WEBVTT 00:00:01.173 --> 00:00:04.802 I wanted to talk to you today about creative confidence. 00:00:05.443 --> 00:00:08.587 I'm going to start way back in the third grade 00:00:08.611 --> 00:00:11.532 at Oakdale School in Barberton, Ohio. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:11.997 --> 00:00:15.977 I remember one day my best friend Brian was working on a project. 00:00:16.490 --> 00:00:20.853 He was making a horse out of the clay our teacher kept under the sink. 00:00:22.116 --> 00:00:25.675 And at one point, one of the girls that was sitting at his table, 00:00:25.699 --> 00:00:29.313 seeing what he was doing, leaned over and said to him, 00:00:29.337 --> 00:00:32.391 "That's terrible. That doesn't look anything like a horse." 00:00:33.765 --> 00:00:35.543 And Brian's shoulders sank. 00:00:35.567 --> 00:00:38.880 And he wadded up the clay horse and he threw it back in the bin. 00:00:39.785 --> 00:00:44.089 I never saw Brian do a project like that ever again. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:44.695 --> 00:00:47.256 And I wonder how often that happens, you know? 00:00:48.096 --> 00:00:51.581 It seems like when I tell that story of Brian to my class, 00:00:53.026 --> 00:00:55.049 a lot of them want to come up after class 00:00:55.073 --> 00:00:57.090 and tell me about their similar experience, 00:00:57.114 --> 00:00:58.724 how a teacher shut them down, 00:00:58.748 --> 00:01:01.409 or how a student was particularly cruel to them. 00:01:01.433 --> 00:01:04.975 And then some kind of opt out of thinking of themselves as creative 00:01:04.999 --> 00:01:06.154 at that point. 00:01:07.155 --> 00:01:10.777 And I see that opting out that happens in childhood, 00:01:10.801 --> 00:01:14.096 and it moves in and becomes more ingrained, even, 00:01:14.120 --> 00:01:16.120 by the time you get to adult life. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:18.141 --> 00:01:22.278 So we see a lot of this. 00:01:22.302 --> 00:01:23.702 When we have a workshop 00:01:23.726 --> 00:01:26.472 or when we have clients in to work with us side by side, 00:01:26.496 --> 00:01:28.773 eventually we get to the point in the process 00:01:28.797 --> 00:01:31.118 that's kind of fuzzy or unconventional. 00:01:31.743 --> 00:01:35.281 And eventually, these big-shot executives whip out their BlackBerrys 00:01:35.947 --> 00:01:38.850 and they say they have to make really important phone calls, 00:01:38.874 --> 00:01:40.445 and they head for the exits. 00:01:41.018 --> 00:01:42.854 And they're just so uncomfortable. 00:01:43.290 --> 00:01:45.909 When we track them down and ask them what's going on, 00:01:45.933 --> 00:01:48.856 they say something like, "I'm just not the creative type." 00:01:49.568 --> 00:01:51.187 But we know that's not true. 00:01:51.703 --> 00:01:54.371 If they stick with the process, if they stick with it, 00:01:54.395 --> 00:01:56.616 they end up doing amazing things. 00:01:56.640 --> 00:01:59.590 And they surprise themselves at just how innovative 00:01:59.614 --> 00:02:01.785 they and their teams really are. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:03.108 --> 00:02:07.694 So I've been looking at this fear of judgment that we have, 00:02:07.718 --> 00:02:11.200 that you don't do things, you're afraid you're going to be judged; 00:02:11.224 --> 00:02:15.021 if you don't say the right creative thing, you're going to be judged. 00:02:15.754 --> 00:02:17.716 And I had a major breakthrough, 00:02:17.740 --> 00:02:21.907 when I met the psychologist Albert Bandura. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:21.931 --> 00:02:25.208 I don't know if you know Albert Bandura, but if you go to Wikipedia, 00:02:25.232 --> 00:02:29.374 it says that he's the fourth most important psychologist in history -- 00:02:29.398 --> 00:02:33.107 you know, like Freud, Skinner, somebody and Bandura. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:33.131 --> 00:02:34.543 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:02:34.567 --> 00:02:37.551 Bandura is 86 and he still works at Stanford. 00:02:37.575 --> 00:02:39.331 And he's just a lovely guy. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:41.082 --> 00:02:42.362 So I went to see him, 00:02:42.386 --> 00:02:45.888 because he's just worked on phobias for a long time, 00:02:45.912 --> 00:02:47.345 which I'm very interested in. 00:02:47.369 --> 00:02:51.607 He had developed this way, 00:02:51.631 --> 00:02:54.357 this, kind of, methodology, 00:02:54.381 --> 00:02:57.332 that ended up curing people in a very short amount of time, 00:02:57.356 --> 00:02:58.715 like, in four hours. 