The business plan can be found here
creative strategic results
Export and Regional Wine Support Package (ERWSP)
| Draft guidelines for ERWSP grants released | September 2017 |
| Draft guidelines consultation period | September – October 2017 |
| Guidelines for ERWSP grants finalised and approved | October – November 2017 |
| ERWSP grants advertising | December 2017– February 2018 |
| ERWSP grants applications assessed | February – March 2018 |
| ERWSP grants funding agreements negotiated with successful applicants | March – April 2018 |
| ERWSP grants projects commence | From March 2018 |
| Wine Tourism and Cellar Door Grants applications open | From July 2019 |
Note: All dates are indicative and subject to Government approval.
We spend a lot of time talking about brands and brand advocates.
And, of course why not, since customer loyality and brand advocates are vital to the success of any business.
I recently came across this;
in lots of ways it goes against conventional wisdom but in so many ways it supports it , as in my opinion one goal to get customer advocates. By aiming at the very top we will gain customers that are not only satisfied with our products and service but are so happy that they want to tell everybody about it.
As Ross Beard puts it;
Customer advocacy is a marketing term for a customer-focused strategy that encompasses all aspects of contact a company has with its customers, including experiences with products, services, sales, support and complaints.
Customer advocacy is important because it provides marketers and business owners with a way to leverage their most loyal customers as brand ambassadors to build awareness, drive sales and increase revenue. In fact, research by BzzAgent, a leading word-of-mouth marketing company, shows that a customer advocate is 50% more likely to influence a purchase decision than a regular customer.
The following are the top four reasons why customer advocacy is important to your business.
A study by McKinsey & Company found that word of mouth is the primary factor behind 20-50% of all purchasing decisions. Interestingly, the same study found that word of mouth is most influential when a customer is buying a product for the first time or the product is relatively expensive.
This makes sense. These two scenarios will require you to do more research, seek trusted opinions and weigh up the purchase decision longer than you usually would.
As a customer, we all remember buying something that didn’t quite meet our expectations and then feeling buyer’s remorse. Often times, these purchases could have been avoided if we had a trusted opinion from a friend, family member or colleague.
How do you think Apple experienced so much growth in the past decade? Yes, they spent some money on creative advertising, but so did Microsoft (PCs) and Sony (mp3 players).
Apple’s products and their customer experience did the selling for them. This combination fuelled millions of brand ambassadors who told millions of other customers about their iPods, iPhones and Macs. Microsoft and Sony simply didn’t have the same passionate customers spreading word-of-mouth opinions about their PCs and MP3 players.
The lesson here is to create products and experiences that your customers love. You want your customers telling their friends about your products – both when they explicitly ask for recommendations and in passing conversations.
According to research by Nielsen that looked at consumer trust, 92% of respondents trust recommendations from people they know, which is well above any other information source. Ads on TV are only trusted by 47% of respondents, while online banner ads are trusted by a measly 33%.
This is probably no surprise to you. As a customer, you likely rely on friends’ opinions and you trust them more than any TV or banner ad.
But think about what this means for your business. How much money are you spending on paid advertising? How much of this advertising is not being trusted by your customers? In comparison, think about how much you are spending on customer advocacy.
I challenge you to consider customer advocacy an important part of your marketing strategy and allocate some of your marketing budget to create an advocacy strategy.
How much does it cost you to acquire a customer through word of mouth? This question can be interpreted in many ways, but essentially, customers you acquire through word of mouth cost you nothing from an advertising perspective.
I understand there may be some marketing initiatives that influence these customers and I understand there may be some costs associated with your customer advocacy programs, but all in all, it’s safe to assume the customers acquired through word of mouth were done so for less money than your other marketing channels.
From my experience, these customers are also less sensitive to price. Referred customers are less likely to haggle with you over cost because they have been referred by someone they trust. This inherently means they trust the price and value they get from the product or service.
According to a study by a team at Goethe University, customer referral programs were found to be a financially attractive way for companies to acquire new customers.
