SuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas

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SuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas

In the SuperCreativity™ podcast, creativity expert and innovation keynote speaker James Taylor interviews leading thinkers, innovators and performers and has them reveal their strategies and techniques to help you unlock your own creative potential. If you enjoy listening to conversations with creative thinkers, innovators, entrepreneurs, artists, authors, educators, and performers then you’ve come to the right place. Each week we discuss their ideas, life, work, successes, failures, creative process and much more. As a leading creativity and innovation keynote speaker James teaches and interviews creative leaders including Seth Godin, David Allen, Jonathan Fields, Amy Edmondson, Amanda Palmer, Chris Guillebeau, Tommy Emmanuel, Eric Ries and Donald Miller on subjects including; how creativity works, the creative process, what is creativity, how to generate ideas, creativity exercises, creativity research, creative block, creative personality types, theories of creativity, creative thin

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    Curiosity: The Ultimate Competitive Advantage in the Age of AI #374

    If there is one trait that will define who thrives in the age of artificial intelligence, it is not intelligence or technical skill. It is curiosity. In this solo episode, James Taylor explores why curiosity is becoming the most important human advantage in a world where machines can generate answers instantly. Drawing from research behind his book SuperCreativity, as well as insights from global leaders and AI pioneers, James explains why the future belongs to those who ask better questions, not those who simply produce better answers. He examines the widening "creativity confidence gap," challenges leaders to rethink how they run meetings, and shares practical ways to develop disciplined, persistent curiosity inside teams and organisations. In the SuperCreative age, curiosity is not a personality trait. It is a strategic capability. Order your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' today at https://geni.us/QiDBu     Key Takeaways In the age of AI, questions matter more than answers Curiosity is the fuel that drives creativity and innovation Machines generate solutions, but humans choose which problems are worth solving The real creativity crisis is often a curiosity crisis Competitive advantage comes from asking what will not change, not just what will Most professionals have stopped asking bold questions Leaders should reward question-asking, not just answer-giving A more curious room is a smarter room     Notable Quotes "If creativity is the engine of innovation, then curiosity is the fuel." "Your advantage is no longer what you know. It's the questions you choose to ask." "Machines don't wake up wondering." "In three years' time, when everyone has the same AI tools, what will be your advantage?" "That gap isn't a capability problem. It's a curiosity problem." "It's not about being the smartest person in the room. It's about building a more curious room."     Timestamps 00:08 – The one trait that defines success in the AI age 01:15 – Why curiosity separates super creatives 02:30 – "Curiosity is the fuel of creativity" 03:30 – Asking what won't change in a changing world 04:40 – Why questions beat answers in the age of AI 05:40 – Insights from global leaders on hiring for curiosity 06:50 – The creativity confidence gap explained 08:10 – Why most people stop asking bold questions 09:10 – A simple challenge to transform your next meeting 10:20 – Turning curiosity into competitive advantage 11:30 – Building a smarter, more curious room 12:20 – Invitation to explore SuperCreativity Order your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' today at https://geni.us/QiDBu  

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    The Eight P's of SuperCreativity: A Practical Architecture for Innovation

    Creativity is often misunderstood as inspiration. A flash of insight. A moment of brilliance. But if creativity were just inspiration, it couldn't be taught. It couldn't be scaled. It couldn't be embedded into organisations. In this solo episode, James Taylor introduces the structured framework behind his book SuperCreativity: the Eight P's. This model provides a practical architecture for developing creativity at three levels: individual, team, and human–AI collaboration. James walks through: The foundational P's: Purpose, Personality, Practice The collaborative P's: People, Process, Place The future-facing P's: Product, Persuasion Together, these eight principles transform creativity from something vague into something strategic and actionable. This episode is a blueprint for leaders and professionals who want to move beyond sporadic inspiration and build a system that consistently drives innovation in the age of artificial intelligence. Order your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' today at https://geni.us/QiDBu     Key Takeaways Creativity is not magic. It has structure and can be taught. The Eight P's provide an actionable framework for modern innovation. Creativity operates across three dimensions: human, human + human, and human + machine. Purpose strengthens creativity by anchoring it to meaning. Personality helps teams understand complementary creative styles. Practice turns creativity into a daily habit rather than a rare event. People, Process, and Place determine whether ideas survive and scale. Product and Persuasion are critical in the age of AI where ideas must be explored and aligned. Structure beats sporadic brilliance. Collaboration beats the lone genius.     Notable Quotes "If creativity was just inspiration, you couldn't build it." "Creativity isn't magic. It's a skill." "The Eight P's are the architecture of modern creative work." "Great ideas fail because the process around them is weak." "In the age of AI, the edge is not just generating ideas, it's aligning people around them." "Structure beats sporadic brilliance."     Timestamps 00:08 – Why creativity is more than inspiration 01:15 – Introducing the Eight P's framework 02:10 – The three dimensions of modern creativity 03:00 – Purpose: anchoring creativity to meaning 04:10 – Personality: understanding your creative style 05:15 – Practice: building creative habits 06:20 – People: who you create with matters 07:20 – Process: turning ideas into execution 08:30 – Place: designing environments for innovation 09:45 – Product: exploring possibilities with AI 10:45 – Persuasion: getting buy-in for your ideas 12:00 – Turning creativity into strategy 13:10 – Why systems outperform sporadic inspiration 14:00 – Invitation to explore SuperCreativity Order your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' today at https://geni.us/QiDBu  

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    Announcing SuperCreativity - The New Book on Human+AI Creative Collaboration

    Sixteen years ago, standing backstage at London's Royal Albert Hall, James Taylor witnessed something that changed the course of his life. From the audience, it looked like magic. A rock star under the spotlight. Five thousand people on their feet. Effortless brilliance. But backstage told a different story. In this deeply personal solo episode, James shares the moment he realised that creativity is not a solo act. It is collaborative. It is orchestrated. It is a team sport. That insight led him to step away from managing high-profile musicians and dedicate his work to helping leaders and organisations unlock their creative potential. Today, as artificial intelligence and exponential technologies reshape every industry, creativity is more valuable than ever. Yet fewer people believe they possess it. James explores what he calls the "creativity crisis," explains the origins of his SuperCreativity framework, and outlines the three dimensions of thriving in the age of AI: Human Creativity Human + Human Creativity Human + Machine Creativity This episode is both a declaration and an invitation. The future, James argues, will not be written for us. It will be designed by those who learn how to collaborate, imagine, and build what comes next. Order your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' today at https://geni.us/QiDBu     Key Takeaways Creativity is not a solo act, it is a collaborative process The illusion of "effortless brilliance" hides coordinated teamwork We are living through a creativity crisis where demand is rising but confidence is falling The most successful professionals today are not necessarily the smartest, but the most collaborative SuperCreativity is the augmentation of human creativity through collaboration with people and machines Creativity is not about being artistic, it is about being capable and relevant The future belongs to those who combine imagination with collaboration Creativity is no longer optional, it is the engine of innovation     Notable Quotes "Creativity is not a solo act. It's collaborative. It's a team sport." "From the audience it looked like magic. Backstage, it looked like coordination." "Just as creativity becomes more valuable than ever, fewer people believe they possess it." "SuperCreativity is human plus human plus machine." "The future doesn't belong to the lone genius." "The future is not written. It's designed."     Timestamps 00:08 – Backstage at the Royal Albert Hall 01:10 – The illusion of effortless brilliance 02:15 – The insight that changed everything 03:20 – Stepping away from managing rock stars 04:30 – The age of AI and exponential technologies 05:40 – The creativity crisis explained 07:10 – The pattern behind those thriving today 08:15 – The birth of the SuperCreativity idea 09:20 – Human Creativity: developing yourself 10:05 – Human + Human Creativity: building creative teams 10:50 – Human + Machine Creativity: collaborating with AI 12:00 – Who this book is for 13:15 – Why creativity is now the engine of innovation 14:20 – "The future is not written, it's designed" 15:00 – Invitation to explore SuperCreativity Order your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' today at https://geni.us/QiDBu

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    Ethics, Gene Editing, CRISPR & Moral Courage with Françoise Baylis #371

    What happens when scientific innovation moves faster than our moral imagination? In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with world-leading bioethicist Françoise Baylis about CRISPR, gene editing, embryo research, relational autonomy, and the future of human identity. From the controversial 14-day embryo rule to the difference between needs and wants in reproductive technologies, Baylis challenges techno-solutionism and genetic determinism. Together, they explore how ethical collaboration can shape better science, why consensus building still matters, and why the most important question in innovation is not "Can we?" but "What kind of world are we building?" This is a wide-ranging, deeply human conversation about creativity, power, responsibility, and moral courage in the age of AI and biotechnology.     What You'll Learn in This Episode What bioethics actually is and why it matters now more than ever The real meaning behind CRISPR and gene editing Why the 14-day embryo rule exists and why it's under pressure The ethical difference between human needs and human wants Why genetic enhancement raises profound social justice questions What "relational autonomy" means in a world obsessed with individual choice Why consensus building is not naïve but necessary The one question Baylis believes every innovator must answer     Key Moments & Timestamps 00:08 – Introduction to Françoise Baylis and her work at the intersection of science, ethics, and public policy supercreativity-podcast-with-ja… 01:32 – Her origin story: an unexpected philosophy class that changed everything 03:48 – Why ethics must move from the ivory tower into hospitals, labs, and boardrooms 05:42 – Ethics as collaboration: how research teams can innovate beyond competition 09:51 – The 14-day embryo rule explained Why 14 days? Neural development, twinning, and value-laden decisions supercreativity-podcast-with-ja… 12:01 – What happens when scientists want to go beyond 14 days? Embryo models, stem cells, and artificial womb research 16:54 – Needs vs Wants: should we use gene editing to create genetically related healthy children? 22:42 – Editing non-human animals: are we appropriating everything for our own interests? 25:28 – Relational autonomy: why we are not isolated individuals but deeply interconnected beings 29:40 – Genetic determinism, tech elites, and the future of human enhancement 32:41 – Radical hospitality and collaborative ambition in science 34:00 – The most important question in ethics: "What kind of world do you want to live in?" 36:44 – Dystopian futures vs birth pangs of a better world 40:19 – Moral courage and what Baylis is working on next     Key Quotes from Françoise Baylis "We all have ethics. We learned them sitting on our parents' knee." "Biology will never give you the answer. You're just looking for something to hang your hat on." "Being really cool science isn't good enough." "We have a moral obligation to respond to needs. We do not have a moral obligation to respond to wants." "We are not just rational atoms bouncing around in the world." "In ethics, there's only one question worth answering: What kind of world do you want to live in?" "Are we witnessing the end of an era, or the birth pangs of a new world?"     Big Ideas from the Conversation 1. Ethics Is Not a Brake on Innovation Baylis reframes ethics as part of the design process. Instead of arbitrary limits like the 14-day rule, she argues for value-grounded discussions tied to research goals and societal impact. 2. The Danger of Genetic Determinism CRISPR enables profound medical breakthroughs, but it also opens the door to enhancement, privilege entrenchment, and a future shaped by those with power and capital. 3. Needs vs Wants in Reproductive Technology The desire for genetically related children may be deeply meaningful. But society must distinguish between moral obligations to meet needs and preferences driven by want. 4. Relational Autonomy We are not isolated decision-makers. Our identities and choices are embedded in relationships, communities, and power structures. This challenges the dominant "individual atom" model of autonomy. 5. Moral Courage & Consensus Building At a time of polarization and posturing, Baylis advocates radical hospitality, respectful disagreement, and consensus building. Even if consensus is never fully achieved, the effort strengthens society.     Resources & Links Françoise Baylis' book: Altered Inheritance Her public-facing website: françoisebaylis.ca  

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    Cyborgs and Centaurs: Two Powerful Ways to Collaborate with AI #370

    Episode Description How should humans really work with artificial intelligence? Pre-order 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' at https://geni.us/QiDBu In this solo episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor explores two distinct and highly effective models for human–AI collaboration: the Centaur and the Cyborg. Drawing on real-world breakthroughs like Google's AlphaFold and research from Harvard Business School, James explains why the future of creativity and innovation is not about humans versus machines, but about orchestration. You'll learn how Centaurs strategically divide work between humans and AI to protect judgment, ethics, and accountability, and how Cyborgs tightly integrate AI into their thinking process to accelerate iteration and discovery. James breaks down when each model works best, how leaders can design teams around them, and why alternating between the two may be the ultimate creative advantage in the age of artificial intelligence. This episode offers a practical framework for leaders, professionals, and creatives who want to move beyond experimentation and start designing truly SuperCreative human–AI partnerships. supercreativity-podcast-with-ja… Key Takeaways The future of creativity is based on partnership, not replacement Breakthroughs like AlphaFold succeed through human–AI orchestration Centaurs divide tasks strategically between humans and AI Cyborgs integrate AI directly into their creative thinking process Centaur models work well where accountability and judgment matter Cyborg models thrive in rapid iteration, design, and R&D environments Research shows AI collaboration can increase fulfilment and work quality The most effective teams learn when to switch between both modes Notable Quotes "The future is not about machines replacing us. It's about partnership." "AlphaFold wasn't machine only or human only. It was orchestration." "Centaurs delegate. Cyborgs integrate." "For cyborgs, AI becomes an expression of their thinking process." "The future of creativity belongs to humans and machines working together." "Leadership today means designing how humans and AI collaborate." Timestamps 00:00 – Two models for human–AI creative collaboration 01:10 – AlphaFold and the power of orchestration 03:05 – Why the future is partnership, not replacement 04:20 – Harvard research on high-performing AI users 05:10 – The Centaur model explained 06:50 – Where Centaur approaches work best 08:10 – The Cyborg model explained 09:45 – AI as an extension of human thinking 11:10 – Happiness, fulfilment, and working with AI 12:20 – Leadership choices in designing AI collaboration 13:40 – When to switch between Centaur and Cyborg modes 14:50 – A practical experiment to try this week 16:10 – The future of SuperCreative teams 17:10 – Invitation to explore SuperCreativity Pre-order 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' at https://geni.us/QiDBu

