14

WE NEED IMAGINATION NOW MORE THAN EVER

by Martin Reeves and Jack Fuller

The idea of “crisis management” requires no explanation right now. Something unexpected and significant happens, and our first instincts are to defend against—and later to understand and manage—the disturbance to the status quo. The crisis is an unpredictable enemy to be tamed for the purpose of restoring normality.

But we may not be able to return to our familiar precrisis reality. Pandemics, wars, and other social crises often create new attitudes, needs, and behaviors, which need to be managed. We believe that imagination—the capacity to create, evolve, and exploit mental models of things or situations that don’t yet exist—is the crucial factor in seizing and creating new opportunities, and finding new paths to growth.

Imagination is also one of the hardest things to keep alive under pressure. Companies that are able to do so can reap significant value. In recessions and downturns, 14% of companies outperform both historically and competitively, because they invest in new growth areas.1 For example, Apple released its first iPod in 2001—the same year the U.S. economy experienced a recession that contributed to a 33% drop in the company’s total revenue. Still, Apple saw the iPod’s ability to transform its product portfolio: It increased R&D spending by double digits. The launch of the iTunes Store (2003) and new iPod models (2004) sparked an era of high growth.

With imagination, we can do better than merely adapting to a new environment—we can thrive by shaping it. To do this, we need to strategize across multiple timescales, each requiring a different style of thinking. In the current Covid-19 crisis, for example:

  • The initial emphasis is on rapid reaction and defense.
  • Then the focus shifts to constructing and implementing plans to endure the likely economic recession to follow.
  • As the recession abates, the focus shifts to rebound—making adjustments to portfolios and channels as we seek to exploit recovering demand.
  • Over time the situation becomes more malleable, and imaginative companies shift their focus to reinventing—seeking opportunity in adversity by applying more creative approaches to strategy.

In other words, renewal and adaptive strategies give way to classical planning-based strategies and then to visionary and shaping strategies, which require imagination.

We recently surveyed more than 250 multinational companies to understand the measures they were taking to manage the Covid-19 epidemic (see figure 14-1). While most companies are enacting a rich portfolio of reactive measures, only a minority are yet at the stage where they’re identifying and shaping strategic opportunities.

We have written elsewhere about what the post-Covid reality will probably look like and how to discriminate between temporary and enduring shifts in demand.2 But how can companies avoid having imagination become the first casualty of the crisis? Phrased another way, how can you develop your organization’s capacity for imagination? Based on our research for a new book on the imaginative corporation, we share seven imperatives.

FIGURE 14-1

Which measures are companies taking in response to Covid-19?

BCG surveyed more than 250 multinational companies on the actions they were taking in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. While most firms are enacting a rich portfolio of defensive measures, only a minority are identifying and shaping strategic opportunities.

Source: BCG Henderson Institute analysis

Note: Survey results as of April 1, 2020. Because of rounding, some totals do not equal 100.

1. Carve Out Time for Reflection

Crises place heavy demands on leaders and managers, and it is easy to lose the already slim time we might have for reflection. But we won’t see the big picture, let alone a shapeable picture of the future, unless we stand back and reflect.

Most of the time in business we operate with our instinctual “fight-or-flight” nervous system that evolved to help us in high-pressure situations, like running from a predator. This system narrows our focus. But lesser known is the parasympathetic, or “rest-and-digest” system, which evolved to manage mental and bodily operations when we are relaxed. We can imagine our ancestors in hunter-gatherer days engaged in the mental intensity of the hunt, followed by time back at home, reflecting on the day’s stories, perhaps envisioning how to hunt better.

We need to create the equivalent rhythm of action and reflection in business as we navigate this crisis. Ways to switch off fight-or-flight mode and support reflection include:

  • Taking a few deep in-breaths and longer out-breaths
  • Taking time over a meal to rest, digest, and reflect
  • Listening to or playing music
  • Going for a walk without your phone

2. Ask Active, Open Questions

In a crisis, we likely won’t have immediate answers, and we therefore need to employ good questions. The most natural questions in a crisis tend to be passive, for example, “What will happen to us?” However, the possibility of shaping events to our advantage only arises if we ask active questions, such as “How can we create new options?”

Creativity involves reaching beyond precedents and known alternatives to ask questions that prompt the exploration of fresh ideas and approaches. Some good questions to ask in the Covid-19 crisis might include:

  • Which needs or products are taking center stage?
  • What customer needs exist for which there is no current solution?
  • What are we not doing for our customers?
  • If we were starting over now, what company and offering would we build?
  • Why are today’s loyal customers still doing business with us?

3. Allow Yourself to Be Playful

Crises require goal-driven and serious responses. However, in times of stress, we tend to overlook the important human capacity of play to temporarily forget about goals and improvise. Biologically, play can be characterized as derisked, accelerated learning. For example, juvenile animals’ mock fighting is highly effective preparation for real combat.

In unprecedented, rapidly changing situations, play is a critical capability. As well as providing some much-needed stress relief—how many of us are currently working from dawn to dusk?—play can end up being, counterintuitively, very productive. We can make interesting new connections between ideas when we allow ourselves to loosen up from our regular, goal-driven, laser-focused, instrumental approach.

“Creativity is the rearrangement of existing knowledge into new, useful combinations,” Jorgen Vig Knudstorp, chairman of the LEGO Brand Group, told us. “Just like playing with LEGO Bricks, this can lead you to valuable innovations—like the Google search engine or the Airbnb business model.”

Sometimes nothing immediately useful will come of play, but playing at least allows us to practice imagining, improvising, and being open to inspiration—all important skills when navigating the unknown.

4. Set Up a System for Sharing Ideas

Someone, somewhere in your organization is likely being forced by circumstances to experiment with new ways of doing things. The imaginative corporation picks up, codifies, and scales these innovations.