00:02:58.739 --> 00:03:02.175 He had a huge cure rate of people who had phobias. 00:03:02.199 --> 00:03:05.163 And we talked about snakes -- I don't know why -- 00:03:05.187 --> 00:03:09.369 we talked about snakes and fear of snakes as a phobia. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:10.271 --> 00:03:13.227 And it was really enjoyable, really interesting. 00:03:13.251 --> 00:03:18.194 He told me that he'd invite the test subject in, 00:03:18.218 --> 00:03:21.105 and he'd say, "You know, there's a snake in the next room 00:03:21.129 --> 00:03:22.733 and we're going to go in there." 00:03:24.421 --> 00:03:26.561 To which, he reported, most of them replied, 00:03:26.585 --> 00:03:31.365 "Hell no! I'm not going in there, certainly if there's a snake in there." NOTE Paragraph 00:03:31.389 --> 00:03:35.689 But Bandura has a step-by-step process that was super successful. 00:03:35.713 --> 00:03:38.619 So he'd take people to this two-way mirror 00:03:38.643 --> 00:03:40.938 looking into the room where the snake was. 00:03:41.368 --> 00:03:43.408 And he'd get them comfortable with that. 00:03:43.432 --> 00:03:44.988 Then through a series of steps, 00:03:45.012 --> 00:03:48.697 he'd move them and they'd be standing in the doorway with the door open, 00:03:48.721 --> 00:03:50.235 and they'd be looking in there. 00:03:50.259 --> 00:03:52.206 And he'd get them comfortable with that. 00:03:52.230 --> 00:03:54.920 And then many more steps later, baby steps, 00:03:54.944 --> 00:03:59.016 they'd be in the room, they'd have a leather glove like a welder's glove on, 00:03:59.040 --> 00:04:01.694 and they'd eventually touch the snake. 00:04:02.575 --> 00:04:07.179 And when they touched the snake, everything was fine. They were cured. 00:04:07.203 --> 00:04:09.323 In fact, everything was better than fine. 00:04:09.347 --> 00:04:12.600 These people who had lifelong fears of snakes 00:04:13.219 --> 00:04:14.729 were saying things like, 00:04:15.396 --> 00:04:17.374 "Look how beautiful that snake is." 00:04:17.398 --> 00:04:20.513 And they were holding it in their laps. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:21.673 --> 00:04:25.226 Bandura calls this process "guided mastery." 00:04:25.582 --> 00:04:28.169 I love that term: guided mastery. 00:04:29.081 --> 00:04:30.761 And something else happened. 00:04:31.222 --> 00:04:34.724 These people who went through the process and touched the snake 00:04:34.748 --> 00:04:38.251 ended up having less anxiety about other things in their lives. 00:04:39.519 --> 00:04:42.091 They tried harder, they persevered longer, 00:04:42.115 --> 00:04:44.871 and they were more resilient in the face of failure. 00:04:45.828 --> 00:04:48.548 They just gained a new confidence. 00:04:50.139 --> 00:04:54.218 And Bandura calls that confidence "self-efficacy," 00:04:54.599 --> 00:04:57.487 the sense that you can change the world 00:04:57.511 --> 00:05:00.335 and that you can attain what you set out to do. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:01.457 --> 00:05:04.221 Well, meeting Bandura was really cathartic for me, 00:05:04.245 --> 00:05:07.778 because I realized that this famous scientist 00:05:07.802 --> 00:05:10.962 had documented and scientifically validated 00:05:10.986 --> 00:05:14.377 something that we've seen happen for the last 30 years: 00:05:14.401 --> 00:05:18.190 that we could take people who had the fear that they weren't creative, 00:05:18.214 --> 00:05:20.940 and we could take them through a series of steps, 00:05:20.964 --> 00:05:24.360 kind of like a series of small successes, 00:05:24.384 --> 00:05:27.734 and they turn fear into familiarity. 00:05:28.315 --> 00:05:29.790 And they surprise themselves. 00:05:29.814 --> 00:05:31.817 That transformation is amazing. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:31.841 --> 00:05:34.237 We see it at the d.school all the time. 00:05:34.261 --> 00:05:36.967 People from all different kinds of disciplines, 00:05:36.991 --> 00:05:39.482 they think of themselves as only analytical. 00:05:39.506 --> 00:05:43.010 And they come in and they go through the process, our process, 00:05:43.034 --> 00:05:46.216 they build confidence and now they think of themselves differently. 