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SuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas

SuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas

Auteur(s): James Taylor
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In the SuperCreativity™ podcast, creativity expert and innovation keynote speaker James Taylor interviews leading thinkers, innovators and performers and has them reveal their strategies and techniques to help you unlock your own creative potential. If you enjoy listening to conversations with creative thinkers, innovators, entrepreneurs, artists, authors, educators, and performers then you've come to the right place. Each week we discuss their ideas, life, work, successes, failures, creative process and much more. As a leading creativity and innovation keynote speaker James teaches and interviews creative leaders including Seth Godin, David Allen, Jonathan Fields, Amy Edmondson, Amanda Palmer, Chris Guillebeau, Tommy Emmanuel, Eric Ries and Donald Miller on subjects including; how creativity works, the creative process, what is creativity, how to generate ideas, creativity exercises, creativity research, creative block, creative personality types, theories of creativity, creative thinking, educational creativity, divergent thinking, organizational creativity, creative cultures, and innovation. His work builds on other leading creativity experts including Julia Cameron, Sir Ken Robinson, Michael J Gelb, Eric Maisel, Scott Barry Kaufman, Twyla Tharp, Todd Henry, Jeff Goins, Richard Florida, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Steven Pressfield, Tina Seelig, Josh Linkner and many others. James Taylor shows us how we can all learn to be more creative.James Taylor Développement commercial et entrepreneuriat Développement personnel Entrepreneurship Gestion et leadership Réussite Économie
Épisodes
  • What Top AI Keynote Speakers Are Really Talking About Behind Closed Doors #365
    Jan 7 2026

    In this solo episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, keynote speaker and AI advisor James Taylor reveals the real conversations happening backstage, in green rooms, and behind closed doors with global CEOs, board members, and fellow AI keynote speakers.

    While public discussions about artificial intelligence often focus on tools, demos, and optimism, the private conversations are shifting to much deeper questions. This episode explores how leaders are redesigning organisations, rethinking decision-making, redefining value creation, and reimagining leadership itself in an AI-augmented world.

    James outlines the five non-technical questions senior leaders are now asking about AI, why judgment and creativity are becoming more valuable rather than less, and why AI is no longer a strategy but an environment leaders must design for. This episode is essential listening for executives, senior leaders, and organisations navigating the human side of AI transformation.

    Key Takeaways
    • AI is no longer a topic or trend. It has become an environment embedded into everyday work.

    • The most important leadership questions about AI are organisational and human, not technical.

    • In an AI-augmented world, judgment, sense-making, and values matter more than raw information.

    • When everyone has access to the same AI tools, value shifts to problem framing, imagination, and strategic choice.

    • Leadership is evolving from expertise and answers to clarity, direction, and organisational design.

    • AI does not replace creativity. It commoditises the easy parts and amplifies the hard ones.

    Key Quotes
    • "AI is no longer a topic. It's an environment. It's a way of working."

    • "This is not a technological problem. This is an organisational design problem."

    • "Leadership has never been about having the most information. It's about sense-making."

    • "AI does not replace creativity. It commoditises the easy parts and amplifies the hard ones."

    • "AI is not the strategy. How you lead with it is."

    Timestamps

    00:00 – What leaders really say about AI behind closed doors
    01:45 – From 'What is AI?' to 'How do we change how we work?'
    03:30 – AI as an environment, not a slide deck
    05:05 – Question 1: How organisations must be redesigned for AI
    07:20 – Question 2: AI as collaborator, not just a tool
    09:10 – Question 3: Leadership and judgment in an AI-rich world
    11:05 – Question 4: Where real value is created with AI
    13:10 – Question 5: What leadership really means now
    15:20 – Why values matter more in the age of AI
    17:10 – Final invitation to leaders: moving beyond the AI hype