The study looked at information from a database of 10,000 customers acquired by a bank in 2006 and found that about half of them were acquired through referrals and the other half through direct mail and advertising. The analysis found that referred customers had higher margins, churned less and had higher customer lifetime values than other customers.
The point here is that customers acquired through customer advocacy can cost less to acquire and be more profitable than customers acquired through other paid and unpaid marketing channels.
Customer advocates don’t just refer new customers – they are also valuable repeat customers. They come back and buy from you regularly, they upgrade their packages more often and they effortlessly sign contract renewals.
There’s no better example of this than Chick-fil-A’s raving fans. This group is extremely profitable for the restaurant, making up 10-15% of its total audience. Chick-fil-A’s advocates eat at the restaurant four or more times each and every month. That’s at least once a week!
Imagine if your customers kept coming back every week.
Steve Robinson, Chick-fil-A’s senior vice president and chief marketing officer, says these die-hards “are crucial to the health of the business and help us grow. Our goal and strategy is to build special relationships with them.”
You can see from this example that, although we tend to focus on referrals being the big benefit of customer advocacy, advocates themselves also drive significant revenue through their repeat purchases and loyalty.
Customer advocacy is important for all businesses because we now live in a world where the most important person selling your product or service is no longer you – it’s your customer.
Buyers increasingly want to learn about products and services through peers – their trusted friends, family and colleagues. As a company, you need to be creative and find a way to put your happy customers in front of these buyers.
Apple found a way to create a passionate community of Apple fans who came together around a purpose for innovation and being different. They used these customers as ambassadors to spread their vision and sell a lot of products.
Chick-fil-A found a way to create ambassadors by doing lots of little things to create a memorable customer experience. By consistently exceeding expectations, they have created millions of ambassadors, with hundreds who will to dress up as a cow for “Cow Appreciation Day” every year.
Hubspot found a way to cultivate advocacy by creating valuable educational content and letting their customers do the sharing for them. Hubspot leads the movement away from outbound marketing towards new, fresh inbound marketing methodology. They create useful content so valuable to their customers that they share it with all of their colleagues via social media and email. Hubspot reaches millions of new customers each and every day through their educational content.
I challenge you to start leveraging your most loyal customers by creating a customer advocacy initiative. Allocate some of your marketing budget and turn these happy customers into brand ambassadors who will do your marketing for you – much more effectively.
Contact iwine hq today to see how we can help.
The ability to create great customer experiences has never been more important, particularly if you’re a winery in a highly competitive region.
However, if there’s one lesson I’ve learned working with Customers and achieving Success. it’s that the term “great experience” is probably the most relative phrase in the English language. “Success” to one winery rarely means exactly the same thing to another. That’s why it’s so important to create flexible processes and use a range of tools that allow customers to shape their own experiences.
A key part of that is Cuspidor, and statistics are increasingly pointing to self-service as a key driver of great experiences. In fact, research from Zendesk has shown that up to 67% of customers actually prefer self-service to speaking with customer service staff.
That’s where knowledge bases come in.
Building a great knowledge base is not a quick or easy process. It’s much more work than throwing together a few “help” articles and picking the right subdomain. However, it’s also a project that, when done right, can pay huge dividends across your entire organization.
Knowledge is currency in the digital world, and a great knowledge base can lead to better end-user experiences, decreased support costs for your organization, and a waterfall of new insights for your Sales, Marketing, and Customer Success teams (not to mention increased product adoption and user engagement).
Here’s how to get started:
An important first step in the process is codifying your customer personas.
If you’re a marketer, you’re probably very familiar and comfortable with the concept of buyer personas. If you’re not, buyer personas are a conceptual exercise designed to help organizations easily understand the most important things about their target customers. They’re an incredibly important part of building modern marketing and sales processes.
But when thinking about your customer personas, your buyer personas are not enough. Don’t get me wrong, they’re a great place to start and should certainly play a key role. But a prospect going through a sales process and an existing customer have very different needs, problems, and expectations. To best meet those needs with your knowledge base, you need to understand how they engage with your platform and how their needs differ based on their use cases, plans or account types, and more.