00:05:46.240 --> 00:05:51.305 And they're totally emotionally excited about the fact that they walk around 00:05:51.329 --> 00:05:53.592 thinking of themselves as a creative person. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:55.566 --> 00:05:57.622 So I thought one of the things I'd do today 00:05:57.646 --> 00:06:00.848 is take you through and show you what this journey looks like. 00:06:01.478 --> 00:06:05.972 To me, that journey looks like Doug Dietz. 00:06:08.226 --> 00:06:10.140 Doug Dietz is a technical person. 00:06:10.164 --> 00:06:13.962 He designs large medical imaging equipment. 00:06:14.432 --> 00:06:17.692 He's worked for GE, and he's had a fantastic career. 00:06:18.242 --> 00:06:20.668 But at one point, he had a moment of crisis. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:21.066 --> 00:06:25.139 He was in the hospital looking at one of his MRI machines in use, 00:06:25.163 --> 00:06:28.410 when he saw a young family, and this little girl. 00:06:28.787 --> 00:06:32.239 And that little girl was crying and was terrified. 00:06:32.263 --> 00:06:34.809 And Doug was really disappointed to learn 00:06:35.642 --> 00:06:39.497 that nearly 80 percent of the pediatric patients in this hospital 00:06:39.521 --> 00:06:43.239 had to be sedated in order to deal with his MRI machine. 00:06:45.065 --> 00:06:47.144 And this was really disappointing to Doug, 00:06:47.168 --> 00:06:49.821 because before this time, he was proud of what he did. 00:06:49.845 --> 00:06:51.976 He was saving lives with this machine. 00:06:52.437 --> 00:06:56.957 But it really hurt him to see the fear that this machine caused in kids. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:57.438 --> 00:07:01.898 About that time, he was at the d.school at Stanford taking classes. 00:07:01.922 --> 00:07:06.573 He was learning about our process, about design thinking, about empathy, 00:07:06.597 --> 00:07:08.422 about iterative prototyping. 00:07:08.446 --> 00:07:13.135 And he would take this new knowledge and do something quite extraordinary. 00:07:13.159 --> 00:07:16.896 He would redesign the entire experience 00:07:16.920 --> 00:07:18.158 of being scanned. 00:07:18.560 --> 00:07:20.159 And this is what he came up with. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:20.183 --> 00:07:21.202 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:07:21.226 --> 00:07:23.799 He turned it into an adventure for the kids. 00:07:23.823 --> 00:07:26.081 He painted the walls and he painted the machine, 00:07:26.105 --> 00:07:28.884 and he got the operators retrained by people who know kids, 00:07:28.908 --> 00:07:31.418 like children's museum people. 00:07:31.442 --> 00:07:35.140 And now when the kid comes, it's an experience. 00:07:35.164 --> 00:07:38.770 And they talk to them about the noise and the movement of the ship. 00:07:38.794 --> 00:07:40.191 And when they come, they say, 00:07:40.215 --> 00:07:42.342 "OK, you're going to go into the pirate ship, 00:07:42.366 --> 00:07:45.883 but be very still, because we don't want the pirates to find you." NOTE Paragraph 00:07:47.314 --> 00:07:50.070 And the results were super dramatic: 00:07:50.974 --> 00:07:54.124 from something like 80 percent of the kids needing to be sedated, 00:07:54.148 --> 00:07:58.402 to something like 10 percent of the kids needing to be sedated. 00:07:58.426 --> 00:08:00.465 And the hospital and GE were happy, too, 00:08:00.489 --> 00:08:03.648 because you didn't have to call the anesthesiologist all the time, 00:08:03.672 --> 00:08:06.480 and they could put more kids through the machine in a day. 00:08:06.504 --> 00:08:08.411 So the quantitative results were great. 00:08:08.435 --> 00:08:12.101 But Doug's results that he cared about were much more qualitative. 00:08:12.463 --> 00:08:14.189 He was with one of the mothers 00:08:14.213 --> 00:08:16.523 waiting for her child to come out of the scan. 00:08:16.547 --> 00:08:18.913 And when the little girl came out of her scan, 00:08:18.937 --> 00:08:20.833 she ran up to her mother and said, 00:08:20.857 --> 00:08:22.797 "Mommy, can we come back tomorrow?" NOTE Paragraph 00:08:22.821 --> 00:08:25.049 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:08:26.046 --> 00:08:29.467 And so, I've heard Doug tell the story many times 00:08:29.491 --> 00:08:31.777 of his personal transformation 00:08:31.801 --> 00:08:35.147 and the breakthrough design that happened from it, 00:08:35.171 --> 00:08:38.282 but I've never really seen him tell the story of the little girl 00:08:38.306 --> 00:08:39.743 without a tear in his eye. