compare and contrast strategies adopted by the focal company and one of its competitors.
- Apply the appropriate tools and models to develop better organizational choices to foster and manage creativity. Specifically, the projects should showcase students' ability to apply the knowledge developed during the course to assess the fit between the strategy of the company and their approach to creativity as well as to compare it to different practices developed in similar contexts.
- Finally, the students have the opportunity to present the project’s results. The presentations give the opportunity to the students to verify their ability to communicate concisely the core points listed above, as well as their ability to argue and defend one's ideas and conclusions reached.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The assessment method for non-attending students is based on a final written exam held at the end of the course. It comprises several multiple-choice questions referring to the concepts, models, and cases contained in the textbooks that constitute the exam materials. The multiple-choice questions are mainly aimed at verifying learning of the analytical and management abilities and their correct comprehension and assessing the ability to apply the knowledge students learned when studying the course material.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING STUDENTS
The exam for attending students is based on:
- Selected chapters from: Catmull, E., & Wallace, A. 2014. Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration. Penguin Random House.
- The course slides, as well as articles, case studies, exercises and other sources distributed in class and/or available online and through the Course Reserve. Materials with copyright such as cases and articles will be provided through links uploaded in BlackBoard. Finally, students can download HBR articles by accessing the Library https://lib.unibocconi.it/record=b1673134~S9*ita. Students can also more easily retrieve them and other materials by entering the title of the articles in the first search box from the home page of the Library: https://lib.unibocconi.it/*ita (set the search by Keyword / Keywords and not by title).
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The exam for non-attending students is based on two textbooks, which should be prepared in their entirety:
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Catmull, E., & Wallace, A. 2014. Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration. Penguin Random House.
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Mumford, M.D. (2011). Handbook of Organizational Creativity. Elsevier.