Once you’ve identified your customer personas, performing an audit of your existing knowledge content can help to identify gapsthat need to be filled. If you’re familiar with the concept of a marketing content audit, you’re all set. A knowledge base content audit is virtually the same process.
So talk to your salespeople, ask your best customers about their biggest challenges, pour through every support case looking for common themes, and keep detailed notes of every customer interaction.
When we redeveloped our knowledge base here at Uberflip, a content audit helped us discover some pretty glaring holes in our existing knowledge base content. To be completely honest, our old knowledge base resembled swiss cheese more than a dynamite resource for our customers.
A good rule of thumb is to ask yourself a common question about your product, service, or solution you’d hear from a customer. If you can’t immediately name a piece of content you have that you could send to a customer to help explain a feature or walk them through a process, you’ve got a problem.
This is the most important, challenging, and time-consuming aspect of building a great knowledge base.
We went into our knowledge base redevelopment expecting this part of the process to take between two and three weeks. After all, we were just answering the common questions that help guide our customers to success each and every day… how much of a challenge could it possibly be to document that knowledge?
Answer: a big one. Three and a half months later, we finally *finished*.
And I say “finished” with a tremendous amount of hesitation since a knowledge base, as Jesse Eisenberg reminded us in The Social Network, is a lot like fashion – it’s never finished. There will always be new questions to answer, new ways or mediums with which to answer them, and new use cases to help your customers explore.
But your knowledge base has to be where they live. The key is to develop a process that makes it easy from the get-go.
Get your team together and answer the following questions:
Once you’ve established some answers, you’ll have a solid framework to guide your content development efforts.
Imagine you walked into a grocery store and found all of the food left in a big pile in the middle of the store. Wouldn’t be a great experience, would it?
Unfortunately, too many knowledge bases take this type of approach to education and learning. To the end user, it can be a bit like drinking through a firehose. When it comes to structuring your content, it’s crucial to make it easy for your customers to find what they’re looking for based on their own unique circumstances, situations, or use cases.
At Uberflip, we create Marketing Streams of content for specific types of users, specific plans, and sometimes even specific users themselves. This allows us to position our content in the proper context and encourage users to consume multiple pieces of helpful content on any given visit.
Providing this type of context is the difference between a so-so user experience and one that helps your customers truly master your product, services, or platform.
A great knowledge base can be a wealth of insight for your team.
Understanding which articles and videos are being consumed can help guide your customer success efforts by letting you know where you need to spend more time from a content creation standpoint. If a particular article or video is getting a lot of views but you’re still fielding lots of questions, chances are that article needs to be re-written or that video re-recorded.
In the example below from the Uberflip Knowledge Base, it’s easy for us to understand how well our article on “How to Add a Custom Domain – HTTP or HTTPS” is helping customers by looking at the ratio of Views to Click-Throughs. The higher the ratio, the less the article is helping.
As well, when you understand what your users are looking for, or more importantly, what they’re struggling with, it’s easy to be proactive from a customer success perspective.
Insights are great, but simply tracking data isn’t enough to understand whether your knowledge base is being used. If you’re not proactively working to turn those insights into action you’re missing a huge opportunity.
That’s why a great knowledge base should be integrated with other tools in your marketing and sales toolkit like Google Analytics, social sharing tools like AddThis, commenting tools like Disqus, and marketing automation tools like HubSpot,Marketo, Eloqua, Pardot, Act-On, and MailChimp.
For example, here at Uberflip our knowledge base is integrated with HubSpot. This gives our marketing team the ability to actively use knowledge base content consumption in our lead nurturing process (changing lead scores or sending automated emails) and allows our customer success team to have user-level insight into potential areas of opportunity or concern.
First and foremost, your knowledge base should look awesome. Far too often knowledge bases are the forgotten stepchild when it comes to user experience design and end up looking more like pumpkins than carriages.
When we redeveloped our knowledge base, we decided to use a Hub to take advantage of its native design features (and of course because it’s an awesomeuse case for our own product).