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    Creative Pairs: Why Breakthrough Ideas Rarely Happen Alone #SCP369

    We love the story of the lone genius. But when you look behind the scenes of the most successful companies, discoveries, and creative breakthroughs, a very different pattern emerges. Innovation is rarely a solo act. It is a team sport, and it often begins with the power of two. In this solo episode, keynote speaker and author James Taylor explores the science and stories behind creative pairs. From iconic partnerships like Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak to long-term research collaborations that consistently outperform solo efforts, James explains why sustained creative duos generate better ideas, stronger execution, and more lasting impact. Drawing on large-scale academic studies and his own experience working with high-performing creatives, James breaks down why productive tension matters, how complementary roles strengthen ideas, and why the future of mastery lies in collaboration rather than individual brilliance. He also introduces the barbell model of mentorship and challenges listeners to find their own creative counterweight. Pre-order your copy of the SuperCreativity book today at https://geni.us/QiDBu      Key Takeaways Breakthrough innovation is far more likely to come from teams than individuals Long-term creative partnerships consistently outperform one-off collaborations Creative pairs thrive on productive tension, not agreement The most effective pairs combine contrasting roles such as visionary and implementer Collaboration sharpens ideas rather than diluting them Research shows team-authored work is cited significantly more than solo work The barbell model of mentorship builds resilience and perspective The future of mastery requires shifting from an age of "me" to an age of "we"     Notable Quotes "Innovation is not a solo act. It's a team sport, and it often starts with the power of two." "Creative pairs sit at a point of productive friction." "They don't dilute the work. They distil it." "If you're trying to innovate alone, you're probably hitting a performance ceiling." "Stop trying to be the smartest person in the room and start making the room smarter." "In a world of increasing complexity, collaboration is the ultimate advantage."     Timestamps 00:00 – The myth of the lone innovator 01:05 – Why the power of two drives breakthrough ideas 02:10 – Jobs, Wozniak, and Ive as creative pairs 03:40 – What research reveals about long-term collaborations 05:15 – Why teams outperform individuals at scale 06:45 – Productive tension and complementary roles 08:20 – Visionaries, implementers, and creative counterweights 09:50 – The barbell model of mentorship explained 11:40 – Finding the right person to challenge your thinking 13:10 – Moving from the age of "me" to the age of "we" 14:40 – Building your own brain trust 15:50 – Invitation to explore SuperCreativity Pre-order your copy of the SuperCreativity book today at https://geni.us/QiDBu   

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    The Lone Genius Myth and Why Creativity Is a Team Sport #368

    The biggest myth about creativity is that it belongs to the lone genius. In this solo episode, keynote speaker and author James Taylor dismantles the centuries-old idea that creativity is reserved for solitary visionaries and artistic prodigies. Tracing the origins of the "lone genius" narrative back to Renaissance-era storytelling, James reveals how collaboration, not individual brilliance, has always driven breakthrough ideas. Drawing on examples from art history, modern business, and his own experience working behind the scenes with world-class performers, James explains why creativity is a learnable skill rather than an innate talent. He explores why so many people today underestimate their creative ability, how automation is reshaping the value of human creativity, and what leaders, professionals, and teams must do to thrive in the age of artificial intelligence. This episode is a practical call to action for anyone who wants to stop waiting for inspiration and start building creativity through collaboration, methodology, and deliberate practice. supercreativity-podcast-with-ja…     Key Takeaways The idea of the "lone creative genius" is largely a historical fiction, not a biological truth Many iconic creative achievements were produced by teams, not individuals working in isolation Believing creativity is reserved for a few creates a widespread creativity confidence crisis Creativity is not about being artistic but about solving problems and reframing challenges As automation increases, creativity becomes a core human competitive advantage Creativity works like a muscle and can be developed, refined, and scaled over time Breakthrough ideas often emerge from friction, diverse perspectives, and honest feedback The future belongs to those who collaborate effectively with both humans and machines     Notable Quotes "The biggest lie you've ever been told about creativity is that it belongs to the lone genius." "Creativity isn't about being the smartest person in the room. It's about making the room smarter." "Creativity is a team sport. It lives in the messy middle of collaboration." "Creativity is not a fixed trait. It's a muscle you can train." "Friction is often where the breakthrough lives." "In the age of automation, creativity is our most distinctly human advantage."     Timestamps 00:00 – The myth of the lone creative genius 01:10 – Renaissance storytelling and the origins of the genius narrative 02:20 – Michelangelo, teams, and the reality behind iconic art 03:35 – Why believing this myth creates a creativity crisis 05:00 – Why creativity is not about being artistic 06:15 – Automation, AI, and the rising value of human creativity 07:30 – Lessons from working backstage with world-class performers 09:10 – Why creativity is a team sport, not an individual act 10:40 – Building a "brain trust" instead of hunting for geniuses 12:10 – Creativity as a learnable, trainable skill 13:30 – A practical challenge to unlock better ideas through collaboration 15:10 – The SuperCreative age: humans plus humans, humans plus machines 16:20 – Invitation to go deeper with SuperCreativity Buy the SuperCreativity Book at https://geni.us/QiDBu  

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    What Is SuperCreativity? Why AI Expands Your Creative Potential #367

    In this solo episode, James Taylor breaks down the core idea behind his new book SuperCreativity – Accelerating Innovation in the Age of AI. He explains why the common framing of humans versus machines is outdated, and how the real competitive advantage now comes from intentional collaboration with both people and intelligent systems. Drawing on eight years of global research and work with organisations across industries, James introduces the three types of modern creativity and reveals why AI doesn't kill creativity, it exposes unpractised creativity. This episode offers a clear, practical, and optimistic explanation of what it really means to be a SuperCreative in an AI-augmented world.     Key Takeaways The "humans versus machines" narrative is false and dangerous. The real opportunity lies in combining human imagination with machine intelligence. AI doesn't replace creativity; it replaces unexamined creativity. If your value comes from judgment, imagination, curiosity, and the ability to connect ideas, AI amplifies you. SuperCreativity is intentional collaboration. It's the ability to enhance your creativity by working with other people and with intelligent systems. The three types of modern creativity: Human creativity Human plus human creativity Human plus machine creativity Most organisations underinvest in human+machine creativity. Designing for this third mode is where the strategic advantage lies. The future belongs to orchestrators. Those who can blend people, processes, and AI will lead innovation. One question to start with: How can you use AI to make you more creative and more human, not less?     Selected Quotes "When people talk about creativity and AI, why does it always sound like a fight?" "SuperCreativity is not about humans versus machines. It's about humans plus machines."   "AI doesn't replace creativity. It replaces unexamined, unintentional, and unpractised creativity." "The people who thrive are the ones who know how to collaborate creatively across disciplines and increasingly with machines."   "The future belongs to those who can orchestrate creativity across people and technology." "Creativity in the age of AI is not a competition. It is a collaboration."     Timestamps 00:00 – Why the creativity and AI conversation is wrongly framed as a battle. 00:38 – What James observed over eight years working with organisations worldwide. 01:12 – The birth of the concept of SuperCreativity. 01:27 – What SuperCreativity actually means. 02:06 – Why AI changes what's possible without replacing human imagination. 02:24 – The uncomfortable truth about what AI really replaces. 03:05 – The three types of modern creativity. 03:58 – Why most companies are stuck in the first two, and the opportunity in the third. 04:20 – What SuperCreativity demands from leaders and teams. 04:48 – The single takeaway James wants listeners to remember. 05:05 – A closing question to begin your own SuperCreativity journey. Buy your copy of 'SuperCreativity - Accelerating Innovation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence' at https://www.jamestaylor.me/supercreativity/  

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    Why Most AI Transformations Fail: AI and the Octopus Organization with Jonathan Brill #366

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Jonathan Brill, futurist in residence at Amazon, inventor, strategist, and one of the world's top-ranked futurists according to Forbes. Jonathan is the co-author of AI and the Octopus Organization, a provocative new book arguing that most AI initiatives fail because they are deployed into broken organisational systems. Rather than fixing dysfunction, AI often amplifies it. Jonathan explains why traditional, top-down organisations struggle in a world of accelerating change, and why the future belongs to adaptive, decentralised, biologically inspired organisations modelled on the octopus. Drawing on examples from Amazon, HP, the US Navy, and high-growth AI startups, he shows how distributed intelligence, fast feedback loops, and cultural redesign are essential for building truly super-intelligent firms. This conversation is essential listening for leaders, executives, and innovators who want to move beyond AI pilots and build organisations that can sense, learn, and adapt at speed.     Key Takeaways AI is an X-ray for culture: it exposes dysfunction more than it fixes it. Most organisations are built for a 19th-century world of command and control, not today's ambiguity. The octopus is a model for modern organisations: distributed intelligence, local autonomy, and bottom-up coordination. Operational innovation beats strategic prediction: change how you work, not who you are. Junior employees with AI are radically more capable and need greater agency, not tighter control. The next decade will favour diamond-shaped organisations, with a strong middle layer focused on sense-making and coordination.     Notable Quotes "Most companies are deploying AI into dysfunctional systems. All AI does is make those dysfunctions faster." "The octopus doesn't change its DNA. It changes its operating system. That's the lesson for organisations." "AI reveals your culture more than it changes it. If you don't redesign the organisation, the pilots will fail." "We now have an army of Einsteins inside organisations, and we're still treating them like they need to be told what to do." "The future of leadership is not control. It's coordination."     Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Jonathan Brill and AI and the Octopus Organization 01:20 – Why the octopus is the right metaphor for AI-era organisations 03:30 – Distributed intelligence vs command-and-control leadership 05:40 – Biomimicry, ecosystems, and learning from nature 07:55 – How AI collapses coordination and transaction costs 09:16 – Jonathan's personal story and early influences on systems thinking 11:25 – Efficiency vs reinvention in AI adoption 12:23 – Why organisations must change their "RNA," not their DNA 14:40 – HP vs Xerox during COVID: a case study in operational resilience 17:04 – AI as an X-ray for organisational culture 18:26 – Why 95% of AI pilots fail 20:25 – Lovable, the US Navy, and radically different organisational models 22:31 – Will AI flatten or expand middle management? 25:44 – Human development, leadership maturity, and decision-making 27:55 – Fast feedback loops over grand strategies 28:23 – One bold experiment leaders should run in the next 90 days 29:57 – Book recommendation: Scale by Geoffrey West 30:44 – Where to find Jonathan Brill and his work 31:03 – Closing reflections     Resources and Links Book: AI and the Octopus Organization by Jonathan Brill & Steven Wunke Website: https://www.jonathanbrill.com Recommended Read: Scale by Geoffrey West  

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    What Top AI Keynote Speakers Are Really Talking About Behind Closed Doors #365

    In this solo episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, keynote speaker and AI advisor James Taylor reveals the real conversations happening backstage, in green rooms, and behind closed doors with global CEOs, board members, and fellow AI keynote speakers. While public discussions about artificial intelligence often focus on tools, demos, and optimism, the private conversations are shifting to much deeper questions. This episode explores how leaders are redesigning organisations, rethinking decision-making, redefining value creation, and reimagining leadership itself in an AI-augmented world. James outlines the five non-technical questions senior leaders are now asking about AI, why judgment and creativity are becoming more valuable rather than less, and why AI is no longer a strategy but an environment leaders must design for. This episode is essential listening for executives, senior leaders, and organisations navigating the human side of AI transformation.     Key Takeaways AI is no longer a topic or trend. It has become an environment embedded into everyday work. The most important leadership questions about AI are organisational and human, not technical. In an AI-augmented world, judgment, sense-making, and values matter more than raw information. When everyone has access to the same AI tools, value shifts to problem framing, imagination, and strategic choice. Leadership is evolving from expertise and answers to clarity, direction, and organisational design. AI does not replace creativity. It commoditises the easy parts and amplifies the hard ones.     Key Quotes "AI is no longer a topic. It's an environment. It's a way of working." "This is not a technological problem. This is an organisational design problem." "Leadership has never been about having the most information. It's about sense-making." "AI does not replace creativity. It commoditises the easy parts and amplifies the hard ones." "AI is not the strategy. How you lead with it is."     Timestamps 00:00 – What leaders really say about AI behind closed doors 01:45 – From 'What is AI?' to 'How do we change how we work?' 03:30 – AI as an environment, not a slide deck 05:05 – Question 1: How organisations must be redesigned for AI 07:20 – Question 2: AI as collaborator, not just a tool 09:10 – Question 3: Leadership and judgment in an AI-rich world 11:05 – Question 4: Where real value is created with AI 13:10 – Question 5: What leadership really means now 15:20 – Why values matter more in the age of AI 17:10 – Final invitation to leaders: moving beyond the AI hype  

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    Creativity in Large-Scale Contexts: How Environments Shape Innovation with Professor Jonathan Feinstein #364

    Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Professor Jonathan S. Feinstein, the John G. Searle Professor of Economics and Management at Yale School of Management, and one of the world's foremost thinkers on the science of creativity. His acclaimed new book, Creativity in Large-Scale Context, explores how creative ideas don't emerge in isolation—they evolve within complex networks of people, places, experiences, and guiding principles. Feinstein shares why pure inspiration is rarely enough in today's interconnected world, and how individuals and organizations can navigate vast creative systems by using "guiding conceptions" and "guiding principles." From Virginia Woolf's literary maps to Indigenous Australian painter Clifford Possum's dreamings and Steve Jobs's design insights, this conversation reframes creativity as a dynamic process that connects the individual imagination with its wider context. Whether you're leading innovation, designing strategy, or nurturing creative talent, you'll learn a framework for creativity that is structured, scientific—and profoundly human.     Key Takeaways Creativity happens in context — Every idea is shaped by our networks of experience, people, and place. Guiding conceptions provide vision — They define what's worth exploring before the specific idea arrives. Guiding principles provide structure — They help us recognize and refine the key missing piece that completes a project. Artists and scientists share the same process — From Virginia Woolf to Albert Einstein, the most creative minds balance openness with rigor. Context builds confidence — Mapping your influences helps you understand where new connections can emerge.     Notable Quotes "We create in context. Every creative act is shaped by the world we've built around ourselves." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "A guiding conception is your creative compass—it points to what's exciting, even before you know what form it will take." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "You can't connect everything; there are infinite possibilities. Guidance helps you find the fruitful paths." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "Artists are far more conceptual than we give them credit for—they're constantly modeling ideas in their minds." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "Each of us follows our own unique path of creativity, but within a common human framework." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein     Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Professor Jonathan Feinstein and his work at Yale 01:19 – Why context—not just inspiration—drives creativity 02:33 – How network models explain creative development 04:23 – Economics meets creativity: viewing ideas as systems of value 06:25 – From The Nature of Creative Development to Creativity in Large-Scale Context 08:01 – Defining "context" in the creative process 10:48 – Virginia Woolf and mapping the creative mind 14:42 – Place as context: Indigenous artist Clifford Possum and the art of mapping dreamings 18:19 – The need for guidance in large-scale creative systems 21:01 – Guiding conceptions: vision before ideas 24:16 – Guiding principles: Steve Jobs, Einstein, and the "missing piece" 26:54 – Teaching creativity at Yale: why artists and engineers think alike 28:54 – Creative pairs and his mathematician brother's influence 31:25 – The Kandinsky cover: visualizing the network of creativity 32:18 – His upcoming third book and the trilogy's big vision 33:42 – Where to find Creativity in Large-Scale Context and connect with Jonathan     Resources and Links Book: Creativity in Large-Scale Context – Stanford Business Books Previous Book: The Nature of Creative Development Website: jonathanfeinstein.com Yale School of Management Faculty Profile: som.yale.edu/faculty/jonathan-feinstein

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    The World of Creativity: Lessons from 75 Countries with Fredrik Haren #363

    The World of Creativity: Lessons from 75 Countries with Fredrik Haren Episode Description  In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor welcomes back Fredrik Haren, the globally renowned Creativity Explorer and author of The World of Creativity: A Journey Across 37 Countries to Discover the Secrets of Creative Minds. Over the past 25 years, Fredrik has travelled to more than 75 countries, meeting everyone from artists in Afghan villages to innovation leaders in global corporations — all to answer one question: What is creativity? In this fascinating and deeply human conversation, Fredrik shares the most powerful lessons he's learned from creative people across cultures — from Thailand's idea naps and Finland's love of questions, to Japan's Kaizen and America's "move fast and break things." Together, they explore how curiosity fuels creativity, why we must fall in love with the process (not the outcome), and how to un-alienate people to bold new ideas. Whether you're a leader, artist, or lifelong learner, this episode will help you see creativity not as a skill reserved for the few, but as a global language of exploration, humility, and connection.     Key Takeaways Creativity loves process, not product — The most creative people fall in love with the how, not just the what. Curiosity is the fuel of creativity — In languages like Finnish and Bulgarian, the word for "curious" literally means "love of asking questions." Developing vs. developed mindsets — Declaring yourself "developed" kills innovation; true progress means staying open and unfinished. Un-alienate new ideas — To introduce radical change, make the unfamiliar feel familiar through gradual storytelling and empathy. Balance exploration and reflection — Fredrik's creative rhythm alternates between global travel (inspiration) and quiet solitude on his private island (reflection).     Notable Quotes "You can't master what you don't understand — and most people don't understand the creative process." – Fredrik Haren "If you want to be more creative, become more curious." – Fredrik Haren "Don't be a developed person; be a developing one. Stay soft, stay adaptable." – Fredrik Haren "Sometimes the smartest way to innovate is to make the alien familiar." – Fredrik Haren "Creativity isn't about speed or slowness — it's about knowing when to go fast and when to be patient." – Fredrik Haren     Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Fredrik Haren and The World of Creativity 01:31 – What it means to be a "Creativity Explorer" 02:55 – Why so few people actively develop their creativity 04:22 – Loving the process: the German brewer's lesson 06:18 – Creativity as practice, not performance 07:56 – The student mindset and the power of curiosity 09:52 – Cultural biases in creativity and the danger of "developed" thinking 11:50 – Why progress stalls in the most advanced countries 13:43 – The psychology of complacency and lack of imagination 17:04 – "Un-alienating" ideas: how to make the new less scary 19:45 – Lessons from Thai "idea naps" and Sabai Sabai philosophy 22:35 – The neuroscience of rest and creativity 24:20 – Fredrik's creative process: selective seclusion and exploration 26:10 – Globalization and why sameness kills creativity 29:46 – Cultural fusion vs. cultural flattening 31:32 – Kaizen vs. "move fast and break things" — two creative speeds 32:33 – Profound patience: creativity lessons from Afghanistan 36:12 – AI, safety, and the speed of innovation 37:04 – How to explore creativity without leaving your city 39:30 – Storytelling, curiosity, and human connection 40:29 – Inspiration vs. respiration: why ideas need to be acted on 41:51 – Fredrik's current book recommendation: Breath by James Nestor 43:05 – Where to find Fredrik and pre-order The World of Creativity     Resources and Links Book: The World of Creativity: A Journey Across 37 Countries to Discover the Secrets of Creative Minds Website: fredrikharen.com Recommended Read: Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor Connect with Fredrik: Search "The Creativity Explorer" on Google or LinkedIn

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    How the Mind Creates Identity - with Professor Masud Husain #362

    Our Brains, Our Selves: How the Mind Creates Identity with Professor Masud Husain Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Professor Masud Husain, neurologist, neuroscientist, essayist, and author of Our Brains, Ourselves: What a Neurologist's Patients Tell Him About the Brain. A leading researcher at the University of Oxford, Husain explores how the brain constructs our sense of self—and what happens when that system breaks down. Through remarkable patient stories—from a man who loses his motivation after a stroke to a woman whose hand acts with a mind of its own—Husain shows how identity, motivation, and consciousness emerge from the fragile architecture of the brain. Together, they discuss the neuroscience of apathy and addiction, the role of dopamine in behavior, the intersection of AI and neurobiology, and what it truly means to be human. If you've ever wondered how much of "you" is shaped by your brain—and how much you can change—this conversation offers profound insights into the science of the self.     Key Takeaways The brain builds identity — Selfhood arises from multiple interacting functions: memory, motivation, attention, and perception. Apathy and addiction share the same circuitry — Dopamine links motivational cues to action; too little or too much disrupts balance. Motivation can be restored — Dopaminergic treatments show promise for patients whose "will to act" has vanished after brain injury. Attention is selective and limited — The brain filters vast sensory input, sustaining focus through the right hemisphere's networks. We remain flexible — Even in adulthood, the brain's plasticity allows for self-directed change in habits, motivation, and mindset.     Notable Quotes "Our brains create our identities—ourselves. And when a part of that function fails, so does a piece of who we are." – Prof. Masud Husain "Motivation is not just psychological—it's biological. It lives in deep circuits that connect desire to action." – Prof. Masud Husain "Apathy and addiction are two sides of the same coin—they both involve the brain's motivation system gone wrong." – Prof. Masud Husain "We can still learn and reshape who we are. Even in adulthood, the brain remains astonishingly flexible." – Prof. Masud Husain     Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Professor Masud Husain and Our Brains, Ourselves 01:24 – How neurological patients reveal the building blocks of identity 03:18 – Why the self is a neuro function, not a philosophical abstraction 05:24 – The brain as a "controlled hallucination" machine 06:57 – Case study: David, apathy, and the basal ganglia 09:54 – Dopamine, motivation, and recovery through treatment 14:35 – Oxford study on apathy and brain activation differences 16:23 – Apathy vs. addiction: the same motivation circuitry at work 19:02 – Dopamine as the "wanting" transmitter, not the pleasure chemical 21:52 – Attention, distraction, and why focus is so difficult to sustain 24:50 – How Marvin Minsky's "society of mind" shaped modern neuroscience 27:55 – The illusion of self: from Descartes to Buddhist philosophy 30:12 – Case study: Anna's "alien hand" and body representation in the brain 33:38 – Phantom limbs, body maps, and how tools become part of us 36:01 – When machines become extensions of the self 37:41 – How adults can retrain motivation and change behavior 39:26 – Why the brain's plasticity offers lifelong potential for growth 40:05 – Book recommendation: Principles of Neuroscience by Eric Kandel 40:46 – Where to learn more: masudhusain.org     Resources and Links Book: Our Brains, Ourselves Website: masudhusain.org Recommended Read: Principles of Neuroscience by Eric Kandel and James Schwartz

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    The Creative Brain: Busting Myths About Creativity with Dr. Anna Abraham #361

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor interviews Dr. Anna Abraham, neuroscientist, educator, and author of The Creative Brain: Myths and Truths. As the E. Paul Torrance Professor at the University of Georgia and director of the Creativity and Imagination Lab, Dr. Abraham has spent decades exploring the science behind creativity and imagination. Together, they dive deep into some of the most persistent myths about creativity—from the supposed link between creativity and mental illness to the popular idea that creativity is only a "right brain" activity. Along the way, Dr. Abraham explains how creativity actually works in the brain, what makes myths so sticky, and why everyday creativity is just as important as exceptional genius. If you've ever doubted your creative potential because of stereotypes or wanted to understand what science really says about imagination, this conversation will change how you think about creativity forever.     Key Takeaways Creativity & mental illness — There are links, but they are complex, nuanced, and shaped by vulnerability and environment, not destiny. Right brain vs. left brain — Both hemispheres play a role; the metaphor is useful, but the science is more complicated. Everyday creativity matters — Creativity isn't just about lone geniuses; it's about building your own creative "fitness." Precarity fuels vulnerability — From writers working alone to creative industries hit hardest by crises, uncertainty impacts mental health. Creativity is a skill — Like fitness, it can be measured, trained, and improved with the right practices and tools.     Notable Quotes "Every myth has a kernel of truth—it's the way the story gets told that flattens it into something misleading." – Dr. Anna Abraham "Creativity is less like magic and more like fitness—it improves with practice." – Dr. Anna Abraham "We like outlandish explanations for creativity more than the truth, because they make a better story." – Dr. Anna Abraham "The unglamorous part of creativity is the real truth: it's a craft, and you have to keep working at it." – Dr. Anna Abraham     Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Dr. Anna Abraham and The Creative Brain 01:17 – Myth #1: Creativity and mental illness 06:32 – Why myths about creativity persist in culture 11:46 – Myth #2: The right brain is the seat of creativity 16:35 – The metaphorical power (and limits) of right vs. left brain 18:17 – Creativity and dementia: de novo creativity explained 21:56 – Improvisation, jazz, comedy, and breaking the path of least resistance 25:57 – Training yourself to disrupt automatic thinking patterns 29:02 – Defining creativity for business audiences: creativity vs. innovation 30:12 – The Torrance Test and measuring creativity in children and adults 34:55 – Myth of the lone creative genius: why context matters 39:42 – The most pervasive myths about creativity today 42:50 – Practice makes the performance look "natural" 44:25 – Book recommendations: Rick Rubin's The Creative Act and Bill Bryson's The Body 47:51 – Where to learn more about Dr. Abraham's work     Resources and Links Book: The Creative Brain: Myths and Truths Website: anna-abraham.com Recommended Reads: The Creative Act by Rick Rubin The Body by Bill Bryson  

  15. 352

    Tiny Experiments: How Curiosity Beats Goals with Anne-Laure Le Cunff #360

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Anne-Laure Le Cunff — neuroscientist, entrepreneur, founder of Ness Labs, and author of Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely in a Goal-Obsessed World. Anne-Laure shares her personal journey from Google's hustle culture to a health crisis that sparked a radical rethinking of success. Instead of chasing fixed goals and rigid outcomes, she advocates for a mindset of tiny experiments—low-risk, curiosity-driven trials that build resilience, creativity, and self-knowledge. We explore her insights on neuroscience, neurodiversity, and how curiosity paired with ambition leads to growth. Whether you're an entrepreneur, leader, or recovering goal-setter, this conversation will help you embrace uncertainty, cultivate creativity, and design a life built on exploration rather than obsession. Key Takeaways Goals can trap us — shifting to tiny experiments fosters learning, joy, and freedom. Curiosity + ambition = experimental mindset — a healthier alternative to perfectionism or cynicism. Neurodiversity as strength — ADHD and nonlinear thinking can be powerful in the right environments. Failure ≠ failure — experiments reframe outcomes as data and opportunities to learn. Practical tools — "Plus, Minus, Next" weekly review and stop-doing lists can spark creativity and focus. Notable Quotes "Success is not reaching a goal. Success is learning something new." – Anne-Laure Le Cunff "A tiny experiment has no fixed outcome. Your only goal is to show up and explore." – Anne-Laure Le Cunff "Curiosity without ambition is escapism. Ambition without curiosity is perfectionism. An experimental mindset is both." – Anne-Laure Le Cunff "We don't need to fix brains. We need to design environments that fit different brains." – Anne-Laure Le Cunff Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Anne-Laure Le Cunff and Tiny Experiments 01:18 – A health crisis at Google that changed everything 04:08 – Hustle culture, identity, and immigrant family expectations 05:57 – Leaving Google and family reactions 07:34 – Startup life: why uncertainty felt scarier than overwork 09:27 – When startup failure became freedom 10:50 – Returning to study neuroscience out of curiosity 12:40 – Curiosity, ADHD, and neurodiversity as superpowers 14:57 – The first "tiny experiment" and the generation effect 17:42 – Recall, connections, and building a personal knowledge network 21:27 – Systems vs. goals and how tiny experiments bridge the gap 26:09 – Redefining success: not binary, but data and learning 28:53 – OKRs, KPIs, and where experiments fit in business 30:53 – Non-attachment, curiosity, and Buddhist parallels 31:57 – Curiosity + ambition: the experimental mindset matrix 35:32 – The dangers of "one true purpose" 39:54 – How to start your first tiny experiment today 40:47 – The "Plus, Minus, Next" weekly review ritual 42:03 – Recommended book: How to Change Your Mind by Michael Pollan 43:21 – Where to find Anne-Laure's work and newsletter Resources and Links Book: Tiny Experiments (Penguin) Website & Newsletter: Ness Labs Recommended Read: How to Change Your Mind by Michael Pollan

