The creativity and innovation field is a rather smallish group of people. It feels like a community, I know most of my competitors, and, I wish them all the success in the world.
There are a few folks that have achieved nearly cult status within our community because of their unique achievements. George Prince was surely one of them. George was the co-inventor/enhancer of Synectics. Synectics is one of the few comprehensive models for problem solving used in corporate innovation. Kimberly-Clarke was one of early, successful, users of the method.
If you don’t know it, I highly suggest that you read Prince’s “Synectics-The Practice of Creativity” (or his partners/co-developer’s book, “Synectics,” by William JJ Gordon, which Prince contributed to). It’s out of print, but you can hunt down a copy. Whenever I visit the home or office of a fellow innovation practitioner, I invariably see a worn copy of one of those books on the shelf. Synectics essentially uses the power of analogies and metaphors to re-frame problems, which leads to innovative solutions. It’s a powerful creative thinking methodology, and as I understand, it was developed by using video observation of innovation teams. Remarkable and visionary work in the 50’s and 60’s, and George Prince was at the heart of it.
Synectics tools can be integrated and/or adapted to work with other problem solving methods, like Osborn-Parnes CPS, which is something I do. I instruct folks on the use of CPS in my business novel, Jack’s Notebook.
SynecticsWorld is the company that continues to offer innovation solutions based on this method today.
I never met George but I have a lot of respect for the work he did. And, beyond all this serious innovation stuff, he clearly had a whimsical mind. See his doodles — I love these! George passed away earlier this week. God rest his creative soul.
One response to “A Prince Among Creative Thinkers: George Prince, Developer of Synectics”
Thank you Gregg for this piece on George Prince.
I heard him speak the first time at CPSI in 1980 I believe. Then I heard him next time at Ned Herrmann’s 1st Whole-Brain Symposium in Key West. That is where I met him during the week the 67 of us from around the globe spent a week with Ned and each other.
One afternoon I asked if I could join him for breakfast.
That breakfast was one of the most meaningful in my life.
During the breakfast he invited me as his guest to attend the BASIC SYNECTICS COURSE, which I did that Summer immediately following CPSI. Bob Johnston was an associate at Synectics, Inc. then in Cambridge.
The greatest gift was received when I was waiting in their training room and George walked into the room as our main facilitator for the week.
Years later, during the time Merry was ill, George and I reconnected thru many email messages. He and his second wife Kathleen had begun doing work similar to some of the things that Merry and I had started doing earlier that year in a very sketch way and he shared a great wealth of their materials.
I will be honoring George as well this week through my weekly
Alan’s Cre8ng Challenges.
Thank you for the link to DOODLES and his website.
Alan