Content-Type: text/html Creativity in Advertising: Research on the "X-Factor" by Ruth Largay The University of Georgia Athens, Georgia Ruth Largay 5454 45th Avenue S.W. Seattle, WA 98136 206-935-6322 Creativity in Advertising: Research on the "X-Factor" ABSTRACT This literature review brings together and discusses nearly three decades of research on advertising creativity. The discussion of research is divided into two parts: 1) studies that address creative ability and the creative process in advertising and 2) management issues and creativity in advertising. In the second part, studies are discussed according to research focus: 1) initial questions, 2) creative vs. account personnel conflict and 3) personality characteristics and work habits of creatives. Creativity in Advertising: Research on the "X-Factor" The scientists of advertising can give you fact after fact after fact...but there's one little rub. Advertising is fundamentally persuasion and persuasion happens not to be a science, but an art. -- William Bernbach (Levenson, 1987, p. xvii) Creativity in advertising, the "art" of advertising, as essential as it appears to be for the success of most advertising, is a subject about which we know little. Since the mid-1970s advertising researchers have conducted research on creativity in advertising. Researchers have addressed the creative process of advertising copy writers, designers, creative directors and art directors. They have modeled the overall process of advertising production, paying particular attention to the creative process. They have conducted research aimed at helping manage advertising creatives, including surveys of personality characteristics, work habits, attitudes and creative ability. They have analyzed advertising for its creative content. In conducting these studies, advertising researchers have often drawn upon the vast literature on creativity from other disciplines, especially psychology. Yet today we do not know very much more about the creative process of advertising creatives or how to foster creativity in advertising than we did neary three decades ago. Back then, what we "knew" about advertising creativity came from the icons of advertising--advice and anecdotes from the likes of a Bernbach, a Burnett, an Ogilvy. We might just as well rely on them today. The efforts advertising researchers have made to study creativity in advertising have been pioneering. They are, by most of their own characterizations, generally exploratory or preliminary in nature, and therefore the studies' findings are somewhat limited in their validity and generalizability. This, however, only becomes a problem if no follow-up research or efforts at replication have been made. This is precisely the case with the body of research on creativity in advertising. Considered as a whole, the knowledge it presents, while interesting and valuable, can only be described as tentative and disconnected. The studies do, however, represent necessary, albeit preliminary, efforts toward a greater understanding of creativity in advertising. What still remains to be done is more research. This literature review discusses only published research which deals directly and specifically with advertising creativity. General studies of creativity, creative people or managing non-advertising creative personnel are not reviewed here. The review begins by defining what is meant by advertising creativity and presents thoughts on advertising creativity and the creative process from some of the greats of advertising. The discussion of research is divided into two parts: 1) studies which address creative ability and the creative process in advertising and 2) management issues and creativity in advertising. The second part, management issues and creativity in advertising, covers the greater number of studies. They have been grouped, according to re search focus, in three sections: 1) initial questions, 2) creative vs. account personnel conflict and 3) personality characteristics and work habits of creatives. The review concludes with an assessment of researchers' efforts against previous calls for new research, a summary of what can be concluded from the body of research, and suggestions for future research directions. What is advertising creativity? Advertising creativity is a certain kind of creativity. It is not art for art's sake. It is art for sales' sake. Advertising creativity is about selling--selling products, images, issues and ideologies. It is about selling candidates, political perspectives, social action, economic policy and military deployments. It is creativity applied for persuasion. [It is] creativity with a deadline. It is functional creativity. It is highly disciplined creativity. Where the poet may create to please himself and his loyal clique, the advertising writer must create to please a profit-conscious client and an indifferent public (White, 1972, p. 29). White (1972) defined the process of creativity in advertising as "creativity on demand." The creative process, according to White, is the same in advertising as in other fields such as the arts and sciences, except it "operates within strict parameters."