  16. 351

    The Untapped Science of Less - Why Subtraction Unlocks Better Ideas with Dr. Leidy Klotz #359

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Dr. Leidy Klotz, engineer, designer, behavioral scientist, and author of Subtract: The Untapped Science of Less. Klotz reveals why our brains are biased toward adding complexity—and why the smartest solution is often to remove, reduce, or simplify. From Lego bridges and Jenga-inspired problem solving to organizational strategy and sustainability, Klotz shows how subtraction can fuel innovation, improve decision-making, and create more meaningful lives. Learn why leaders struggle to showcase competence by doing less, how subtraction improves team morale, and why sustainability, education, and design sectors are embracing the power of removal. If you've ever felt overwhelmed by too many meetings, endless features, or bloated systems, this conversation will inspire you to see less as progress, not sacrifice. Key Takeaways Our brains default to adding, not subtracting — but subtractive thinking can create elegant and effective solutions. Visible subtraction matters — leaders must model it for teams to feel empowered to simplify. Sustainability thrives on subtraction — less packaging, less waste, less complexity equals more progress. Subtraction boosts morale — removing tasks or meetings frees up mental energy and creativity. Simple rituals help — swap to-do lists for stop-doing lists, or remove one recurring meeting to reclaim focus. Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Dr. Leidy Klotz and Subtract 01:49 – Why addition isn't always the answer 04:08 – The Lego bridge story: A child's insight into subtraction 07:00 – Why subtraction feels harder than addition 09:54 – The visibility problem: How leaders can model subtraction 13:39 – Subtraction in leadership: examples from Steve Jobs and Capital One 16:14 – Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial as a powerful subtractive design 19:56 – Marie Kondo, "omit needless words," and joyful subtractions 21:47 – Innovation vs. exnovation: why patents rarely focus on subtraction 23:30 – Sustainability as subtraction: packaging, waste, and planetary limits 26:30 – Rituals: stop-doing lists, subtractive AI prompts, and meeting-free time 28:15 – How subtraction improves morale and team performance 31:59 – From marginal gains to subtractive culture in organizations 34:20 – Airlines, hotels, and small subtractions that save costs and resources 36:22 – Quotes, notebooks, and tools for creativity 38:22 – Book recommendations: Soccer in Sun and Shadow & The Extended Mind 39:45 – Where to learn more about Leidy Klotz and his upcoming work Resources and Links Book: Subtract: The Untapped Science of Less Website: Leidy Klotz Recommended Reads: Soccer in Sun and Shadow by Eduardo Galeano The Extended Mind by Annie Murphy Paul

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    The Creativity Advantage - How Creativity Shapes Our Lives with Dr. James C. Kaufman #358

    The Creativity Advantage: How Creativity Shapes Our Lives with Dr. James C. Kaufman In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor sits down with Dr. James C. Kaufman, one of the world's leading creativity researchers and a professor of educational psychology at the University of Connecticut. Known for groundbreaking concepts like the 4C Model of Creativity and the Sylvia Plath Effect, Kaufman's latest book, The Creativity Advantage, explores how creativity impacts our lives far beyond innovation—enhancing our emotional well-being, self-insight, relationships, and sense of meaning. Together, they explore: The science-backed benefits of creativity and how they apply to everyone. Why process matters more than outcomes in creative work. How AI is reshaping creativity—both its opportunities and risks. Practical steps to unlock your creative potential and cultivate openness in everyday life. Whether you're an artist, leader, educator, or someone just beginning your creative journey, this conversation will inspire you to see creativity as a powerful tool for growth, connection, and resilience. Key Takeaways Creativity benefits everyone — You don't have to be a professional artist or innovator to gain its emotional and cognitive rewards. Process over product — The act of creating often matters more than the final outcome. Openness is key — Trying one new thing a week can significantly expand your creative mindset. AI is a collaborator, not a replacement — Use it to augment, not replace, your creative processes. Creativity fosters well-being — From journaling to micro-creative habits, small practices can have profound effects on mental health and self-awareness. Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Dr. James C. Kaufman and his work 01:08 – How a personal family experience inspired his research on meaning and creativity 02:58 – Why focusing on process over outcomes changes everything 05:49 – Writing as a tool for self-insight and healing 06:43 – Balancing solo and collaborative creative work 08:47 – The power of creative partnerships 10:34 – Discovering a passion for creativity research at Yale 13:15 – The origins of the Sylvia Plath Effect and its widespread misinterpretation 18:04 – Creativity, neurodivergence, and misunderstood narratives 20:34 – Audience responses to The Creativity Advantage 22:22 – AI, creativity, and the importance of human engagement 23:05 – The next generation of creativity researchers 25:50 – How attitudes toward creativity have shifted in business and education 28:14 – Creativity's role in healing and well-being in an "always-on" world 30:42 – The risks and opportunities of AI as a creative collaborator 35:41 – Simple habits to nurture creativity: Openness and trying new things 37:25 – A personal mantra for staying grounded 38:03 – Finding your optimal time of day for creative flow 38:57 – Recommended reads for exploring creativity 39:54 – Closing thoughts Resources and Links Dr. James C. Kaufman's Website: creativityandmadness.com Book: The Creativity Advantage Book: Cambridge Handbook of Creativity Recommended Reads: Wired to Create by Scott Barry Kaufman The Creativity Choice by Zorana Ivcevic Pringle The Art of Insubordination by Todd Kashdan

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    The Brain at Rest - Why Doing Less Fuels Creativity with Dr. Joseph Jebelli #357

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor interviews Dr. Joseph Jebelli, neuroscientist and author of The Brain at Rest and In Pursuit of Memory. Together, they explore how rest isn't laziness but a neural necessity that unlocks creativity, productivity, and mental clarity. Discover the neuroscience behind the brain's default mode network (DMN), why overwork accelerates aging and burnout, and practical strategies for harnessing rest to spark creative insights. Dr. Jebelli also shares actionable tips on micro-rest practices, the surprising cognitive power of nature, and why doing "nothing" could be the most productive thing you do today. Perfect for entrepreneurs, creatives, leaders, and anyone looking to work smarter—not harder. Key Takeaways Rest is a productivity tool: Rest activates the brain's default mode network, boosting intelligence, memory, and creativity. Burnout rewires the brain: Chronic overwork shrinks the hippocampus, enlarges the amygdala, and accelerates cognitive aging. Micro-rest techniques work: Short breaks, naps, and even just staring into space can enhance problem-solving and creative thinking. Nature fuels creativity: Spending as little as 20 minutes in green or blue spaces significantly improves creativity, memory, and immune health. Cultural mindset shift needed: From hustle culture to embracing rest as a key driver of performance and well-being. Notable Quotes "People often succeed in life not despite their inactivity but because of it." – Dr. Joseph Jebelli "Rest isn't powering down; it's your brain switching states and forming new connections." – Dr. Joseph Jebelli "Nature is full of what psychologists call soft fascinations—things that hold your attention effortlessly and calm the brain." – Dr. Joseph Jebelli "The more you rest, the sharper and more creative your brain becomes." – Dr. Joseph Jebelli Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Dr. Joseph Jebelli and his work 01:32 – Personal story: How overwork led to insights about rest 05:07 – The statistics behind burnout and its neurological effects 08:29 – The cultural roots of overwork and the Protestant work ethic 13:36 – The brain's default mode network explained 17:31 – Why naps grow your brain (literally) 20:27 – Creativity, the shower effect, and hypnopompic states 24:26 – The importance of green and blue spaces for brain health 28:49 – Micro-rest practices for everyday life 33:22 – The connection between place, nature, and creativity 41:24 – Favorite quotes and reflections on solitude 44:09 – Why boredom sparks creativity 45:46 – Rituals vs. apps for better rest and productivity 47:27 – Book recommendation: The Expectation Effect by David Robson 49:00 – How to connect with Dr. Jebelli Resources and Links Dr. Joseph Jebelli's Website: drjosephjebelli.com Book: The Brain at Rest Book: In Pursuit of Memory Recommended Read: The Expectation Effect by David Robson

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    The Curiosity Gap: How Questions Drive Innovation

    In this solo episode, James Taylor shares his favorite listening game—Only Questions—and shows how strategic curiosity can unlock trust, insight, and innovation. You'll learn the science of the curiosity gap (why a good question makes the brain restless until it gets an answer), the three reasons leaders suppress curiosity (ego, speed, fear), and a practical playbook for asking better follow-ups, spotting surprises, and building a personal "question bank." Includes a Zurich-to-Dubai story where one question turned into a keynote-worthy insight. Key takeaways Play "Only Questions." Make it your mission to learn as much as possible about the other person—without talking about yourself. It sharpens listening and builds trust fast. Use the Curiosity Gap. As behavioral economist George Loewenstein described, the gap between what we know and what we want to know pulls attention like gravity—great communicators open that gap on purpose. Why curiosity gets suppressed: Ego (signal expertise), speed (rush to ship), and fear (looking uninformed). Naming these helps you counter them. Questions change rooms. "What problem are we actually trying to solve?" and "What if we flipped the approach?" surface constraints and reveal blind spots. Follow-up is where the gold is. Ask "Why is that important to you?" or "What's been the biggest challenge so far?" to go deeper. Train your curiosity muscle. Listen for surprises, keep a running list of great questions, and practice in low-stakes settings (planes, breaks, 1:1s). Pro travel tip: Bring chocolates for cabin crew—they often know the stories behind the seats. Memorable quotes "Only Questions is a deliberate exercise in curiosity." "In leadership, innovation, and creativity, curiosity is a superpower—and it's massively underused." "Some of the biggest breakthroughs didn't come from the right answers; they came from better questions." "The most valuable insight you hear this month might come at 35,000 feet—starting with two words: What's interesting?" Timestamps (approx.) 00:09 — The game: How Only Questions works and why James plays it on long-haul flights. 01:xx — Outcomes: Building trust, mapping context, and collecting insight—while revealing almost nothing about yourself. 03:xx — The Curiosity Gap: Why questions hook attention and keep people engaged. 04:xx — The blockers: Ego, speed, and fear—how they shut down inquiry in business. 05:xx — Questions that shift strategy: "What problem are we actually solving?" and "What if we flipped it?" 06:xx — Zurich→Dubai story: A finance conversation that became a keynote-level case study. 07:xx — The practice plan: Follow-ups, listening for surprises, and keeping a question bank. 08:xx — Travel tip: Chocolates for crew = social intel. 09:xx — Closing prompt: Open a curiosity gap—start with, "What's interesting?" Call to action If this episode sparked better questions, like, follow, and subscribe to the SuperCreativity Podcast—and share it with a teammate who leads innovation. 👉 Subscribe here: https://link.chtbl.com/scp

  20. 347

    How to Build Creative Teams - Dr. Amy Climer on Team Creativity #356

    Creativity at work isn't random—it's designed. In this SuperCreativity Podcast episode, Dr. Amy Climer (author of Deliberate Creative Teams and creator of Climer Cards) joins James to break down her Purpose–Dynamics–Process model for team creativity. We dig into psychological safety and "creative abrasion," reframing the right problem before ideating, meeting redesigns that unlock innovation, and practical tools like ethnographic interviews and image prompts. Plus: exnovation (what to stop doing) and how leaders can turn conflict into better ideas, faster. Key takeaways Be deliberate to be creative: rituals + structure make innovation repeatable. The Deliberate Creative Team model = Purpose, Dynamics, Process—alignment matters. Clarify before you ideate or you'll solve the wrong problem. Encourage task conflict ("creative abrasion"), avoid relationship conflict—psychological safety is the guardrail. Redesign meetings: less reporting, more collaborating through clear stages (clarify → ideate → develop → test). Make time by stopping things: exnovate outdated tasks and meetings. Practical tools: Creative Problem Solving, ethnographic interviews, and image-based prompts (Climer Cards). Memorable quotes "Be deliberate to be creative." "Creativity is novelty that is valuable." "Teams think they have a process—until you ask them to describe it." "If you didn't spend time clarifying, you'd solve the wrong problem." "Creative abrasion means disagreeing about the work—respectfully." Timestamps 00:08 — Intro to Dr. Amy Climer and her work with innovative teams and organizations. 01:16 — Amy's path: from The Artist's Way to a PhD and a consulting practice. 03:23 — Creating the Deliberate Creative Team Scale: measuring behaviors, not just traits. 04:36 — The model: Purpose, Dynamics, Process (and why all three matter). 06:17 — Applying the model to an engineering team: purpose, process, and meeting design. 10:53 — Clarifying the problem: how five minutes can change the brief. 12:25 — Ethnographic interviews: talk to the people who actually have the problem. 14:55 — Dynamics & "creative abrasion": productive task conflict vs. harmful relationship conflict. 18:05 — Safety, hierarchy, and speaking up (airline cockpit lesson). 22:58 — The biggest blocker is "time"—and how exnovation frees it. 29:47 — Letting go to innovate: pausing projects to serve emerging client needs. 30:30 — A teacher's influence and early psychological safety. 33:59 — Leaders' misconception: "I don't want creativity, I want innovation." Defining terms. 36:56 — More people now self-identify as creative; culture and generational shifts. 38:41 — The 1950 APA moment and the boom in creativity research. 39:37 — If you do one thing: fix your team meetings to unlock brainpower. 41:03 — Tools: Climer Cards and image prompts to deepen conversation and ideation. 43:42 — Book pick: The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron. 45:12 — Connect with Amy: Climer Consulting and LinkedIn. 45:58 — Close. Resources mentioned Deliberate Creative Teams — Dr. Amy Climer Climer Cards (image-based facilitation/ideation decks) The Artist's Way — Julia Cameron Call to action If you enjoyed this episode, please follow and rate the show—and share it with a colleague who cares about building innovative teams. 👉 Like & subscribe to the SuperCreativity Podcast: https://link.chtbl.com/scp

