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Subject: 
LEGO® Survey Reports: Creativity is Critical for New Recruits
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.mediawatch, lugnet.general
Date: 
Wed, 26 Sep 2007 14:04:29 GMT
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1051 times
  
ENFIELD, Conn., Sept. 26 /PRNewswire/

LEGO® Survey Reports: Creativity is Critical for New Recruits; ‘Office Politics are Stifling My Creativity

LEGO-Sponsored Survey Reveals State of Creativity at Today’s Fortune 1,000 Companies Company Joins Partnership for 21st Century Skills to Prepare Future Workforce

Note to job seekers:

Executives are concerned with creativity in the workplace, and you should be, too. According to a recent Creativity in the Workplace survey sponsored by LEGO Systems, Inc. and executed by Leflein Associates, Inc., executives at Fortune 1,000 companies nationwide, when asked to rate the most critical skill set the next generation workforce must possess, were more than twice as likely to rank creativity higher than collaboration, and rated it on par with critical thinking skills. LEGO Group initiated the survey as part of its ongoing Creation Nation campaign to unearth, celebrate and cultivate lifelong creativity.

“Creative people often cite a specific source as fostering their creativity at a young age and inspiring them to be who they are today. When you scratch beneath the surface of today’s creative world -- from corporate leaders to video game innovators to renowned writers -- myriad examples of LEGO inspiration are revealed,” said Soren Torp Laursen, President, LEGO Systems, Inc. “Creativity is at the core of the LEGO brand experience and serves as the compass for every decision we make. We know that fostering open-ended creativity at a young age helps children embrace a lifetime of critical thinking and creative problem solving; creativity that our children, the builders of tomorrow, will need in an ever-evolving and competitive marketplace. Our Creation Nation program is designed to celebrate and nurture lifelong creativity and to demonstrate how it has made and can make a difference.”

To underscore its commitment to the significant role creativity plays in shaping the future, the LEGO Group has this month joined the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, a group that has emerged as the leading advocacy organization focused on infusing 21st century skills like creativity and innovation into education. The organization brings together the business community, education leaders, and policymakers to define a powerful vision for 21st century education to ensure every child’s success as citizens and workers in the 21st century. The only toy manufacturer on the Board, LEGO Group will focus on communicating the importance of 21st Century Skills to parents.

Conducted last month, the LEGO Creativity in the Workplace survey canvassed 200 manager-level and above executives at Fortune 1,000 companies with more than 10,000 employees. Respondents’ job functions included: marketing, engineering, product development, business development, IT and creative and job titles ranged from manager to C-suite to president/chairman. Additional survey highlights are detailed below.

Why Creativity Matters to Businesses According to the survey, creativity in the workplace is more important these days because executives believe that it impacts the bottom line. -- Almost three-fifths (58 percent) of executives agree that creativity has a great deal of positive impact on their company’s bottom line. -- Virtually all executives (96 percent) agree that their own company could benefit from a formal creativity initiative.

Creativity in the Workplace Scorecard: West Beats South and Size Matters Believing creativity matters is one thing; doing something about it is another. The good news is that many companies are: -- 56 percent of respondents report that their companies are doing a great deal to foster creativity in the workforce. -- However, almost three-fifths (59 percent) of executives say their company’s entry level staff or management trainees are more creative than their own peers in management. -- This position is most striking in companies that do little or nothing to foster creativity. Almost three-quarters (71 percent) of executives in these companies with little or no focus on creativity consider entry level staff more creative than their own peers in management. -- Companies in the South are significantly less likely than those in the West to do “a great deal” to foster creativity in their workforce (43 percent in the South vs. 70 percent in the West). -- Size matters when it comes to fostering creativity in the workplace. Companies with 10,000 to less than 25,000 employees are 57 percent more likely than jumbo size companies with 25,000 or more employees to foster creativity a great deal.


“Office Politics are Stifling My Creativity!”

-- 45 percent of our nation’s top executives agree that office politics is the single biggest deterrent to creativity in their workplace. Workload (23 percent) and meetings (22 percent) tie for second. -- Interestingly, executives of companies that do little or nothing to foster creativity are most likely to be concerned with office politics (52 percent consider office politics the biggest deterrent vs. only 40 percent in companies that do a great deal to foster creativity). -- Companies in the Northeast have a particular problem with meetings; a complaint unrivaled in other regions of the country. Presumably too many meetings are getting in the way of their creativity. Executives in the Northeast are 55 percent more likely than their peers in other parts of the country to agree that meetings are the biggest deterrent to creativity.

And the Winner Is ... When asked to name the most creative CEO currently in office, survey respondents named Microsoft’s Bill Gates (40 percent) followed by Apple’s Steve Jobs (34 percent). Warren Buffett, Michael Dell, Martha Stewart and Donald Trump were a few other leaders cited for creativity.

More on LEGO Creation Nation Through its online web presence, events, and LEGO Creativity Awards, LEGO Group seeks to encourage children and adults alike to become and stay creative problem solvers at home, in their communities and in the workplace. Visit http://www.LEGOcreationnation.com to find profiles of individuals, organizations and companies that are actively fostering creativity and get inspired.

In the coming weeks the company will announce the first recipients of its LEGO Creativity Awards where 6-13 year olds were invited to apply for one of 10, $5,000 awards to fund any creative pursuit. In addition, the company will name the recipient of its first annual LEGO Children’s Fund grant, awarded to a charitable organization focused on fostering creativity.

LEGO Systems, Inc. (LSI) is the Americas (North America and Latin America) division of the LEGO Group, a privately-held firm based in Billund, Denmark. The LEGO Group is committed to the development of children’s creative and imaginative abilities through high-quality, creatively educational play materials, and its employees are guided by the motto adopted in the 1930s by founder Ole Kirk Christiansen: “Only the best is good enough.” For more information, visit http://www.LEGO.com LEGO and the LEGO logo are trademarks of The LEGO Group. (C) 2007 The LEGO Group.

http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/09-26-2007/0004670345&EDATE=

-end of report-



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