Additionally, a great knowledge base should also have powerful search functionality that can surface not only the right content, but the right content in the right context (say that five times fast). It should be easy to find, from search engines like Google or Bing, from within your app, from your website, or in the email signatures of your employees. It also needs to be mobile friendly and accessible on any device.
Accessibility should also extend to your Support and Success teams. Your knowledge base must enable them to adapt on the fly and easily create new content to solve new customer questions.
A great knowledge base is a labour of love. As much as you can, you should try to make it evident that there is a caring team on the other side of the computer screen from your customers.
Here at Uberflip, we use a Marketing Stream to highlight the human side of our Success Team. Instagram photos from team outings, day-to-day Uberflip shenanigans, and brief bios help let our customers know that we care and we’re here to help when needed.
Your Knowledge Base is a Cornerstone
In the few weeks since we’ve re-launched the Uberflip Knowledge Base, we’ve seen customer engagement with it go through the roof and have gotten nothing but positive feedback from our customers, partners, and the Uberflip team.
When creating your own knowledge base, ensure that it’s customer-centric, regularly audited and updated with new content, well-structured, optimized from a metrics and integrations standpoint, readily accessible, and truly showcases that you care about your customers’ success.
A great knowledge base is certainly not the be-all-and-end-all of a great customer experience, but it’s a must-have foundation.
So start building.
based upon original article by SAM BRENNAND
we certainly aren’t driving into the countryside for wine alone
Experiences are also part of the package – be they winery tours, exclusive tastings or varietal blending workshops such as those offered by Wolf Blass, Wynns and Tahbilk, all of which offer the chance to take a home a personalised bottle of your own unique wine. Many cellar doors double as museums or art galleries, and musical entertainment is also commonplace: Hunter Valley’s Hope Estate, Yarra Valley’s Domaine Chandon and Margaret River’s Leeuwin Estate continue to host some of the world’s biggest acts.
It’s unsurprising to find that the wine itself has become secondary in this modern age of wine tourism. The internet puts the world’s wines a mouse-click away, so we certainly aren’t driving into the countryside for wine alone.
33% of people leave reviews when service was either extremely good or extremely bad. Another 25% said they leave reviews when service was really good.
Whether your online reviews are positive or negative, it is always a good idea to respond to them. After all, it is nice to know why customers aren’t returning to your restaurant or why they love it.
The results from a recent study show that 67% of people say online reviews impact their purchasing decisions. More than half of the people also said online reviews are absolutely part of their decision-making process.
This means they are reading your reviews – both the good and the bad. And, this is why it’s so important to monitor your reviews and respond to them.
If you can turn a negative review into a positive one, you’ve shown you respect and appreciate your patrons. (tweet this) This leaves review-seekers with a positive feeling about your restaurant and might make them willing to give your restaurant a try.
Lastly, try to stay on top of what patrons are saying about your restaurant online.
Check out the review sites and sign up for Google Alerts so you’ll be double sure to notice when something is posted about your restaurant online.
or alternatively let us do it for you
George Kneller quoted, “Creativity, it has been said, consists largely of rearranging what we know in order to find out what we don’t know. Hence, to think creatively, we must be able to look afresh at what we normally take for granted.” Critical thinking is a very important tool in any creative endeavour.Critical thinking is a friend of creativity, not a foe! CREATIVITY AND CRITICAL THINKING: FRIENDS, NOT FOES!



Critical thinking Critical Thinking, also called critical analysis, is clear, rational thinking involving critique. Its details vary amongst those who define it. According to Barry K. Beyer (1995), critical thinking means making clear, reasoned judgments.

During the process of critical thinking, ideas should be reasoned, well thought out, and judged.[1] The National Council for Excellence in Critical Thinking[2] defines critical thinking as the ‘intellectually disciplined process of actively and skillfully conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, synthesizing, and/or evaluating information gathered from, or generated by, observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or communication, as a guide to belief and action.’[3]
One of the main purposes of a good education is to learn to think critically. Critical thinking leads to one of the highest forms of human knowing.