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:40.055 --> 00:08:42.320 Doug's story takes place in a hospital. 00:08:43.021 --> 00:08:45.200 I know a thing or two about hospitals. 00:08:46.470 --> 00:08:49.640 A few years ago, I felt a lump on the side of my neck. 00:08:51.211 --> 00:08:53.406 It was my turn in the MRI machine. 00:08:53.964 --> 00:08:56.924 It was cancer, it was the bad kind. 00:08:56.948 --> 00:09:00.107 I was told I had a 40 percent chance of survival. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:00.903 --> 00:09:03.809 So while you're sitting around with the other patients, 00:09:03.833 --> 00:09:05.057 in your pajamas, 00:09:05.081 --> 00:09:07.109 and everybody's pale and thin -- NOTE Paragraph 00:09:07.133 --> 00:09:08.149 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:09:08.173 --> 00:09:11.438 you know? -- and you're waiting for your turn to get the gamma rays, 00:09:11.462 --> 00:09:13.114 you think of a lot of things. 00:09:13.138 --> 00:09:15.716 Mostly, you think about: Am I going to survive? 00:09:16.381 --> 00:09:17.649 And I thought a lot about: 00:09:17.673 --> 00:09:20.591 What was my daughter's life going to be like without me? 00:09:22.496 --> 00:09:24.914 But you think about other things. 00:09:24.938 --> 00:09:27.924 I thought a lot about: What was I put on Earth to do? 00:09:27.948 --> 00:09:31.190 What was my calling? What should I do? 00:09:31.363 --> 00:09:33.411 I was lucky because I had lots of options. 00:09:33.435 --> 00:09:35.394 We'd been working in health and wellness, 00:09:35.418 --> 00:09:37.516 and K-12, and the developing world. 00:09:37.540 --> 00:09:40.192 so there were lots of projects that I could work on. 00:09:40.612 --> 00:09:42.930 But then I decided and committed at this point, 00:09:42.954 --> 00:09:44.799 to the thing I most wanted to do, 00:09:46.234 --> 00:09:49.925 which was to help as many people as possible 00:09:49.949 --> 00:09:53.081 regain the creative confidence they lost along their way. 00:09:53.822 --> 00:09:56.646 And if I was going to survive, that's what I wanted to do. 00:09:56.670 --> 00:09:58.131 I survived, just so you know. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:58.155 --> 00:10:00.226 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:10:00.250 --> 00:10:06.869 (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:10:06.983 --> 00:10:10.888 I really believe that when people gain this confidence -- 00:10:10.912 --> 00:10:13.913 and we see it all the time at the d.school and at IDEO -- 00:10:13.937 --> 00:10:16.735 that they actually start working on the things 00:10:16.759 --> 00:10:18.746 that are really important in their lives. 00:10:18.770 --> 00:10:22.481 We see people quit what they're doing and go in new directions. 00:10:22.505 --> 00:10:28.954 We see them come up with more interesting -- and just more -- ideas, 00:10:28.978 --> 00:10:31.881 so they can choose from better ideas. 00:10:31.905 --> 00:10:33.928 And they just make better decisions. NOTE Paragraph 00:10:34.498 --> 00:10:37.991 I know at TED, you're supposed to have a change-the-world kind of thing, 00:10:38.015 --> 00:10:40.715 isn't that -- everybody has a change-the-world thing? 00:10:40.739 --> 00:10:43.866 If there is one for me, this is it, to help this happen. 00:10:43.890 --> 00:10:46.630 So I hope you'll join me on my quest, 00:10:46.654 --> 00:10:48.264 you as, kind of, thought leaders. 00:10:48.288 --> 00:10:52.529 It would be really great if you didn't let people divide the world 00:10:52.553 --> 00:10:56.515 into the creatives and the non-creatives, like it's some God-given thing, 00:10:56.539 --> 00:11:00.895 and to have people realize that they're naturally creative, 00:11:01.049 --> 00:11:04.578 and that those natural people should let their ideas fly; 00:11:05.665 --> 00:11:09.841 that they should achieve what Bandura calls self-efficacy, 00:11:09.865 --> 00:11:13.128 that you can do what you set out to do, 00:11:13.152 --> 00:11:16.840 and that you can reach a place of creative confidence 00:11:16.864 --> 00:11:18.548 and touch the snake. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:18.572 --> 00:11:19.724 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:19.748 --> 00:11:26.063 (Applause)