Imagination doesn’t just happen on an individual level. Ideas evolve and spread by being able to skip between minds. Companies need to facilitate collective imagination. The key to this is allowing new ideas to be shared while they are still in development: creating forums for people to communicate in a casual way, without hierarchy, reports, permissions, or financial justifications.

Conversely, the way to kill imagination and the spread of ideas is to construct noncommunicating functional silos and to induce fear of not meeting the bar for “sensible” suggestions. In the name of “practicality” or “common sense,” many ideas are rejected without being explored. But it is hard to distinguish ideas with no eventual merit from those which are merely unfamiliar, undeveloped, counterintuitive, or countercultural. In a situation where there are no easy solutions, we need to open up rather than constrict the funnel for new ideas.

Every corporation had entrepreneurial beginnings. But successful corporations that have honed a stable, profitable, business recipe forget the messy, imaginative origins of the ideas upon which they were founded. Now is not the time for only executing a practiced recipe. We are facing a historic discontinuity, requiring entrepreneurialism and creativity.

5. Seek Out the Anomalous and Unexpected

Imagination is triggered by surprising inputs. Our pattern-seeking minds adapt our mental models when we see something that does not fit. And when we adapt our mental models, we entertain different strategies and courses of action.

To solve tough new problems, look externally. Examine accidents, anomalies, and particulars, and ask, “What doesn’t fit here?” Digging into what we find will prompt reframing, rethinking, and the discovery of new possibilities.

In the current situation, we might ask, for example: Why have some countries like Japan, China, and South Korea been able to break away from an exponential infection pattern? Or why are some cities suffering more than others? Or why have apparently similar strategies given different results in different places? Or what stopped us from being prepared for this crisis in spite of MERS, SARS, Ebola, and other ominous precedents?

6. Encourage Experimentation

Although a crisis stretches our resources, it is important to encourage experiments—even if only on a shoestring budget. Natural systems are most resilient when they are diverse, and that diversity comes from trying new ways of doing new things. Our ideas only become useful if they are tested in the real world, often generating unexpected outcomes and stimulating further thinking and new ideas.

For example, Ole Kirk Christiansen, the founder of the LEGO Brand, originally made homes and household products, such as wooden ladders and ironing boards, until the Great Depression of the 1930s forced him to experiment, and he tried building toys. This turned out to be a successful move at a time when consumers were holding back from building homes. After examining the international toy market, which was largely derived from wood, Christiansen was driven to experiment again by introducing toys made of a new, disruptive material—plastic. He reinvested a full year’s profits into new machinery and tools, at first making traditional toys, then creating building blocks. By 1958, these had evolved into today’s well-known “binding” LEGO Bricks. Soon after, the company abandoned all wooden and other toys to double down on the LEGO Brick Toy Building System).

7. Stay Hopeful

Imagination feeds off the aspirations and aggravations that propel us to seek a better reality. When we lose hope and adopt a passive mindset, we cease to believe that we can meet our ideals or fix our problems. In statistics, Bayesian learning involves taking a belief about a statistical distribution (a “prior”) and updating it in the light of each new piece of information obtained. The outcome of the entire process can be determined by the initial belief. Pessimism can become a self-fulfilling prophesy.

As a leader, ask yourself whether you are giving people grounds for hope, imagination, and innovation, or whether you are using pessimistic or fatalistic language, which could create a downward spiral in organizational creativity. Dealing with real risks involves taking imaginative risks, which requires hope.

“Never in our lifetimes has the power of imagination been more important in defining our immediate future,” Jim Loree, CEO of Stanley Black & Decker, told us. “Leaders need to seize the opportunity to inspire and harness the imagination of their organizations during this challenging time.”

All crises contain the seeds of opportunity. Many businesses, struggling now, will likely find a second life during and after the crisis, if they can keep alive and harness their imaginations. Imagination may seem like a frivolous luxury in a crisis, but it is actually a necessity for building future success.

TAKEAWAYS

Many businesses, struggling now, will find a second life during and after the pandemic. Cultivating imagination now may seem like a luxury, but it is actually a necessity for building future success.

  • Carve out time for reflection. Switch from “fight-or-flight” mode to “rest-and-reflect” mode.
  • Ask active, open questions. Reach beyond precedents and known alternatives to explore fresh ideas.
  • Allow yourself to be playful. Make interesting, new connections between ideas by letting go of the regular goal-driven approach.
  • Set up a system for sharing ideas. Facilitate collective imagination. Ideas are able to evolve and spread by being able to skip between minds.
  • Seek out the anomalous and unexpected. Look externally to solve tough new problems. Imagination is triggered by surprising inputs.
  • Encourage experimentation. Try new ways of doing things. Diversity makes our natural systems more resilient.
  • Stay hopeful. Avoid a fatalistic or passive mindset. Imagination feeds off the aspirations and aggravations that propel us to seek a better reality.

NOTES

  1. 1.  Martin Reeves, David Rhodes, Christian Ketels, and Kevin Whitaker, “Advantage in Adversity: Winning the Next Downturn,” BGC Henderson Institute, January 18, 2019, https://bcghendersoninstitute.com/advantage-in-adversity-winning-the-next-downturn-5853b4425db1.

  2. 2.  Martin Reeves, Philipp Carlsson-Szlezak, Kevin Whitaker, and Mark Abraham, “Sensing and Shaping the Post-COVID Era,” BCG Henderson Institute, March 29, 2020, https://bcghendersoninstitute.com/sensing-and-shaping-the-post-covid-era-c282cd227a4f.

Adapted from “We Need Imagination Now More Than Ever” on hbr.org, April 10, 2020 (product #H05JYI).