Sir
Ernest Shackleton was a great explorer who found himself
and his crew in a life-or-death crisis when they had
to abandon ship in the icy waters around Antarctica.
It
was 1914, and Shackleton's expedition had planned an
unprecedented land crossing of the frozen continent.
When the ship got stuck in the ice and sank, the crew
began an unscheduled 18-month survival test. They stayed
alive as they moved among the drifting ice floes until
they eventually found an island, where they established
a camp. When their provisions began to run low, Shackleton
and several crewmembers boarded one of their salvaged
lifeboats and made a daring 800-mile voyage to a whaling
station. They returned with a ship, and all 27 men survived
the ordeal.
There
are two types of people during a crisis - those who
freeze and those who focus. Shackleton might have been
stranded in one of the coldest places on the planet,
but his creativity never froze. Instead, it was critical
to the team's survival.
As
I studied Shackleton's experiences, three principles
about leading with creativity during crisis came to
mind.
1.
Creative activity increases creative ability.
As
you become active in creativity, you gain more creative
ability. Many people would love to have creative ability,
but they've never done creative activities. When we
freeze, we stop creating. Shackleton practiced "routine"
creativity, for himself and for his crew. So when problems
presented themselves, he and his crew never gave up
on their ability to come up with creative solutions.
2.
The rulebook no longer rules.
Everybody
wants to give you the rulebook. David Kelley was right
when he said, "The most important thing I learned
from big companies is that creativity gets stifled when
everyone's got to follow the rules." And Thomas
Edison, probably the greatest inventor ever, would tell
people who visited his laboratory that, "There
ain't no rules around here! We're trying to accomplish
something." Structure and rules serve us well,
but legalism can choke our creative spirit to its death.
3.
God is the Great Creator.
It
doesn't make sense not to bring God - the Creator of
the universe - into the creative process. No matter
how much natural talent God has given us, God always
can make it greater, better, bigger. That's why I pray
for creativity. And when I pray for creativity, I ask
for two things - I ask God to give me an idea or give
me an example.
In
our fast-paced, competitive marketplace, few resources
are more valuable to organizations than creativity.
But during a crisis, which is when real leadership either
rises or falls, creativity often finds itself swallowed
by urgency. Who has time to think outside the box when
the box is collapsing around you?
Shackleton,
however, saw beyond the problems to the big picture.
He recognized creativity's importance in keeping him
and his crew alive and functioning as a team when they
had little margin for error in the bitter cold and isolation
of Antarctica. More than a skill, creativity was an
attitude in his life that enabled him to find solutions
to the obstacles they faced. When others would have
frozen - literally as well as figuratively, in this
case - Shackleton focused creatively on surviving the
crisis. John
C. Maxwell is an internationally-acclaimed author
and speaker on the subject of leadership. Learn more at http://www.johnmaxwell.com/. ©
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