Zachary Aldwin Milkshake in the Boardroom
I have a coffee addiction. There, I have said it. The confession is finally in print. A day without caffeine is sad and gloomy. As a result I spend a large amount of time in coffee shops imbibing java-infused beverages. Last week I walked into the restroom of one of my favourite venues to be confronted by

a larger than life print of a man wearing sunglasses on the wall.

Someone had carefully cut mirrors into shape and placed them where the lenses of the sunglasses would be. How creative! How innovative! How different!

Pressure fosters creativity.

Right now with economic pressure on, creativity needs to come to the fore in order to stand out.

The stress will either crush you, causing you to shrink back or it will provide the impetus to explode out in a burst of creative excellence.

The coffee shop with the restroom decor had renovated a few months before but I never noticed the glasses because

I had not needed the facilities.

It made me question what else I was not seeing.

That is the essence of creativity; throwing out the preconceived and asking ‘What else am I not seeing?

What is my conditioning stopping me from seeing?

I strolled back into the main section of the coffee shop and deliberately studied the artwork.

There were a dozen details I had taken for granted, from the upside down cups used as lighting to the larger description of coffee on the wall.

The details all creatively add to form the vibe that the coffee shop wants to maintain.

Your creativity needs to work to create an end result.

Your ideas need to say something about you to your clients, or facilitate the transactions behind the scene in a way that makes things better.

The decor will not work in any other coffee shop; they will have to come up with their own furnishings that work for their unique system.

Uniqueness that people will not copy because it will not work for them will get you ahead.

Now there are some things that everyone will copy and that is okay if you are the first with the idea.

Take cupcakes in coffee shops.

Cupcakes became fashionable around the world a few years ago.

It took Zimbabwe a little while to pick up on it but someone started it here and then suddenly every cake shop was selling cupcakes of varying sorts.

Suddenly cupcakes are no longer unique on the menu.

What are unique are the beautiful, state-of-the-art, intricately decorated cupcakes, more than just a blob of icing on dry confectionary, that only one or two places offer and that people will order in lieu of wedding cake.

The temptation right now is to try differentiating on price, to be the cheapest.

While there is a long way for people to go in reducing prices from the level of “rip-off” to “reasonable”, simply cutting prices is not a creative way of generating clients and revenue streams. Creative price cutting would be the auction type system that low budget airlines utilise where the earlier you purchase the cheaper the ticket, but as the demand for tickets increases the price goes up the closer to the fly date you buy.

Their pricing structure has been an industry game changer.

Tried and tested will still work to a degree, but add to it the new innovative.

Budget airlines will not compromise on the backbone of safety but you are not going to get a meal on the plane either.

Break out of the non-existent box that you have put yourself in, refuse to shrink back.

Do not remain static and comfortable.

Think ahead.

Look for that uniqueness that will put you ahead of the game without compromising what you stand for.

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