Creative thinking is divergent, critical thinking is convergent; whereas creative thinking tries to create something new, critical thinking seeks to assess worth or validity in something that exists; whereas creative thinking is carried on by violating accepted principles, critical thinking is carried on by applying accepted principles.
Although creative and critical thinking may very well be different sides of the same coin they are not identical (Beyer, 1987, p.35). Critical Thinking vs. Creative Thinking
Fake news is running rampant on the internet, but blaming social media sites like Facebook for not filtering it out doesn’t address the larger issue at hand. Bogusnews isn’t the real problem: The problem is that we undervalue the type of critical thinking needed to spot it.
We shouldn’t expect a social media site to tell us what is and is not real. We are bombarded with nonsense on a daily basis, and navigating through it is a life skill we must learn. We can’t expect others to do it for us.
A lack of critical thinking and scepticism creates problems beyond politics. It makes us vulnerable to scams and pyramid schemes as well as phoney products like weight-loss drugs and “miracle cures” that are really only as effective as placebos. It leads us to ignore existential threats like global warming and perpetuates harmful conspiracy theories such as the idea that vaccines cause autism.
If there’s overwhelming evidence for something—like man-made climate change—and you don’t believe it, you aren’t being a sceptic, you are in denial. Being sceptical means demanding evidence, not ignoring it.
In this new age of social media, our news is no longer being filtered through major media outlets that have teams of meticulous and principled fact checkers. As a result, empiricism is more important than ever. We all must be trained to navigate through the false information, and we can do that by thinking like scientists.
Our ideologies blind us and bias our behaviour. For that reason, we should all be empiricists, not ideologues. Empiricists form their beliefs and opinions about the world based on facts and observation; ideologues, by definition, are uncompromising, dogmatic, and committed to specific principles. They are therefore unlikely to change their views based on new evidence. By self-identifying first and foremost as empiricists, we commit ourselves to a worldview that is shaped by reality.
Unfortunately, we often don’t feel compelled to check the accuracy of something that already aligns with our ideals and worldview. This is bad practice. We must continue to demand evidence—even when the claims in question come from the side that shares our beliefs and values.
A recent Buzzfeed News analysis of Facebook activity found that while 38% of news shared on popular right-leaning Facebook pages was false, so was 19% of the news shared on popular liberal Facebook pages. Given that liberals have also been known to peddle pseudoscience and ignore facts, as can be seen by theanti-vaxxer movement, this should be no surprise.
Scientists and researchers are trained to sniff out untruths, but you don’t need to be a scientist to do what scientists do.
When scientists want to understand how reality works, they devise experiments to test their questions. If they want to know if a specific treatment works—for example, if a certain diet makes people healthier, or if a particular medicine is effective—they design a study that will determine whether or not a hypothesis is true. If the hypothesis is supported, it becomes the reigning explanation while it continues to be tested further. This is an ongoing process that should continue until almost no uncertainty remains.
Derren Brown, a famous British magician and mentalist (think David Blaine, but more focused on mental tricks) is an expert at appearing to have psychic abilities. He is also a sceptic who exposes those who try to claim they have them for real. In an interview with prominent evolutionary biologist and outspoken sceptic Richard Dawkins, Brown describes a simple test that he has suggested to non-empiricists in the past.
“I think it feels unfashionable to talk to people about the importance of evidence, of testing things,” Derren said to Dawkins. “A friend of mine, who’s a psychic, told me she puts crystals in her plants and they grow better. So I said, well you’ve got loads of plants—have you ever put two in the same window? Maybe just put crystals in one and not the other?”
This anecdote illustrates just how easy it can be to start testing your beliefs.
It is also important to teach children to demand evidence and think critically from an early age. A few months ago on the Late Late Show with James Corden, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson told a wonderful story about the way he and his wife gave their child a lesson in critical thinking.
