Brainstorming Skills

Duration: 40m | .MP4 1280x720, 30 fps(r) | AAC, 44100 Hz, 2ch | 534 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English
Brainstorming is a technique that was first introduced by Alex Osborne in the 1930s.

What you'll learn:
Explain What is Brainstorming
Describe the Brainstorming Principles
Explain the Brainstorming Process
Explain the Silent Brainstorming Technique
Explain the Question Brainstorming Technique
Explain the Structured and Unstructured Brainstorming Technique
Explain the Reverse Brainstorming Technique
Explain the Split Group Brainstorming Technique
List the Ground Rules of Brainstorming
List the Tips to Follow for Brainstorming

Requirements:
No prior knowledge is required

Description:
Brainstorming is a strategy that is generally used in a group setting to quickly generate a large number of ideas to help solve a particular problem. Hence, it is a method or technique to foster creative problem-solving for generation of new ideas and greater acceptance by all of the suggested solutions. So, brainstorming proves to be a quick and easy way to generate novel ideas for problem solving and innovation. Brainstorming technique helps bring out new and fresh ideas from each individual and present them in a systematic manner to all. Brainstorming foster creative thinking as it helps to provide the participants with an environment free of criticism for creative and unrestricted discovery of options or solutions.
Therefore, brainstorming helps to stir up the brain of the participants to think about problems in a creative or novel way. People thus come up with ideas that are driven by spontaneity, originality, and imagination without much processed thought or reflection. The human brain is prone to make associations. So, when a person hears a word such as 'danger', the human brain automatically searches for words that that particular person associates with 'danger' and offers suggestions such as fire, accidents, racing cars, electric shocks etc.
This same capacity of association of the human brain is useful for creative thinking in brainstorming. This is because although a single person can only find a few limited associations to something, a large group of people working together can produce several associations to a single word.
Also, the new associations of other people triggers a person's brain to work faster and search in much wider areas than it would without such stimulus.

Who this course is for:
Human Resource Professionals
Managers
Management Personnel
Employees

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