  21. 346

    The 8 Second Attention Span: Storytelling in a Distracted World

    In this solo episode, James Taylor breaks down how to hook and hold attention when audiences are more distracted than ever. Drawing on research (Microsoft's "8 seconds" headline, Gloria Mark's screen-focus studies, and a King's College London survey) and years of stagecraft, James shares a practical framework: script the first eight seconds, chunk content into 3–5 minute segments, and use intentional attention resets (story shifts, movement, voice changes, stats, and questions) to keep people with you—online or onstage. You'll learn specific openings, reset ideas, and a 4-step structure you can apply to keynotes, team meetings, classes, or one-to-ones. Key takeaways You have ~8 seconds to earn the next 8. Treat the opening like a runway: nail it, and you buy more attention in repeating cycles. Attention is under siege. Average screen focus dropped from ~2.5 minutes to ~47 seconds; many people feel eight seconds is the norm. Structure to match reality. Hooks that "break autopilot." Start with a human story, a surprising question, or a stat that snaps people out of scroll-mode. Use attention resets every few minutes. Change story type, visuals, stage position, or vocal tone; pose a question or drop a surprising number to re-engage the room. Think in short, high-impact chunks. For a 30-minute talk, build in 3–5 minute segments with deliberate transitions. Deliver value quickly. Give people an immediate reason to invest their attention—then keep paying it off. Respect attention as a gift. You're competing with the most addictive feeds ever built; intentional design beats improvisation. Memorable quotes "Eight seconds is your runway. If you use it well, you earn the next eight seconds—and the next." "Whatever the hook, the goal is the same: break autopilot." "These resets are intentional—they pull people back from the brink of distraction." "Attention isn't guaranteed; it's a gift. If you respect it, people will give you more of it than you think." Timestamps (approx.) 00:08 — The 8-second challenge: Goldfish myth vs. reality; why attention is our scarcest resource. 01:10 — The data picture: Gloria Mark's findings (47-second screen focus) and a 2023 King's College London survey. 02:30 — Onstage diagnostics: Reading phones, posture, and eye contact to know you've passed the first test. 03:20 — Opening hooks that land: Manila power-cut story; "What do jazz musicians and AI engineers have in common?"; striking image/metric. 04:30 — The Attention Reset toolkit: Shift story → image, center stage → edge, full voice → whisper, stat drops, and reflective questions. 06:00 — Competing with attention machines: Designing like an engineer, communicating like a storyteller. 07:00 — The 4-step framework: 1) Script the first 8 seconds, 2) Chunk into 3–5 min segments, 3) Build resets, 4) Deliver value fast. 08:20 — Closing thought: Treat attention as a gift—and keep earning the next eight seconds. Call to action If this helped you sharpen your talks, like, follow, and subscribe to the SuperCreativity Podcast—and share it with a colleague who presents often. 👉 Subscribe here: https://link.chtbl.com/scp

  22. 345

    The Creativity Choice: Dr. Zorana Ivcevic Pringle on Turning Ideas Into Action and Emotion Into Insight #355

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, host James Taylor speaks with Dr. Zorana Ivcevic Pringle, senior research scientist at the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence and author of the new book The Creativity Choice: The Science of Making Decisions to Turn Ideas into Action. Zorana reveals why the most creative people aren't necessarily the most inspired—but the most committed to acting on their ideas. Drawing on cutting-edge research from the fields of psychology, creativity, and emotional intelligence, she explores how our emotions shape our creative process, how cultural norms influence our creative confidence, and why social conditions are key to sustaining creativity over time. Whether you're a designer, entrepreneur, educator, or innovator, this episode provides practical wisdom for transforming creative sparks into meaningful outcomes. Key Takeaways: Creativity is not a trait—it's a choice, repeated again and again. Emotions are not barriers to creativity—they are information that guide the process. Cultural perceptions of creativity dramatically affect confidence and identity. Creative block often comes from emotional overload, not lack of talent or ideas. Sustained creativity is fueled not only by inner drive but by social ecosystems.   Notable Quotes: "Emotions are data. Frustration doesn't just feel bad—it tells you what you're doing isn't working." "Confidence doesn't come before creativity. It's built by doing." "In many cultures, creativity is not a trait—it's an act. You become creative through action." "You don't need to eliminate doubt to be creative. You just need to act anyway." "The creativity choice isn't a one-time decision—it's a decision we make again and again."   Timestamps: 00:09 – Intro to Dr. Zorana Ivcevic Pringle and The Creativity Choice 01:06 – Her origin story: studying "interesting people" and discovering creativity science 02:59 – The standard definition of creativity: originality + effectiveness 04:59 – What makes The Creativity Choice different from other creativity books 06:46 – The role of emotions in the creative process 08:28 – Emotional granularity and how to use emotions as feedback 12:20 – How art evokes complex emotion beyond language 16:20 – Why ideas alone aren't enough—the decision to act 18:26 – Social fear, self-doubt, and identity: the real blockers to creativity 19:17 – Cultural differences in defining and identifying with creativity 22:36 – Japanese Takumi and Western vs. Eastern creative mindsets 24:08 – Language and creativity: being vs. doing 27:02 – Creative confidence is grown, not given 30:24 – Certainty vs. uncertainty—for both creators and audiences 32:43 – Georgia O'Keeffe and embracing discomfort in creativity 34:28 – What keeps people going: social support and creative community 37:54 – Competitors and the creative power of external motivation 39:27 – How to handle creative block and emotional overload 41:21 – Nature, art, and personal recovery strategies 44:41 – How creative habits evolve over a lifetime 46:38 – What a creative life looks like—and why it's available to everyone 49:43 – Zorana's personal creative process and emotional timing hacks 50:12 – Where to find the book and connect with Zorana  

  23. 344

    The 3AM Idea: Why Our Brains Spark at Odd Hours

    On a red-eye flight over the Indian Ocean after a keynote in Chennai, James Taylor unpacks why our best ideas often arrive at 3am—when we're untethered from meetings, inboxes, and notifications. He explores diffuse-mode thinking, the role of cultural cross-pollination (inspired by an NPR Tiny Desk discovery of Catriel & Paco Amoroso), and a simple, three-step creative practice to capture late-night insights: expand your playlist, protect your "off hours," and remix on purpose. If you want more serendipitous breakthroughs and stronger creative muscles, this episode shows you how to engineer them. Key takeaways Odd hours = open circuits. When pressure drops (think 3am on a plane), the brain shifts into diffuse mode, quietly connecting books, conversations, mistakes, and music into fresh ideas. Great innovators are "cultural DJs." Fluency across genres and the courage to combine them—sometimes recklessly—creates the magic. Ideas travel at light speed now. A sound born in Buenos Aires can influence Berlin today; a Bangalore breakthrough can shape Boston by week's end. Use this global flow deliberately. Three practices that spark: 1) Expand your playlist beyond your bubble. 2) Protect off hours—don't fill every gap with your phone. 3) Remix on purpose to surprise yourself. Capture first, judge later. Some pages are usable, some need to marinate, and a few make no sense—often the favorites. Keep them all. Memorable quotes "Your mind becomes a DJ booth, sampling from the influences you've been collecting." "Great innovators are cultural DJs." "Don't fill every gap with your phone. Let your mind wander." "The best ideas don't always knock on the door during office hours." "Sometimes they arrive quietly… halfway between yesterday and tomorrow at 35,000 feet." Timestamps (approx.) 00:09 — The red-eye spark: Wide awake over the Indian Ocean after a Chennai keynote; cabin quiet, notebook ready, headphones on. 01:xx — Tiny Desk inspiration: Discovering Catriel & Paco Amoroso; genre-blending as a creativity lesson. 02:xx — Ideas in motion: How cultural exchange now moves at unprecedented speed—and why that matters. 03:xx — Diffuse-mode thinking: Letting connections form when you stop forcing solutions. 04:xx — The cultural DJ: Becoming fluent in multiple creative languages and mixing them boldly. 05:xx — Practice #1: Expand your playlist—fill it with ideas and sounds outside your norm. 06:xx — Practice #2: Protect your off hours—resist the phone, preserve mental wandering. 07:xx — Practice #3: Remix on purpose—combine influences until you surprise yourself. 08:xx — Capture it all: Pages fill; some ideas are ready, others need time, a few are gloriously weird. 09:xx — Closing prompt: When was your last 3am idea? Call to action If this episode sparked something, like, follow, and subscribe to the SuperCreativity Podcast—and share it with a curious friend. 👉 Subscribe here: https://link.chtbl.com/scp

  24. 343

    Learning to See: Dr. Keith Sawyer on How Artists Think, Create, and Transform #354

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor interviews Dr. R. Keith Sawyer, one of the world's leading experts on creativity, learning, and innovation. Keith is the Morgan Distinguished Professor of Educational Innovation at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of 19 books on the science of creativity—including his latest, Learning to See: Inside the World's Leading Art and Design Schools. Based on a decade of immersive research across top BFA and MFA programs, Learning to See explores how artists and designers are taught to transform their perception, navigate uncertainty, and unlock deeper creative thinking. In this conversation, Keith shares why the most creative people don't start with an idea—they discover it through making. You'll learn how great teachers foster creative breakthroughs, the power of constraints, why failure is redefined in creative environments, and what business and AI leaders can learn from the artistic process. Whether you're an entrepreneur, educator, engineer, or executive, this episode will change how you think about creativity, leadership, and innovation.   Key Takeaways: 🎨 Seeing is a skill: Art schools don't just teach craft—they transform how students perceive and interpret the world. 🧠 Linear thinking limits creativity: Great artists don't execute ideas—they discover them through iterative exploration. 🚀 Problem-finding > problem-solving: True innovation emerges not from solving known problems but from identifying better ones. 💬 Critique is conversation: Professors don't tell students what to do—they help them see what they've created and guide reflection. 🤖 AI lacks creative dialogue: Current gen-AI tools can't replicate embodied creativity or guide personal transformation. 🛠️ Structure creates freedom: Constraints (like musical forms or material limits) often spark greater creative breakthroughs.   Notable Quotes: "You can't tell someone how to see. You have to guide them through a transformation." – Keith Sawyer "Making is thinking. It's through engaging with materials that surprising new ideas emerge." "Students arrive with talent—but they haven't yet learned how to find the problem worth solving." "AI can help with problem-solving. But it can't yet help with problem-finding—and that's where the most creative work lives." "Failure is not failure. It's a mismatch between intention and result—and often, that mismatch is the breakthrough."   Timestamps: 00:09 – Intro to Keith Sawyer and his new book Learning to See 02:05 – Discovering creativity research through Csikszentmihalyi 03:35 – Why he immersed himself in art and design schools 05:05 – The surprising resistance to the word "creativity" 07:00 – What professors are really teaching: "learning to see" 08:30 – Why many see themselves as "accidental teachers" 10:34 – Making as thinking: the fallacy of the "one big idea" 13:45 – Malcolm McLaren vs. Vivienne Westwood creativity styles 15:36 – Problem-finding vs. problem-solving creativity 18:40 – How professors help students find their voice 21:53 – Mismatches and self-discovery in student work 22:25 – How the book evolved from research to storytelling 25:15 – What business and tech leaders can learn from artists 29:16 – Could AI become a creativity co-pilot? Not yet 33:49 – Redefining failure and building resilience 36:58 – The "deep water and canoe" metaphor for mentorship 37:42 – Why constraints help unlock creativity 39:10 – Jazz as a metaphor: structure enables improvisation 40:43 – Where to find Keith's work and podcast  

  25. 342

    When AI Steals Our Creativity, Is That a Feature… or a Bug?