After their daughter lost a tooth, they told her that they heard if you put a tooth under your pillow, the tooth fairy visits. That night the little girl did just that, and Tyson swapped the tooth for money while she slept. The next morning, after their daughter had shown them her gift, they asked her a question that prompted her to think sceptically. “How do you know it was the tooth fairy?” they asked, to which the daughter replied, “Oh no, I don’t know, I just know that there’s money here.”
With her curiosity stirred, their daughter began setting traps for the fairy—for example, foil on the floor to hear when it arrived—and when those didn’t work, she and her equally suspicious schoolmates thought of a test. The next one to lose a tooth would put it under their pillow—without telling their parents.
The next day, when the tooth did not turn into money, the children worked out that their parents were the perpetrators of the hoax. This doesn’t mean that you should crush all the magical beliefs that children have—it only means that you should teach them to question. As adults, we must do the same to set a good example. When something sounds outlandish or simply incredible, we must investigate. Without conducting our tests in controlled settings, it can be difficult to make any definite conclusions. But these steps will still likely help us identify many bogus claims without stepping foot inside a lab.
It is often said that we should let people believe whatever they want as long as they aren’t hurting others. “Ignorance is bliss,” as some say. However, we can no longer ignore the fact that when people don’t think critically, it actually harms others. When candidates who peddle false information get elected into office, they are more likely to also ignore crucial evidence when making decisions or policy. Do we want the person making decisions concerning climate change to be someone who ignores all the data that’s been carefully collected by scientists? That’s a recipe for catastrophe.
We must, therefore, encourage our friends to think critically and to test things. When they make claims or decisions that ignore the evidence, they should be confronted. We speak up when someone we love has an addiction or some chronic bad habit. We should feel a similar moral obligation.
Lastly, we all must all demand that our celebrities, influencers, and politicians also think critically and refrain from making claims that ignore evidence. Spreading lies and misinformation to millions of people can have some serious real world effects.Conservative or liberal, there’s just no excuse for it. Consistency is crucial.
Source: https://qz.com/858887/how-to-know-if-fake-news-is-fake-learn-to-think-like-a-scientist/

If the criteria are good ones, then a critical thinker can discriminate mere opinions and false beliefs from true facts and verifiable knowledge. Critical thinkers can determine false or unverifiable claims and can tell you why. Just because someone else writes something or says something does not mean it is true or has merit.
To be a good writer, critical thinking is essential. If you need some help with your writing, here’s an inexpensive and excellent resource:
Booth, W. C., Colomb, G. G., & Williams, J. M. (2008). The craft of research (3rd. Ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Turabian, K. L. (2013). A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, And Dissertations (8th. Ed.). The University of Chicago Press.
Take advantage of your education and learn something. Be a critical thinker. Don’t be a dupe. Source
Reference and note for above:
Jeff Foxworthy. (2015). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 9:48 a.m. EST, April 8, 2015, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Foxworthy
Leaders are expected to take right decisions after considering various facets of a given problem – just like an expert jeweller looks at a diamond. Logic looks at problems as a coin with just two sides whereas critical thinking is all about looking at the same problem as a diamond with multiple facets. Source
The fact is that a leader needs a fine balance of emotion and rationality to succeed. They need to connect with their people using emotion and decide what is best for them using rational thought.Critical Thinking is the connecting link between emotions and intelligence. Source
Critical thinking is an antidote to cognitive biases. When we think critically, we recognise our own assumptions, evaluate arguments and draw conclusions.Source
The truth is that conflicts if managed well, are an opportunity to understand better, get to the root causes, introspect, improve and learn. A well-managed conflict often leads to improved clarity, better relationships and win-win situations. Source
There is a difference between creative thinking and creativity. Creative thinking is the process of ideation (thinking). Creativity is about bringing that idea to life (execution). Source
If communication is defined as a meaningful exchange of information, thoughts and feelings between two living creatures, critical thinking is the engine that provides this meaning. Source






Standards should serve as a flexible framework to meet the academic, social, emotional, and vocational needs of diverse learners and NOT a forced march to meet the data-driven demands of standardised tests.