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    7 min
  • Creativity in Large-Scale Contexts: How Environments Shape Innovation with Professor Jonathan Feinstein #364
    Dec 9 2025
    Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Professor Jonathan S. Feinstein, the John G. Searle Professor of Economics and Management at Yale School of Management, and one of the world's foremost thinkers on the science of creativity. His acclaimed new book, Creativity in Large-Scale Context, explores how creative ideas don't emerge in isolation—they evolve within complex networks of people, places, experiences, and guiding principles. Feinstein shares why pure inspiration is rarely enough in today's interconnected world, and how individuals and organizations can navigate vast creative systems by using "guiding conceptions" and "guiding principles." From Virginia Woolf's literary maps to Indigenous Australian painter Clifford Possum's dreamings and Steve Jobs's design insights, this conversation reframes creativity as a dynamic process that connects the individual imagination with its wider context. Whether you're leading innovation, designing strategy, or nurturing creative talent, you'll learn a framework for creativity that is structured, scientific—and profoundly human. Key Takeaways Creativity happens in context — Every idea is shaped by our networks of experience, people, and place. Guiding conceptions provide vision — They define what's worth exploring before the specific idea arrives. Guiding principles provide structure — They help us recognize and refine the key missing piece that completes a project. Artists and scientists share the same process — From Virginia Woolf to Albert Einstein, the most creative minds balance openness with rigor. Context builds confidence — Mapping your influences helps you understand where new connections can emerge. Notable Quotes "We create in context. Every creative act is shaped by the world we've built around ourselves." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "A guiding conception is your creative compass—it points to what's exciting, even before you know what form it will take." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "You can't connect everything; there are infinite possibilities. Guidance helps you find the fruitful paths." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "Artists are far more conceptual than we give them credit for—they're constantly modeling ideas in their minds." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein "Each of us follows our own unique path of creativity, but within a common human framework." – Professor Jonathan Feinstein Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Professor Jonathan Feinstein and his work at Yale 01:19 – Why context—not just inspiration—drives creativity 02:33 – How network models explain creative development 04:23 – Economics meets creativity: viewing ideas as systems of value 06:25 – From The Nature of Creative Development to Creativity in Large-Scale Context 08:01 – Defining "context" in the creative process 10:48 – Virginia Woolf and mapping the creative mind 14:42 – Place as context: Indigenous artist Clifford Possum and the art of mapping dreamings 18:19 – The need for guidance in large-scale creative systems 21:01 – Guiding conceptions: vision before ideas 24:16 – Guiding principles: Steve Jobs, Einstein, and the "missing piece" 26:54 – Teaching creativity at Yale: why artists and engineers think alike 28:54 – Creative pairs and his mathematician brother's influence 31:25 – The Kandinsky cover: visualizing the network of creativity 32:18 – His upcoming third book and the trilogy's big vision 33:42 – Where to find Creativity in Large-Scale Context and connect with Jonathan Resources and Links Book: Creativity in Large-Scale Context – Stanford Business Books Previous Book: The Nature of Creative Development Website: jonathanfeinstein.com Yale School of Management Faculty Profile: som.yale.edu/faculty/jonathan-feinstein
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    35 min
  • The World of Creativity: Lessons from 75 Countries with Fredrik Haren #363
    Oct 21 2025
    The World of Creativity: Lessons from 75 Countries with Fredrik Haren Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor welcomes back Fredrik Haren, the globally renowned Creativity Explorer and author of The World of Creativity: A Journey Across 37 Countries to Discover the Secrets of Creative Minds. Over the past 25 years, Fredrik has travelled to more than 75 countries, meeting everyone from artists in Afghan villages to innovation leaders in global corporations — all to answer one question: What is creativity? In this fascinating and deeply human conversation, Fredrik shares the most powerful lessons he's learned from creative people across cultures — from Thailand's idea naps and Finland's love of questions, to Japan's Kaizen and America's "move fast and break things." Together, they explore how curiosity fuels creativity, why we must fall in love with the process (not the outcome), and how to un-alienate people to bold new ideas. Whether you're a leader, artist, or lifelong learner, this episode will help you see creativity not as a skill reserved for the few, but as a global language of exploration, humility, and connection. Key Takeaways Creativity loves process, not product — The most creative people fall in love with the how, not just the what. Curiosity is the fuel of creativity — In languages like Finnish and Bulgarian, the word for "curious" literally means "love of asking questions." Developing vs. developed mindsets — Declaring yourself "developed" kills innovation; true progress means staying open and unfinished. Un-alienate new ideas — To introduce radical change, make the unfamiliar feel familiar through gradual storytelling and empathy. Balance exploration and reflection — Fredrik's creative rhythm alternates between global travel (inspiration) and quiet solitude on his private island (reflection). Notable Quotes "You can't master what you don't understand — and most people don't understand the creative process." – Fredrik Haren "If you want to be more creative, become more curious." – Fredrik Haren "Don't be a developed person; be a developing one. Stay soft, stay adaptable." – Fredrik Haren "Sometimes the smartest way to innovate is to make the alien familiar." – Fredrik Haren "Creativity isn't about speed or slowness — it's about knowing when to go fast and when to be patient." – Fredrik Haren Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction to Fredrik Haren and The World of Creativity 01:31 – What it means to be a "Creativity Explorer" 02:55 – Why so few people actively develop their creativity 04:22 – Loving the process: the German brewer's lesson 06:18 – Creativity as practice, not performance 07:56 – The student mindset and the power of curiosity 09:52 – Cultural biases in creativity and the danger of "developed" thinking 11:50 – Why progress stalls in the most advanced countries 13:43 – The psychology of complacency and lack of imagination 17:04 – "Un-alienating" ideas: how to make the new less scary 19:45 – Lessons from Thai "idea naps" and Sabai Sabai philosophy 22:35 – The neuroscience of rest and creativity 24:20 – Fredrik's creative process: selective seclusion and exploration 26:10 – Globalization and why sameness kills creativity 29:46 – Cultural fusion vs. cultural flattening 31:32 – Kaizen vs. "move fast and break things" — two creative speeds 32:33 – Profound patience: creativity lessons from Afghanistan 36:12 – AI, safety, and the speed of innovation 37:04 – How to explore creativity without leaving your city 39:30 – Storytelling, curiosity, and human connection 40:29 – Inspiration vs. respiration: why ideas need to be acted on 41:51 – Fredrik's current book recommendation: Breath by James Nestor 43:05 – Where to find Fredrik and pre-order The World of Creativity Resources and Links Book: The World of Creativity: A Journey Across 37 Countries to Discover the Secrets of Creative Minds Website: fredrikharen.com Recommended Read: Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor Connect with Fredrik: Search "The Creativity Explorer" on Google or LinkedIn
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    44 min
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