[1] In advertising, the creative individual must produce (in an environment of constraint and pressure) a concept, theme, advertisement or campaign that can break through the prospect's potential mental defenses and mesh the wheels of product attributes with that of consumer preference. Advertising creativity is, certainly, paradox under pressure (Blasko and Mokwa, 1986, p. 44) For Leo Burnett advertising creativity was "the art of establishing new and meaningful relationships between previously unrelated things in a manner that is relevant, believable and in good taste (cited in Blasko & Mokwa, 1986, p. 43)." Advertising creativity is an art, as far as William Bernbach was concerned, and he maintained the most important thing in advertising is "to be fresh, to be original" (Higgins, 1965, p. 14), which requires creativity. This business of trying to measure everything in precise terms is one of the problems with advertising today. This leads to a worship of research. We're all concerned about the facts we get, and not enough concerned about how provocative we make those facts to the consumer...One of the disadvantages of doing everything mathematically, by research and mandate, is that after a while, everybody does it the same way. Because you go out and find the same things--and if you take the attitude, as many people do, that once you have found out what to say, your job is done, then what you're doing is saying it the same way as everybody is saying it, and then you've lost your impact completely (Higgins, 1965, pp. 14 -15). Bernbach's philosophy of creativity in advertising still commands followers today, even in some agency environments where the most sophisticated market research is conducted and made available to the creatives. Only a few years ago, Walston (1990), following Bernback, argued creativity in advertising today must be inspired, and to be inspired it must come from the creatives who look within themselves, rather than to market research or the audience to direct their efforts. For advertising creatives to look within themselves for inspiration is certainly part of the creative process. Although David Ogilvy trusted the value of research in the creative process, he also wrote that to be creative one must escape the "tyranny of reason" (Ogilvy, 1987). On his creative process, the irrational, unblocking the imagination and inspiration, Ogilvy said: I am almost incapable of logical thought, but I have developed techniques for keeping open the telephone line to my unconscious, in case that disorderly repository has anything to tell me. I hear a great deal of music. I am on friendly terms with John Ba rleycorn. I take long hot baths. I garden. I go into retreat among the Amish. I watch birds. I go for long walks in the country. And I take frequent vacations, so that my brain can lie fallow--no gold, no cocktail parties, no tennis, no bridge, no co ncentration: only a bicycle. While thus employed doing nothing, I receive a constant stream of telegrams from my unconscious, and these become the raw material for my advertisements (Ogilvy, 1987, 20-21). Much of the research on advertising creativity has followed from the insights of the greats of advertising such as Bernbach, Burnett and Ogilvy. In the research reviewed here, then, advertising creativity is seen as a distincly different kind of work than that of the "pure" artist. The creative process of advertising creatives, while like that of other artists in many ways, is also different because it requires advertising creatives to incorporate the needs of the client and the desires of the customer into their creative solutions. Creative ability and the creative process in advertising One of the earliest studies on creativity in advertising was conducted by Reid and Rotfeld (1976), who conceptualized an associative model of creativity in advertising. Pursuing the conviction of many of the great advertising copywriters that the associative thinking process is central to advertising creativity, the researchers proposed a model of advertising creativity using 1) Mednick's associative theory of creativity ["the process of bringing previously unrelated facts into association so that unrealized relationships between them become apparent" (p. 25)]; 2) the attitude of the creative; and 3) market, product and consumer research data. The model shows research data as the "previously unrelated facts" provided to the creative who then, using associative ability, conceptualizes a creative solution in the form of advertising. The model also shows the creative's attitude toward creating as an influence on the creative process. The model was not intended to be comprehensive, but to highlight the roles of the three above-mentioned components in the creative process. Reid and Rotfeld (1976) used three measurement instruments: 1) Mednick's Remote Associates Test (RAT), 2) attitude scales and 3) an expert opinion creative ability profile scale. Seventy-one undergraduate and graduate advertising students were required to complete the attitude scales and the RAT. A week later, experts rated each student on the creative ability profile scale. The researchers hypothesized strong interdependent relationships among associative ability, attitude toward the act of creating and creative ability ratings, which were supported in their findings. Perhaps the most important of these [findings] is the affirmation of the views expressed by...advertising writers that the associative process is directly related to advertising creativity. That is, the highly creative person has more ability