Rather than rating and sorting students according to a common and narrow set of testable academic skills, we should be celebrating and cultivating uncommon talents and divergent thinking in our classrooms.
As Arnold Dodge explains, schools should be honouring and uplifting the creative “characters” in their classrooms…
Many of our schools have become dry, lifeless places. Joy and spirited emotions have been replaced by fear, generated by masters from afar. These remote overseers — politicians, policy-makers, test prep executives — have decided that tests and numbers and drills and worksheets and threats and ultimatums will somehow improve the learning process…
When a student does well on a reading test, the results tell us nothing about how well s/he will use reading as a tool to learn larger topics, nor does it tell us that s/he will be interested in reading at all. What it tells us is that s/he is good at taking a reading test…
With the battle cry “College and Career Ready,” the champions of standardisation are determined to drum out every last bit of creativity, unpredictability, humour, improvisation and genuine emotion from the education process in the name of useful “outcomes.”
The self-righteous and powerful, if they have their way, will eliminate from schools kids who have character — or kids who are characters, for that matter…
But there is another way. If we believe that children are imaginative creatures by nature with vast amounts of talent waiting to be mined, and if we believe that opening children’s minds and hearts to the thrill of learning — without competition and ranking — is a healthy approach to child development, then we are off to a good start…
William Glasser, M.D., studied schools for over 30 years and in his seminal work, The Quality School, he outlines five basic needs that all human beings are born with: survival, love, power, fun and freedom.
How many policymakers today would subscribe to having fun or experiencing freedom as a goal of our educational system?
Just think of the possibilities if they did. Kids actually laughing in school and not being punished for it.
Students feeling strong enough to talk truth to power and not being silenced. Youngsters feeling free to write with creativity and originality without being ridiculed for deviating from state test guidelines.
And that’s before we even get to love.
Think of the characters that would emerge from such an environment.
Comedians, orators, raconteurs, revolutionaries, magicians, clowns, young people with agency and drive, having fun, not afraid to take risks or make mistakes. Not afraid to be children…

Reference: Critical Thinking vs. Creative Thinking
original brilliant article by jeevanshu.wordpress.com
It can be argued that the best CEOs are effectively designers–grappling with ambiguous challenges, probing for creative solutions–even though few would accept that moniker. Yet successful design-driven organisations are often distinguished by a close personal rapport between the top business leader and the top designer. That was certainly the case at Apple, between Steve Jobs and the person we unequivocally dub “designer of the decade,” Jony Ive. We’ve highlighted 25 other CEO-designer pairs in “Dynamic Duos” listen to Burberry CEO Angela Ahrendts talking to chief creative officer Christopher Bailey and not be struck by their genuine connectedness–there’s just no way to fake that energy. Or Nike CEO Mark Parker’s penchant for doodling with VP of design John Hoke. Or PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi’s unabashed support for her new chief design officer, Mauro Porcini. “Only the CEO can get the entire company to focus on something,” observes Google designer Jon Wiley. As Farhad Manjoo reports in “Google: The Redesign,” CEO Larry Page’s support has been the single motivating factor in Google’s recent embrace of a design signature.
Apple is the touchstone for so many business lessons, and the role of design has been key. In a quest to be the Apple of their industry, many businesses have embraced design. How design actually operates at Apple, though, has long been shrouded in mystery. Because Apple’s products work so seamlessly together, the assumption has been that Apple operates internally with high collaboration. Yet when contributing writer Max Chafkin set out to do an oral history of Apple’s design, he discovered something else: “The greatest business story of the past two decades is completely misunderstood,” Chafkin writes. As it turns out, the integration of disparate efforts–each often devised in secrecy–has defined Apple’s process.
The dividends of good design do not always play out according to Wall Street’s quarterly demands. Jon Rubinstein, who was Ive’s boss at Apple for a time (and later ran Palm), recalls how Apple’s introduction of the Cube in 2000 flopped, but, he says, “it set the foundation for almost all of our future products.” As Rubinstein explains, “We learned a lot about materials, curved plastics, touch switches.” The results you can see from the iPod to the iPad.