    In this solo episode, James Taylor explores a timely question: when AI seems to take over creative work, is that progress or a problem? From a reflective moment on the beach at San Diego's Hotel Del Coronado to research on "cognitive offloading," James examines how generative AI (ChatGPT, Midjourney, DALL·E) can both supercharge and stunt our creative muscles. You'll learn where AI outperforms humans (divergent and convergent thinking), where humans still shine (emotionally resonant storytelling), and a simple system for making AI your trampoline—not your crutch. Walk away with three practical habits—"No-AI time," voice-and-values checks, and owning the "why"—to keep your imagination strong while you collaborate with machines. Key takeaways AI can amplify or atrophy creativity. Heavy reliance risks "creative muscle" loss via cognitive offloading; intentional use expands your range. Strengths split: AI often scores higher on divergent (many ideas) and convergent (selecting) thinking, while humans lead in meaning-making and emotionally rich storytelling. Use AI as a collaborator, not an autopilot. Treat it like a trampoline that helps you jump higher, but you still do the jumping. Adopt "No-AI time." Schedule regular sessions where you sketch, write, and brainstorm without digital assistance to keep creative muscles active. Own the context and the 'why.' Let AI assist with the what and how, but humans must retain judgment, values, and meaning. Memorable quotes "AI is like a trampoline. It can bounce you higher—but you still need to do the jumping." "Use AI like a trampoline, not a crutch." "The future belongs to those who can imagine first, and engineer later." "AI can draw our monsters faster, but we shouldn't stop imagining them ourselves." Timestamps (approx.) 00:09 — Opening question: Is AI stealing our creativity—or refining it? Beachside reflection at Hotel Del Coronado. 01:xx — From curiosity to core tool: How generative AI moved into everyday creative workflows. 02:xx — Cognitive offloading warning: Why heavy AI use can weaken the "creative muscle." 03:xx — What AI does better vs. worse: Divergent/convergent thinking vs. emotionally resonant writing. 04:xx — Partnering with AI: How James uses AI to prototype, research, and explore client angles—without handing over the reins. 05:xx — The trampoline metaphor: Collaborate with AI while preserving judgment and voice. 06:xx — Three practices: No-AI time, voice/values injection, and owning the "why." 07:xx — Closing image: The child's imperfect sand monster and the call to keep imagining first. Call to action If this episode sparked ideas, please like, follow, and subscribe to the SuperCreativity Podcast—and share it with someone who geeks out about creativity and AI. 👉 Subscribe here: https://link.chtbl.com/scp

  26. 341

    What Matters Next: Kate O'Neill on Human-Centric Tech and Making Decisions in the Age of AI #353

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, host James Taylor interviews tech humanist Kate O'Neill, founder and CEO of KO Insights and author of the new book What Matters Next: A Leader's Guide to Making Human-Friendly Tech Decisions in a World That's Moving Too Fast. Kate has advised global organizations like Google, Adobe, Microsoft, and the United Nations on how to design technology and digital transformation strategies that are ethical, human-centered, and built to last. In this conversation, she explains why we must move beyond shallow futurism to embrace strategic foresight, how to distinguish transformation from innovation, and why meaning is the most important compass for the future of leadership. Whether you're a CEO, innovator, strategist, or simply curious about the future of humanity and technology, this episode will equip you with frameworks for clearer decision-making and sustainable success. Key Takeaways: Transformation ≠ Innovation: Transformation is about catching up; innovation is about moving ahead. Strategic foresight is not futurism: Leaders must develop insights and foresight simultaneously to navigate fast-changing environments. Meaning drives decision-making: Whether semantic, emotional, or strategic—understanding "what matters" is the key to human-centered leadership. Synthetic data and digital twins offer powerful tools to test future-facing decisions without risking real-world failures. Cross-pollination of ideas across disciplines is where creativity and insight thrive. Notable Quotes: "Transformation is catching up. Innovation is moving ahead." – Kate O'Neill "Leaders need clearer thinking, not shinier tools." "Foresight is not about predicting the future—it's about preparing for meaningful outcomes." "We don't need timid incrementalism—we need right-sized steps into what matters next." "AI lets us build serendipity into our thinking—if we use it thoughtfully." Timestamps: 00:09 – Welcome and Kate O'Neill intro: Tech Humanist and KO Insights founder 01:14 – Her early career at Netflix and evolution into strategic foresight 03:59 – Why Kate rejects futurism in favor of actionable foresight 06:37 – Lessons from visionary leaders and bad leadership 08:40 – Speaking truth to power and confronting with compassion 10:57 – Innovation vs. transformation: what's the difference? 14:55 – Helping leaders ask better questions and clarify meaning 17:50 – Cross-functional collaboration and aligning around "what matters" 20:45 – From questions to insights to foresight: building an insights inventory 24:00 – Synthesizing partial truths into clearer decisions 28:30 – Using synthetic data and digital twins to stress-test strategy 32:48 – Decision-making in a world of high consequence 33:08 – Where Kate's ideas come from and how she catalogs insight 36:13 – Using AI to distill themes and surface cross-disciplinary insights 39:06 – Creative tools: Notion, MindNode, and visual decision-making 41:24 – Using AI to simulate dissent and refine your ideas 43:40 – Books that shaped What Matters Next: Good to Great, Blue Ocean Strategy 45:58 – Balancing artistry and business, strategy and ethics 47:18 – Where to learn more about Kate and KO Insights Links & Resources: 📘 What Matters Next by Kate O'Neill – Buy on Amazon 🌐 KO Insights – www.koinsights.com 📲 Kate O'Neill on LinkedIn – Connect 🧠 James Taylor's SuperCreativity Podcast – All Episodes

  27. 340

    More Human: Leading with Heart and AI – Marissa Afton on Awareness, Wisdom & Compassion in the Age of Machines #352

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, host James Taylor interviews Marissa Afton, co-author of More Human: How the Power of AI Can Transform the Way You Lead. Marissa is a Partner at Potential Project, where she works with companies like IBM, Eli Lilly, and Amgen to create more human-centered workplaces. Together they explore how artificial intelligence isn't here to replace leaders—but to amplify their humanity. Drawing from real-world examples, global executive interviews, and practical frameworks from the book, they unpack how leaders can become AI-augmented by developing awareness, wisdom, and compassion. If you're a leader navigating the rise of AI, this episode will help you avoid dehumanizing traps and unlock a more mindful, emotionally intelligent, and ethically grounded approach to leadership. 🔑 Key Takeaways: AI is an amplifier: It will magnify your leadership—for better or worse. Awareness, wisdom, and compassion are the three human capacities that will differentiate great leaders in the AI era. Time-freed ≠ time-used well: Leaders must reinvest AI-generated efficiency into more connection, creativity, and presence. Digital twins and psychometric AIs can help simulate and anticipate—but the human touch is still essential. Stillness enables awareness: The best leaders will use AI to create space, not just speed. 💬 Notable Quotes: "AI gives us the time to be better leaders—but we often just fill that time with more work." – Marissa Afton "The leader of the future is not more digital—but more human." – James Taylor "Awareness happens in stillness. Creativity happens in stillness." – Marissa Afton "AI is an exoskeleton for the mind and heart. But we still have to drive." – Marissa Afton "We must ask not only what AI can do for us—but what it can do to us." – Marissa Afton ⏱️ Timestamps: 00:09 – Intro to Marissa Afton and More Human 02:45 – How the book changed course due to generative AI 04:40 – What leaders misunderstand about AI's permanence 06:28 – Why some leaders want AI to make decisions for them 07:58 – How to use time saved by AI for more human leadership 10:14 – Psychometrics, sales calls, and keeping the human in AI 12:34 – The risk of outsourcing too much to AI 13:31 – Avoiding AI echo chambers and reinforcing bias 16:10 – The "exoskeleton" model of AI + human leadership 19:46 – Perception, creative seeing, and blind spots 22:34 – AI as a reflective coach for the future version of you 24:15 – Contrasting reactive vs. AI-augmented leadership styles 27:22 – Using digital twins to improve boardroom dynamics 29:28 – Why companies must train the human, not just the tool 30:15 – The Ferrari analogy: AI without driver training 31:26 – Where to find out more about Marissa and Potential Project

  28. 339

    The Barbell Guide to Mentorship — Why Every Leader Needs a Reverse Mentor #351

    Most leaders have mentors. But are they missing the other side of the barbell? In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor introduces a simple but powerful concept that could transform how you approach mentorship, leadership, and innovation. You'll discover: Why traditional mentorship alone isn't enough in today's fast-changing world The surprising power of reverse mentorship A 30-minute challenge that can shift your thinking and unlock new creative insights Whether you're a CEO, team leader, or emerging professional, this episode will show you how to balance your barbell—and why doing so could lead to your next breakthrough. Listen now and start rethinking how you learn, lead, and grow. #Mentorship #ReverseMentoring #Leadership #Innovation #JamesTaylor #SuperCreativity #CreativeThinking #GrowthMindset #FutureOfWork Timestamps: 00:00 – Introduction: From Dubai Keynote to Mentorship Insight 01:30 – The Barbell Metaphor for Balanced Mentoring 03:00 – Traditional Mentors: Wisdom from Experience 04:25 – The Power of Reverse Mentors 06:40 – How Younger Minds Can Challenge and Inspire You 08:20 – The Reverse Mentor Challenge: Try This Today 10:15 – Final Reflection: Balancing Both Sides of the Barbell 11:30 – Call to Action: What Insight Will You Discover?

  29. 338

    Will AI Have Its Chernobyl Moment #350

    In 1986, a single technological failure at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant changed the world. Today, AI is advancing at an unprecedented pace—but could it be heading toward a catastrophic failure of its own? In this episode, I explore: ⚠️ The real risks of AI—autonomous warfare, financial collapse, deepfake-driven misinformation 🧠 The incredible opportunities AI offers in medicine, sustainability, and creativity ✅ The critical steps we must take to prevent an AI disaster From AI replacing millions of jobs to deepfake propaganda making truth almost impossible to verify, we are on the edge of something huge. Will AI revolutionize the world for the better, or are we sleepwalking into its Chernobyl moment? Listen now and decide: Will AI lead us to disaster, or can we harness it for a better future? 🎧 Subscribe & Share if this episode made you think! 📌 Let's continue the conversation: What do you think? Will AI be our greatest tool or our biggest threat? 🔗 https://www.jamestaylor.me/  #Podcast #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #AIEthics #ChernobylMoment #TechDisaster #FutureOfAI #Innovation #AIRegulation Timestamps: 00:00 - The Chernobyl Disaster & AI's Parallels 02:15 - How AI Is Already Transforming the World 04:40 - The Dark Side of AI: Risks We Can't Ignore 07:20 - AI Catastrophes: Autonomous Warfare, Financial Crashes & Deepfakes 10:30 - The Ethics Problem: AI Doesn't Ask "Should We?" 13:15 - AI's Potential for Good: Healthcare, Sustainability & Creativity 16:40 - Preventing an AI Disaster: Transparency, Ethics & Oversight 19:55 - AI's Future: The Biggest Question We Must Ask

  30. 337

    The 3 Secrets of a Hit Keynote Speech - #349

    Episode Description: What makes a keynote speech truly unforgettable? Just like a hit song needs the singer, performance, and song, a hit keynote speech requires three essential elements: 1️⃣ The Voice – Your unique perspective and authenticity. 2️⃣ The Performance – How you deliver and engage your audience. 3️⃣ The Content – The message that sticks and transforms lives. In this episode, James Taylor breaks down what makes a speech compelling, memorable, and impactful. Whether you're a professional speaker or someone who wants to improve your communication skills, this episode will help you craft a keynote that inspires and educates. 👉 Which of these three is your biggest challenge? Drop a comment below! 🔔 Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more insights on creativity, innovation, and the business of speaking. 🎯 Key Takeaways: ✔ A great keynote speech is like a hit song—it needs voice, performance, and content. ✔ Your voice isn't just how you sound—it's your unique perspective that makes you stand out. ✔ Performance matters! If you have great content but poor delivery, your message won't land. ✔ Content must be relevant, memorable, and actionable—otherwise, it's just entertainment, not transformation. ✔ The best speeches inspire AND educate. 💬 Notable Quotes: 🎤 "If you sound like everyone else, your speech is completely forgettable." 🎤 "Great keynote speeches don't just inspire; they transform." 🎤 "Energy, storytelling, and emotional connection are what separate good speakers from great ones." 🎤 "When you nail all three—voice, performance, and content—you don't just give a speech, you create an experience." 📋 Show Notes: ⏱ [00:09] – What David Foster teaches us about great keynote speeches. ⏱ [01:20] – Why your voice (your unique perspective) matters. ⏱ [02:35] – The performance: How delivery affects impact. ⏱ [03:50] – Content: Why some speakers fail despite great delivery. ⏱ [05:15] – The formula for a hit keynote (and why you need all three!). ⏱ [06:30] – Key questions to ask yourself before your next speech. 📢 Call-to-Action (CTA): 💡 Which of these three elements do you struggle with the most? Let me know in the comments! 👇 📩 Want to learn how to craft a high-impact keynote speech? Subscribe to my newsletter for exclusive speaking tips! 🔔 Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more insights on creativity, innovation, and professional speaking.