to associate provided research data into problem solving advertising communications than has the less creative person. Moreover, such a relationship accentuates the importance of research to the creative process since facts are essential to an associative theory of c reativity. Also the findings indicate that the strength of a person's [positive] attitude toward the act of creativity is directly related to his associative ability (Reid and Rotfeld, 1976, p. 29). Reid pursued this research stream with a series of studies (Reid, 1977; Reid, 1978a; Reid, 1978b), most importantly one (1978a) in which he tested the associative model of creativity further, adding measures of the creative's involvement, satisfaction and confidence as predictors of an individual's level of creative ability. Like the earlier study (Reid and Rotfeld, 1976), he tested advertising students (91) using the same research design with the addition of the new measures. He found significant correlations, suggesting the possibility of an underlying relationship that links a person's attitude toward the act of creating an advertising message, level of associative ability, involvement in the process of creating, satisfaction with created objects, and confidence in creative ability with his actual creative ability (Reid, 1978a, p. 785). Reid noted that the correlations indicate the possibility that creative individuals share these characteristics and recommended that advertising managers use them to identify creatives. Although Reid's studies provided important first steps in conceptualizing some factors involved in the process of creativity in advertising and in identifying certain factors as possible predictors of creative ability, as he has suggested himself (Reid and Moriarty, 1983), his research is limited by its reliance on advertising students, rather than advertising creatives, as research subjects; by its primary focus on creative ability rather than the creative process itself; and by its treatment of creativity as unidimensional (in relying on the associative theory of creativity) rather than multidimensional. Reid and Moriarty (1983), in their selected review of research on ideation (the formulation of ideas and original thoughts), noted a paucity of research on advertising creativity (only six reports: Auer, 1976; Reid and Rotfeld, 1976; Reid, 1977; Reid, 1978a; Reid 1978b; and Vanden Bergh, 1981), but found extensive research on ideation and creativity in general from various other disciplines, most of which was psychologically based. From their review of the literature, Reid and Moriarty (1983) drew six general conclusions from the studies up to that time: 1. the capacity for ideation is multidimensional rather than unidimensional 2. ideation and intelligence are probably not directly related 3. the capacity for ideation is reflected in distinct personality characteristics 4. individuals produce better ideas when they are required to participate in structured groups than when they are allowed to voluntarily participate in unstructured groups 5. deferring judgment, in particular, and incubation, to some extent, lead to better ideas 6. training programs tend to increase the production and quality of ideas (p. 131). Reid and Moriarty (1983) criticized the lack of research into advertising creativity published by then and called for future more sophisticated empirical studies with these six conclusions as starting points. As we shall see, more than a decade later, advertising researchers are still advocating more research on creativity in advertising. Three more empirical studies of the creative process in advertising followed. Moriarty and Vanden Bergh (1984) conducted an exploratory study of advertising creatives to elicit the creatives' perceptions of their own creative problem solving techniques and creative processes in their work. The study examines the creatives' responses to an open-ended questionnaire in relation to the creativity technique of brainstorming as Osborn (1963) described it and to several similar theoretical models of the creative process (i.e., Wallas, 1926; Taylor, Austin and Sutton, 1974; and Young, 1975).[2] These are exemplified by Wallas' four-phase creative process model of preparation, incubation, illumination and verification with Osborn's (1963) addition of an initial phase of orientation. The researchers reported a 21 percent response rate to their survey of 251 Addy winners. The respondents, owners of small agencies and creative people who had moved into management positions, creative directors, art directors, copywriters and producers, answered the opened-ended questionnaire with written narratives of their work styles and creative processes. It appears the researchers grouped the data topically, although, unfortunately, they do not state their method of data analysis. In general, the researchers (Moriarty and Vanden Bergh, 1984) found that advertising creatives use brainstorming techniques to generate ideas, not in large conference settings as Osborn recommended, but in smaller teams or alone. The researcher's analysis of the creatives' narratives of their creative processes and work styles identified a process with stages similar to the models posed in the creativity literature. The orientation and preparation phases often consisted of immersion in the facts of the problem and "wrestling with the