As much as we applaud the advent of the chief design officer, we need to acknowledge that there are many ways to build a cohesive design culture. Google does not have a chief designer, nor any hard-and-fast design “rules.” Instead, as Manjoo writes, “Google’s new process leans heavily on conversation and collaboration.” At Warby Parker, the top designers are co-CEOs. If there is any overriding model to design-driven solutions, it is that there is no single overriding model for anything.
For many years, there has been a rigorous debate about how best to measure the return on investment for design initiatives. It is a discussion that often relies on short-term cost metrics. When the Apple Stores were being developed, the financial penalties for including a Genius Bar seemed insurmountable. As Michael Kramer, the CFO of Apple retail at the time, says, “So you’re going to take away 20% of the sales floor? . . . What are we going to charge? ‘Nothing.’ Most CFOs would say, ‘Are you f$%^ing crazy?” If Apple hadn’t embraced a design vision, Genius Bars might never have been. And Apple Stores might not boast the highest sales per square foot of any retailer.
Retailers such as Target have long capitalised on the appeal of well-designed products, and today’s consumer is more discerning–and more responsive–than ever. No entity represents this trend better than online bazaar Fab, which has built a rabid following and $1 billion valuation in barely two years. We’ve seen this too in the design-driven resurgence of Samsung and the emergence of new brands such as Nest and Warby Parker, which have taken on traditional old-school approaches and exploded them.
In an era of big data, we can convince ourselves that if we just watch consumers closely enough and look at the numbers the right way, all our problems will be solved. But consumers will rarely alert us to opportunities they have not yet seen. The best designers can divine those opportunities from the gaps in user experience. That’s what has fueled the rise of breakthrough design-led enterprises such as Airbnb and Pinterest. It is a perspective that infuses “The Best Designs of 2013,” the finalists in our annual Innovation by Design Awards. No focus group had been clamoring for a Leap Motion Controller. Nor were Cambodian mothers agitating to add iron to their family’s diet, a challenge the Lucky Iron Fish Project cleverly surmounts. Only AidPod saw that packing medicine within crates of Coca-Cola bottles could create a low-cost aid-distribution network to remote, needy communities.
Beauty is way more than skin-deep. Apple has thrived not simply because each of its products is lustworthy, but because of the way they reinforce one another (unlike at enterprises such as Microsoft). The biggest challenge for Fab may not be whether chief designer Bradford Shellhammer’s taste will keep customers engaged but whether CEO Jason Goldberg’s aggressive expansion plans will prove too helter-skelter. Nike thrives not simply because it has well-designed shoes but because CEO Parker and design chief Hoke integrate shoe design with manufacturing, with marketing, and, yes, with financial realities.
When Samsung Electronics CEO Boo-keun Yoon talks about drawing inspiration “from the contours of a wineglass,” you can get the impression that it is the little things that matter most. “Sweating that detail for the experience,” as Hosain Rahman, CEO of Jawbone, puts it. But as you dig more deeply into the businesses of Samsung and Jawbone–and Flipboard and J.Crew–what you see is a meshing of both small-bore focus and big-picture vision. “Jenna [Lyons] is a designer all day long,” says J.Crew brand president Libby Wadle of the company’s executive creative director, “but she can also have conversations about real estate, about parts of running the business. . . . Her head is not in the clouds.”
Jeff Bezos, the CEO of Amazon, uses the expression “day one” to describe how far along his enterprise is in its maturation: Despite two decades of success and growth, Bezos contends, Amazon is at the beginning. You could apply that same perspective when assessing design’s impact on business. So much has changed in the past decade, it is natural to feel a bit of wide-eyed amazement about how far we have come. Yet given the chaotic, fast-changing nature of our world, and the increasing requirement for flexible responses to new challenges and new opportunities, there’s no question that design has only begun to reach its potential. Businesses cannot sacrifice “better” and “nicer” in order to be “faster” or “more efficient.” We need to do it all. Which means the design revolution is only at its dawn.
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