  31. 336

    Why Your Ideas Aren't Ready (Yet) – The Secret Process of Idea Development #348

    In this episode of SuperCreativity, James Taylor takes you behind the scenes of idea development—how a simple spark evolves into a fully formed concept ready for the world. He reveals the five levels of an idea, from the sacred space of initial inspiration to the big stage where it impacts audiences. If you've ever wondered why some ideas thrive while others fade, this framework will help you refine and stress-test your creative thinking. Listen in as James shares personal insights, real-life examples, and actionable steps to help you nurture your best ideas before you share them with the world. Show Notes James Taylor shares the five levels of an idea and why great ideas don't arrive fully formed. The importance of the sacred space (Level 5) and why ideas need time before being shared. How trusted conversations (Level 4) refine and strengthen a concept. The dinner party test (Level 3) and why social settings are perfect for stress-testing ideas. The power of public experimentation (Level 2) using short-form videos and posts. Final stage (Level 1): Bringing the idea to the world through keynotes, books, and major content pieces. Why most people share their ideas too early and how to avoid that mistake. Key Takeaways Great ideas evolve through levels—they don't appear fully formed. The best ideas start in solitude (sacred space) before they are shared. Early conversations refine raw ideas before public testing. Social settings provide real-time feedback to improve clarity and resonance. Short-form content is a powerful testing ground before presenting an idea on stage. Rushing an idea too soon can lead to wasted potential—let it go through its levels first. Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction: How ideas actually develop 02:15 – The spark: Level 5 (Sacred Space) 05:30 – Testing in private: Level 4 (Inner Circle) 08:45 – The social test: Level 3 (Dinner Party Effect) 12:20 – Public experimentation: Level 2 (Short-form content) 15:10 – The big stage: Level 1 (Keynote, book, or full launch) 18:00 – Why most ideas fail: Sharing them too early 20:30 – How to apply this framework to your own ideas 22:00 – Closing thoughts and next steps Hashtags #SuperCreativity #IdeaDevelopment #Creativity #Innovation #PublicSpeaking #EntrepreneurMindset #CreativeThinking #AI #JamesTaylor #ThoughtLeadership #KeynoteSpeaker #GrowthMindset

  32. 335

    DeepSeek AI And Why Too Much Freedom Kills Creativity - #347

    In this solo episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor explores a counterintuitive truth: creativity thrives on constraints. While we often associate innovation with limitless freedom, history, psychology, and business show that well-defined limitations often lead to the most groundbreaking ideas. From Haiku poetry and jazz improvisation to AI advancements and low-cost prosthetics, James dives into how scarcity fuels innovation. He also shares practical ways to introduce constraints into your work to boost creativity, improve focus, and overcome choice paralysis. Key Takeaways ✔ Constraints Fuel Creativity – Having too many choices can stifle innovation, while limitations force focus and problem-solving. ✔ Real-World Examples – From Haiku poetry to MIT's low-cost prosthetics and DeepSeek AI's efficiency breakthroughs. ✔ Choice Paralysis Is Real – Too much freedom can lead to overthinking; constraints help you move forward. ✔ Practical Creative Constraints – The One Take Rule, Limiting Your Tools, Setting Hard Deadlines, and Reducing Resources to supercharge creativity. ✔ Less Is More – Instead of asking what can I add?, ask what can I remove? Timecodes ⏱ 00:00 – Why constraints drive creativity ⏱ 02:15 – Haiku, jazz, and literature: How artists use constraints ⏱ 06:40 – Business & tech: AI innovation and low-cost prosthetics ⏱ 11:00 – Psychology: Why the brain works better with limitations ⏱ 14:20 – Four ways to apply creative constraints in your work ⏱ 19:00 – Why removing options makes you more creative Full show notes at https://www.jamestaylor.me/

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    Elon Musk's Bold New Strategy: Why Exnovation (Not Innovation) Is the Future of Business #346

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor explores the concept of Exnovation—the systematic removal of outdated practices, technologies, and business models to drive efficiency and innovation. While the world glorifies innovation, many businesses, governments, and individuals struggle to let go of redundant systems that slow them down. Using real-world examples from Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Ford, GE, and retail and automotive industries, James highlights why exnovation is just as critical as innovation for staying competitive in a fast-changing world. Tune in to discover why subtraction, not just addition, is the secret to breakthrough success and how you can apply exnovation to your business and personal life. Key Takeaways Innovation is Overrated – Without exnovation, businesses accumulate outdated processes, leading to inefficiency. Elon Musk's DOGE Initiative – A bold attempt at government exnovation, cutting bureaucracy for efficiency. The Exnovation Mindset – Removing the old is just as important as creating the new. Real-World Examples – How Ford, GE, and retailers are exnovating for future success. How to Apply Exnovation – Audit, strategically eliminate, and embrace a growth mindset. Timecodes ⏱ 00:00 – Why exnovation matters & Elon Musk's DOGE initiative ⏱ 03:45 – The problem with innovation addiction and innovation theater ⏱ 07:30 – Business examples: Ford, GE, and exnovation in the automotive & retail industries ⏱ 12:15 – How to exnovate: auditing, strategic elimination, and a growth mindset ⏱ 15:30 – What should you stop doing today to create space for your next breakthrough? #Exnovation #InnovationStrategy #ElonMusk #BusinessGrowth #Efficiency #Leadership #AI #DOGE #FutureOfWork

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    The 5 Biggest Job Shifts You MUST Prepare for in 2025 - #345

    In this episode, James Taylor discusses the World Economic Forum 'Future of Work' Report 2025 which highlights the significant job shifts driven by AI, the creative economy, green jobs, and the rise of digital and remote work. He emphasizes the importance of soft skills and outlines key skills needed to future-proof careers, including creative thinking, AI fluency, and resilience. takeaways By 2030, 92 million jobs will be lost, but 170 million new ones will be created. AI is transforming jobs rather than replacing them. Creative thinking and innovation are the most sought-after skills. Green jobs are on the rise due to climate change initiatives. Digital skills are essential in a remote work environment. Soft skills like empathy and leadership are becoming more valuable. Resilience and adaptability are crucial in a rapidly changing job market. Investing in creative thinking will help you thrive. Understanding AI integration is key to future success. Continuous learning and adaptation are vital for career longevity. Sound Bites "Green jobs should be on your radar." "Soft skills take center stage." "AI and digital fluency are crucial." Chapters 00:00 The Future of Work: An Overview 02:47 The Booming Creative Economy 03:43 Green Jobs and Sustainability Careers 04:34 The Rise of Digital and Remote Work 05:29 The Importance of Soft Skills 06:26 Key Skills for Future-Proofing Your Career   Learn more at https://www.jamestaylor.me/

  35. 332

    The Surprising Link Between Temperature and Creativity #344

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor explores the surprising impact of temperature on creativity. He discusses how environmental factors, particularly temperature, influence cognitive performance and creative output. The episode highlights the optimal temperature range for creativity, the differences between divergent and convergent thinking, and personal adaptations to different climates. Taylor also draws a parallel between temperature in AI algorithms and human creativity, emphasizing the importance of creating the right conditions for ideas to flourish. takeaways The temperature around us significantly affects our creative thinking. Extreme temperatures can impair cognitive functions like decision-making. The ideal temperature for creativity is between 22-24 degrees Celsius. Warmer environments promote divergent thinking, while cooler ones favor convergent thinking. Adjusting workspace temperature can enhance creativity and productivity. Personal preferences and cultural factors influence how temperature affects creativity. AI's temperature concept can serve as a metaphor for human creativity. Experimenting with temperature can optimize creative flow. Small changes in the environment can lead to significant improvements in performance. Creating the right conditions is essential for nurturing creativity. Sound Bites "Warmer environments encourage divergent thinking." "Cooler spaces are better for convergent thinking." "Tailoring your workspace temperature can boost creativity." Chapters 00:00 The Science of Temperature and Creativity 02:29 Optimizing Workspaces for Creative Thinking 04:53 Personal Adaptation and AI Metaphors

  36. 331

    Building Your Virtual Advisory Board: SuperCreativity in Action - #343

    In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor shares exciting updates about the podcast's new structure and his personal journey of writing a book on SuperCreativity. Discover how James is blending human and AI insights to enhance his creative process through a virtual advisory board. Whether you're an entrepreneur, innovator, or creative professional, learn actionable steps to build your own virtual advisory board and supercharge your next big project. Show Notes: Introduction: James Taylor announces the relaunch of the SuperCreativity Podcast with a new structure. The podcast now features three episode types: solo insights, expert interviews, and industry insights. James's Book Writing Journey: James reveals his decision to write and self-publish a book on SuperCreativity. The book will consolidate stories, case studies, and strategies from his global speaking engagements. He highlights the importance of accountability and inspiration in creative projects. The Concept of a Virtual Advisory Board: James introduces the idea of combining real and AI-generated advisors to guide creative work. Real advisors include industry experts Elaine Pofeldt and David Avrin. Virtual advisors, simulated via AI, include thought leaders like Ryan Holiday, Seth Godin, and Jay Papasan. Using AI tools allows James to receive diverse perspectives and actionable feedback. Practical Takeaway: Listeners are encouraged to create their own virtual advisory boards: Identify 5–6 advisors (real, fictional, alive, or deceased). Use generative AI tools to simulate their advice on a creative project. Use the feedback to strengthen and refine their ideas. Sound Bites: "Accountability is a powerful motivator in any creative endeavor." "AI tools make it possible to receive feedback from your dream advisors." "Inspiration often comes from sharing your journey with others." Chapters: 00:00 – Revamping the SuperCreativity Podcast 01:51 – The Journey of Writing a Book 03:20 – Creating a Virtual Advisory Board 04:55 – Final Thoughts and Next Steps

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    Robert Hannigan - The Power of Neurodiversity in Innovation, Cybersecurity, GCHQ and Counter-Intelligence #342

    In this enlightening episode of the Super Creativity Podcast, James Taylor interviews Robert Hannigan, former director of GCHQ and author of "Counter-intelligence - What The Secret World Can Teach Us About Problem-Solving and Creativity" Hannigan shares insights from his extensive career in cyber security and intelligence, discussing what the secret world of counterintelligence can teach us about problem solving and creativity. They delve into the history of Bletchley Park, the importance of neurodiversity in intelligence work, and how to foster a creative and effective work environment. Full show notes and links at https://link.chtbl.com/scp Key Takeaways: Creative Problem Solving: Lessons from Bletchley Park on fostering creativity and innovation in high-pressure environments. Neurodiversity: The critical role of neurodivergent individuals in intelligence and cybersecurity and how organizations can support them. Team Dynamics: The importance of diverse teams and creative pairs in solving complex problems. Ethical Discussions: The necessity of open discussions on ethics and politics within intelligence organizations. Environmental Influence: The impact of the physical and cultural environment on fostering creativity and innovation. Quotes: "I was trying to answer the question of how was it that Bletchley Park... created the world's first digital programmable computer." - Robert Hannigan "Tolerating that kind of eccentricity frankly is one of the interesting challenges for an organization, particularly a company, trying to engender creativity." - Robert Hannigan "It's really important that people can express any ethical concerns and discuss them and have them addressed." - Robert Hannigan "The blend of these different types of thinking and ways of looking at the world is massively powerful in creativity." - Robert Hannigan Timestamps: [00:09] Introduction to Robert Hannigan and his career highlights. [01:41] Robert Hannigan discusses his current focus and the fast-changing landscape of cyber security. [02:16] Insights from Bletchley Park and the ingredients for successful counterintelligence work. [06:07] The role of neurodiversity and eccentricity in fostering creativity at Bletchley Park. [10:41] The importance of teamwork and creative pairs in intelligence work. [13:38] Discussion on the impact of Elizabeth and William Friedman on US codebreaking. [17:18] The role of neurodiversity at GCHQ and the value of different perspectives. [20:06] Advice for managing diverse teams in large organizations. [23:13] Modern equivalents of Bletchley Park's 'tea parties' and fostering collective problem-solving. [24:38] Open discussions on ethics and politics within intelligence organizations. [27:15] Balancing optimism and caution in technology advancements. [30:33] Robert Hannigan's personal sources of creative inspiration and the importance of the environment. [32:01] Recommended reading for those interested in creativity and innovation. [34:02] Conclusion and where to learn more about Robert Hannigan and his work.  https://link.chtbl.com/scp

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    Sam Dixon of Womble Bond Dickinson - The Evolving Role of Lawyers in the AI Era #341

    Sam Dixon, Chief Innovation Officer of law firm Womblebond Dickinson, discusses the role of AI in the legal profession and the challenges of driving innovation in a traditional industry. He shares his journey from online retail to law and how he became involved in innovation. Dixon explains the different applications of AI in the legal sector, such as document automation and machine learning for document review. He also discusses the buy vs. build argument and the potential impact of AI on pricing and billing in law firms. Dixon emphasizes the importance of developing social intelligence and complex problem-solving skills to remain relevant in the evolving legal landscape. Takeaways Generative AI is a major focus in the legal profession, with applications in document automation and machine learning for document review. Law firms need to strike a balance between buying and building AI tools, leveraging existing software and integrating different systems. The role of lawyers is evolving, and skills such as social intelligence and complex problem-solving are becoming increasingly important. The pricing and billing models in law firms may need to adapt to incorporate the use of AI tools and technologies. Creating a culture of innovation is crucial in law firms, where traditional mindsets and billable hours can hinder progress. Sound Bites "Generative AI is able to do a lot of that work without the need for lots and lots of examples." "The key for me is creating that culture of innovation where it is part of the conversation and where people are enabled to suggest ideas and implement ideas." "I don't think lawyers need to be coders. I mean, query in the modern world of low and no code, how much coders need to be coders?" Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Sam Dixon and Womblebond Dickinson 03:33 Focus on Restructuring in Commercial Law 06:17 Applications of AI in the Legal Profession 08:06 Overcoming Resistance to Innovation in Law Firms 09:56 Two-Tier Approach to Innovation 11:56 Deciding Between Buy and Build in AI Adoption 15:23 Impact of AI on Pricing and Billing in Law Firms 22:04 Exploring the Potential of Data Licensing 24:52 Parallels Between AI in Law and Music 28:09 The Changing Role of Lawyers in the AI Era 30:00 Using Generative AI as a Sounding Board 31:53 Book Recommendation: Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom   Bio Sam is the Chief Innovation Officer of law firm Womble Bond Dickinson in the UK. He is also a practising lawyer in the firm's restructuring team. His innovation journey started in online retail in the early 2000s and led him to law via a brief detour through the world of DJing. 

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    John Craske of CMS - The Role of AI in Legal Firms #340

    John Craske, the director of innovation at CMS, discusses the firm's AI strategy and the role of innovation in the legal industry. He emphasizes the importance of fostering a culture of curiosity and experimentation. The firm has implemented an innovation department and introduced innovation hours to encourage employees to pursue their ideas. Craske believes that AI can enhance the efficiency of legal work and sees opportunities for collaboration between humans and machines. He also highlights the need for foundational legal skills and human skills like empathy and creativity. Takeaways Fostering a culture of curiosity and experimentation is crucial for innovation in the legal industry. Implementing an innovation department and introducing innovation hours can encourage employees to pursue their ideas. AI can enhance the efficiency of legal work, but collaboration between humans and machines is essential. Foundational legal skills and human skills like empathy and creativity are still valuable in the age of AI. Sound Bites "We're using our computers more like electronic typewriters for many years." "Innovation hours are like seed funding for ideas." "AI has captured the imagination of people in a way that lots of other technology has never had." Chapters 00:00 Introduction to John Craske and his role at CMS 03:04 The Development of Innovation Departments in Law Firms 06:44 Overcoming the Tension between Billable Hours and Innovation 09:26 Building a Team and Aligning Innovation with Firm Strategy 12:08 The Opportunities and Challenges of AI in the Legal Industry 15:23 The Importance of Human Skills in the Age of AI 27:23 Final Quickfire Questions   Bio John Craske is responsible for the innovation and knowledge functions at CMS, with the aim of helping their clients and business to work smarter: to find the right balance between client satisfaction, cost effectiveness, profitability and opportunities for our people. He leads their dynamic Legal Innovation, Legal Operations and Project Management, Legal Tech, Managed Legal Services and Knowledge teams. He's passionate about fostering a culture of innovation and encouraging people to be curious, ask questions and experiment. John is currently leading our firmwide AI strategy as tjeu look to use AI to supercharge our digital transformation programme. He regularly works with clients (and others in the legal industry) to help design / implement practical (and innovative) solutions to their challenges.

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    JD Meier - The Billion Dollar One Person Business #339

    JD Meier, high performance and innovation coach, discusses his focus on using AI to advance high performance and change how the world innovates. He emphasizes the power of one person businesses to impact and influence a billion minds. Meier shares his two-track transformation model for innovation, which involves sustaining innovation in the current business while also working on disruptive innovation for the future. He also highlights the importance of productivity and offers strategies such as setting three wins each day and reflecting on weekly achievements. Takeaways AI can be used to advance high performance and enhance senses One person businesses have the power to impact and influence a billion minds The two-track transformation model involves sustaining innovation in the current business while working on disruptive innovation for the future Productivity strategies include setting three wins each day and reflecting on weekly achievements Sound Bites "I'm all about trying to use AI to advance high performance" "I call it billion dollar solopreneur, not because you're going to make a billion dollars, but it's about impacting and influencing a billion minds" "You have your current business, which is your current business model... and then you have your future business model" Chapters 00:00 Introduction 05:07 The Billion Dollar Solopreneur 08:58 The Two-Track Transformation Approach 15:03 Improving Productivity with Three Wins and Reflection 31:07 Conclusion   Biography JD Meier is a High Performance & Innovation Coach who has 25 years of experience changing the world at Microsoft. JD was the former head coach for Satya Nadella's innovation team at Microsoft and is also the author of the bestselling book Getting Results the Agile Way. His WHY is to advance human potential and to help people realise their potential in work and life while his specialty is to provide proven practices combined with information models to advance a space. People at Microsoft know JD for innovation, productivity, and changing the world because he always took on big challenges and moved the ball forward.

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    Sir David Omand - How Spies Think: 10 Lessons in Critical Thinking #338

    Professor Sir David Omand, former UK security and intelligence coordinator, shares insights from his book 'How Spies Think: 10 Lessons in Intelligence'. He discusses the importance of critical thinking, the SEES model used by intelligence analysts, and the role of creativity in decision-making. He also explores the impact of biases, the Bayesian approach to probability, and the challenges of decision-making in high-stress environments. Omand emphasizes the need for diversity of thought and expertise, especially in the face of emerging technologies like AI and biotechnology. He concludes with the importance of ethical decision-making and recommends the book 'The Three-Body Problem' by Cixin Liu. Takeaways Developing critical thinking skills is crucial for making better decisions and avoiding biases. The SEES model (Situational Awareness, Explanation, Estimate, Strategic Notice) provides a framework for intelligence analysis. Creativity plays a role in intelligence work, particularly in finding innovative ways to uncover secrets and address challenges. Understanding biases and creating a safe space for diverse perspectives is essential for effective decision-making. Emerging technologies like AI and biotechnology require careful consideration and preparedness for potential risks. Ethical decision-making is important, and doing what is genuinely believed to be the right thing provides a solid defense. Sound Bites "We have a polluted information environment, which AI, I'm afraid, adds to with the ability to make deep fakes and to provide misleading information." "You can spot trends in technology, international affairs, domestic affairs and social attitudes, and then have the imagination to say, well, if that were to happen, what would it look like?" "The Reverend Bayes was an 18th century cleric in Tunbridge Wells, and he amateur mathematician. And he came across this rule, which we call Bayes rule named after him, which essentially relates the likelihood of something happening to which you've worked out to how you should then recalculate that likelihood when new evidence arrives." Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Background of Sir David Omand 02:32 The Polluted Information Environment and AI 06:18 The Bayesian Approach to Probability 09:00 The Importance of Explanation in Intelligence Analysis 11:34 The Role of Creativity in Intelligence Work 15:34 Navigating Biases and Creating a Safe Space for Decision-Making 23:29 Teamwork and Decision-Making in High-Stress Environments 25:25 The Importance of Expertise in Crisis Management 29:23 Preparing for the Challenges of Emerging Technologies 32:09 Ethical Decision-Making and Doing What Is Right  

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    The World's Most Creative People With Debbie Millman – #337

    The World's Most Creative People With Debbie Millman – #337 Named as "one of the most creative people in business" by Fast Company, Debbie Millman is a designer, author, educator, curator and host of the podcast "Design Matters," one of the world's first and longest running podcasts. In the 16 years since its inception, "Design Matters" has garnered a Cooper Hewitt National Design Award, six Webby nominations, and an Apple Podcasts "best overall podcast" designation. In 2009 Debbie co-founded with Steven Heller the world's first graduate program in branding at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. Her writing and illustrations have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, New York Magazine, Print Magazine, Design Observer and Fast Company. She is the author of seven books, including her latest, Why Design Matters, a book she describes as 'a love letter to creativity, a testament to the power of curiosity. It features nearly 60 interviews curated from her podcast show with guests including Brené Brown, Tim Ferriss, Anne Lamott, Seth Godin, Malcolm Gladwell, David Byrne and Maria Popova. These conversations explore what it means to design a creative life, the creative process, dealing with rejection, and the relationship between humanity and creativity. Welcome to the SuperCreativity Podcast Debbie Millman.

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    The Story of Paypal and the Entrepreneurs Who Shaped Silicon Valley With Jimmy Soni – #336

    The Story of Paypal and the Entrepreneurs Who Shaped Silicon Valley With Jimmy Soni – #336 Tesla, Facebook, YouTube, SpaceX, Yelp, Palantir and LinkedIn. What do all of these companies have in common? They were all formed, funded, or advised by a small group of men who founded or worked at one company, PayPal. Members of the PayPal Mafia as it's sometimes called, and who include Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, Max Levchin, and Reid Hoffman, have gone on to drive innovation and entrepreneurship in the 21st Century. Yet for all their influence, the story of where they first started has gone largely untold. In The Founders: The Story of PayPal and the Entrepreneurs Who Shaped Silicon Valley, award-winning author and biographer Jimmy Soni explores PayPal's turbulent early days. He also reveals the stories of countless individuals and hidden figures who were left out of the front-page features and banner headlines but who were central to PayPal's success. Jimmy Soni's previous book, A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age, won the 2017 Neumann Prize, awarded by the British Society for the History of Mathematics for the best book on the history of mathematics for a general audience. Welcome to the SuperCreativity Podcast, Jimmy Soni.

  44. 323

    The New Leadership Playbook with Andrew Bryant

    The New Leadership Playbook with Andrew Bryant – #335   Being an effective leader in a post-pandemic world goes beyond being good at what you do; it requires balancing empathy with accountability. In The New Leadership Playbook, self-leadership coach Andrew Bryant provides a practical guide to being human and understanding people, whilst simultaneously driving for accelerated results. For nearly 25 years Andrew Bryant has been transforming individuals and organizations with his Self-Leadership Methodology and has delivered training, coaching and keynotes on five continents in 20+ Countries to 200,000+ Executives.

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    The Creative Brain With With Dr Iain McGilchrist - #334

    The Creative Brain With Dr Iain McGilchrist – #334 My guest today says that in order to understand ourselves and the world we need science and intuition, reason and imagination. Dr. Iain McGilchrist is a psychiatrist, neuroscience researcher, philosopher, and literary scholar. He is a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, an Associate Fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford, a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, and a former Consultant Psychiatrist and Clinical Director at the Bethlem Royal & Maudsley Hospital, London. He is the author of a number of books but is best known for The Master and his Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World. In his latest book The Matter With Things he argues that we have become enslaved to an account of things dominated by the brain's left hemisphere, one that blinds us to an awe-inspiring reality that is all around us.

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    How Emotions Shape Our Thinking With Leonard Mlodinow – #333

    How Emotions Shape Our Thinking With Leonard Mlodinow – #333 How can you make better decisions? How can you improve your relationship with others? What can you do to live a happier life? My guest today argues that the answers to all these questions and more lie in understanding our emotions. Leonard Mlodinow is a theoretical physicist and author of five best-selling books including Subliminal, The Drunkard's Walk, and the #1 New York Times bestseller 'The Grand Design', co-authored with the late Professor Stephen Hawking. His latest book Emotional: How Feelings Shape Our Thinking explores the new science of feelings and offers us an essential guide to making the most of one of nature's greatest gifts.

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    Lean Innovation Problem Solving With Peter Newell - #332

    Lean Innovation Problem Solving With Peter Newell – #332 Peter Newell is a nationally recognized innovation expert whose work is transforming how the government and other large organizations compete and drive growth.  He is the CEO of BMNT, a Palo Alto-based innovation consultancy and early-stage technology incubator that helps solve some of the hardest real-world problems in national security, state and local governments, and beyond. He is also a founder and co-author, with Lean Startup founder Steve Blank, of Hacking for Defense (H4D)®, an academic program that engages students to solve critical national security problems and gain crucial problem-solving experience while performing a national service. Pete is a retired US Army colonel who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. From 2010 through 2013 he was the Director of the US Army's Rapid Equipping Force (REF) charged with rapidly finding, integrating and employing solutions to emerging problems faced in the battlefield. This experience gave him a unique perspective on how to anticipate competitive challenges and head them off quickly, whether on the battlefield or in the board room.

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    Innovation Is All About People With Alison Hawks – #331

    Innovation Is All About People With Alison Hawks – #331 Dr. Alison Hawks is the CEO of BMNT, Ltd and Executive Director of the Common Mission Project in the UK, and a recognized expert in military strategy and sociology.  Ali was previously the Director of Research of the Section 809 Panel, a US congressionally mandated commission tasked with streamlining and codifying defense acquisition.  She was a Lecturer at King's College London, Defence Studies Department, Assistant Professor at the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, and is currently a Visiting Research Fellow at the School of Security Studies, King's College London. She has also taught at Brunel University and the Department of War Studies, King's College London. Her doctorate thesis was in military sociology and Ali received her Ph.D. from the Department of War Studies, King's College London, and her MA in Strategic Studies from the University of Leeds. She holds a BA in Political Sciences from the University of California, San Diego. Welcome to the SuperCreativity podcast Alison Hawks…

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    Overcoming Resistance To Innovation with Jim Euchner – #330

    Overcoming Resistance To Innovation with Jim Euchner – #330 Many large companies today have begun to adopt the principles of Lean Startup, a methodology first adopted among Silicon Valley tech startups in order to become more innovative and agile in implementing new products, services and business models. However large corporations are not just bigger versions of startups. My guest today, Jim Euchner has studied how the Lean Startup concept can be applied to innovation within established businesses and has shared his findings in a new book called 'Lean Startup In Large Organisations'. Jim was Vice President of Global Innovation at Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, where he led the development of new businesses and incubated and launched five businesses on three continents. Prior to his work at Goodyear, Jim held positions as Vice President of Growth Strategy and Innovation at Pitney Bowes, Inc. and Vice President, Network Systems Advanced Technology at Bell Atlantic (now Verizon). Today his is Editor in Chief at the Research-Technology Management journal, Honorary Professor at Aston University in the UK, a member of the Scientific Advisory Council for the Nissan autonomous vehicle program and a co-founder of the MIT Innovation Laboratory, a consortium of companies interested in user and community innovation.  

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    Human Creativity in the Age of Analytics With Chris Jones #328

    Human Creativity in the Age of Analytics With Chris Jones #328 Chris Jones is a long-time journalist and short-time screenwriter. He has written extensively for Esquire, The Atlantic, WIRED, the New York Times Magazine, and The Wall Street Journal, and has won two National Magazine Awards for his feature writing. He was also a producer on Away, the Netflix series starring Hilary Swank. His latest book The Eye Test makes the case for human creativity in the age of analytics. The book seeks to serve as a reminder that if beauty is less of virtue in the age of analytics, a good eye still is. Welcome to the show Chris Jones.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

In the SuperCreativity™ podcast, creativity expert and innovation keynote speaker James Taylor interviews leading thinkers, innovators and performers and has them reveal their strategies and techniques to help you unlock your own creative potential. If you enjoy listening to conversations with creative thinkers, innovators, entrepreneurs, artists, authors, educators, and performers then you’ve come to the right place. Each week we discuss their ideas, life, work, successes, failures, creative process and much more. As a leading creativity and innovation keynote speaker James teaches and interviews creative leaders including Seth Godin, David Allen, Jonathan Fields, Amy Edmondson, Amanda Palmer, Chris Guillebeau, Tommy Emmanuel, Eric Ries and Donald Miller on subjects including; how creativity works, the creative process, what is creativity, how to generate ideas, creativity exercises, creativity research, creative block, creative personality types, theories of creativity, creative thin

HOSTED BY

James Taylor

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