problem" before moving on to an incubation phase. The researchers found, though, that illumination or insight (the idea for the solution) for these creatives might come at any stage of the process, not necessarily after incubation. In reporting their work styles, the researchers found that advertising creatives thrive on "the pressure, tension and frustration of deadlines. They use pressure as a catalyst" (Moriarty and Vanden Bergh, 1984, p. 174) and have certain techniques for breaking mental blocks when they occur. While this study provides access to the actual comments of the respondents themselves, the lack of description of data analysis technique used tends to make the researchers' conclusions appear to be based on anecdotal evidence. In an exploration of how the use of computer imaging might be affecting the creative process of art directors and designers, Alvey (1991) presents a salient critical discussion of some of the earlier research on the creative process as it relates to advertising creativity and creative problem-solving to situate her preliminary study and formulate a theoretical understanding of the computer's potential impact. Using Osborn's creative process model (orientation, preparation, incubation, illumination, verification), Alvey investigated the creative problem solving processes of 12 computer imaging students, asking them to report their work processes in terms of Osborn's model when using traditional tools and methods of design and those when using the computer as an imaging tool. Like Moriarty and Vanden Bergh (1984), Alvey also does not state her method of data analysis. Alvey's preliminary findings indicated a change in how the students' moved through their creative problem solving design task when using a computer. When using traditional tools and processes, the subjects reported more of all three activities in the incubation stage, but while using the computer there was more of all activities in the verification stage...Findings indicate a different approach to work ing through the creative process, at least in the final stages of the process. It is conceivable that artists and designers might be experiencing a shift in energies expended in the later stages of the creative process (Alvey, 1991, p. 107). Alvey uses the findings of her preliminary, exploratory study to indicate the need for further research on the effect computers may be having on the work patterns and creative processes of design creatives, and discusses and recommends the use of more recently developed measures of an individual's preference for particular phases of the creative process and if those preferences shift with the introduction of the computer as a tool in the creative process. She outlines a model and measurement tool introduced by Basadur, Graen and Wakabayashi (1990) and suggests that future researchers could make use of their model and instrument to assess whether or not a major shift in the creative process of designers is occasioned by the use of computers for imaging. Alvey hones in on some crucial questions regarding the creative process and computers, the answers to which, she notes, may necessitate reconsideration of teaching, training, and/or working methods. The computer, with its ever-increasing capabilities, is forever changing the visual communications industry, and more importantly, is possibly changing the very process of creativity. If there is a major shift in the creative process, are conceptual thinkers missing the ideation and incubation phases so important to truly creative ideas? (Alvey, 1991, p. 112). Although Alvey's study is a preliminary one and uses students rather than advertising creatives as respondents, it raises provocative questions about how advertising creatives' thinking and working processes might be being affected by changing technology. Alvey's study is the last of the empirical studies published to date on advertising creativity as it relates to creative ability and the creative process itself. In their review of non-advertising and advertising research directed toward understanding creativity and the creative process, Blasko and Mokwa (1986) identified some common themes. Creativity is a process--an important human process of imagination, expression and association. The creative challenge (problem or opportunity) involves paradox--an encounter with apparent limits, anomalies or conflict. The creative encounter is naturally involving, or at least enticing--confronting limits or conflict generates natural tension, emotion and even passion. The creative experience involves an integrative resolution, and typically a harmonious transformation--a breakthrough or breaking out to a new and exhilarating state of association and meaning (Blasko and Mokwa, 1986, p. 44, emphasis in original). Blasko and Mokwa published two analytic articles (Blasko and Mokwa, 1986 and 1988) using the advertising product as data from which to make inferences about creativity. Blasko and Mokwa (1986) proposed Janusian thinking as a "logic of creativity" in advertising. They follow Yale psychiatrist Albert Rothenberg in defining Janusian thinking as "the capacity to conceive and utilize two or more contradictory concepts, ideas, or images simultaneously" (p. 43), and refine the term Janusian thinking as symbolizing and describing the "mind processes which simultaneously realize (originate, apprehend, resolve, and express) the natural unity and harmony in apparent opposites" (p. 44). Unlike Mednick's associative thinking process which Reid posited as central to a model of advertising creativity (Reid and Rotfeld, 1976; Reid, 1978a, 1978b), the Janusian thinking process deals with concepts which are inherently related, not unrelated. Blasko and Mokwa illustrate Janusian thinking as a specific cognitive approach in the creative process in advertising, by citing many national ad campaigns that employ Janusian opposites in copy and art, visuals and sound. (For example, the Sara Lee campaign themeline, "Everybody doesn't like something, but nobody doesn't like Sara Lee.") Blasko and Mokwa (1986) adopted Rothenberg's formulation that Janusian thinking is a way of promoting a direct link between the conscious and unconscious (a link, by the way, that Ogilvy established for himself by taking "long hot baths"). "Janusian thinking is a unity of the conscious and unconscious fields of mind without the interferences of mental boundaries" (p. 45). Blasko and Mokwa (1986) also note Arthur Koestler's (1978) exploration of Janusian thinking and describe his version, "bisociation," which Koestler advocated as a creative alternative to conventional logic which pervades the creative process. A bisociating mind freely confronts and actively seeks to uncover inherent paradox and resolve it through a synthesis of previously unconnected thought patterns or frames of reference. Thus, the creative mind actively seeks novel connection and uses the a pparently divergent ideas, insights or perspective to generate these convergent connections. A synergistic, new whole is created by each connection or set of connections ( Blasko and Mokwa, 1986, p. 46). Blasko and Mokwa (1986) conclude that "Janusian thinking is an important way to creatively approach problems in advertising, and it serves to help define the elusive process of advertising 'creativity'" (p. 49). In a later essay, Blasko and Mokwa (1988) argue that the whole practice of advertising, from account management to sales performance, (not just the creative process of producing ads) is filled with paradox, and they advocate the use of Janusian thinking to confront these paradoxes creatively. The authors, citing Bengston (1982) and others, criticize Young's (1975) model of the creative process as "assembly-line" creativity that leads to predictable, less creatively-inspired solutions. These two essays, although not very useful in providing empirically-based knowledge of the way the creative process works with advertising creatives in practice, do have some heuristic value in conceptualizing how a particular type of thinking pattern or approach to a problem could come into play during the creative process. Earlier empirical research, Reid and Rotfeld (1976) and Reid (1978a), addressed this conceptualization in a much more concrete way, using data from tests of subjects, rather than inferring a particular thinking process of the creators from the manifest content of advertisements. (Analysis of the content of advertising is, of course a useful technique for many other kinds of research questions.) However, taken together, the Blasko and Mokwa and Reid reports do illustrate the point Reid and Moriarty (1983) have made, that the thought processes involved in creativity and ideation are, and should be viewed as, multidimensional. Management issues and creativity in advertising Initial questions: what managers need to know Shortly after the initial empirical studies of the creative process in advertising were published, management issues involving creativity in advertising became a central focus of much of the research on creativity in advertising, beginning with an analytic paper by Vanden Bergh and Adler (1983). They proposed an expanded model of the creative process in advertising as a practical guide to advertising managers. Using Osborn's five-step creative problem-solving model as the core, the authors situate it between the initial and final stages ( ie: objective, research and problem definition; running advertisement and outcomes) of the advertising creation. Vanden Bergh and Adler explain the features of the Osborn model and the other factors, as well as describe de Bono's (1970) vertical versus lateral thinking styles, to help managers understand how creatives work differently from managers. An ad agency is likely to be a schizophrenic place. As a business it must demand structure and organization, but because it is also in the business of ideas it must provide an atmosphere for idea generation (creativity) to take place. Therefore, it is paramount that managers understand how creative types think if an ideal meshing of these two worlds is to take place (Vanden Bergh and Adler, 1983, p. 110). We shall see below that Fletcher (1990) reiterates this need--for managers to understand creatives--in a slightly different context, including personality characteristics of creatives, as well as the routines of their creative processes, in what managers ought to know to manage creative personnel more effectively. Keeping the research focus on management issues, Vanden Bergh, Reid and Schorin (1983) collaborated to empirically test a long-held assumption related to creativity and its management in advertising. They designed their study to test the generally held assumption that a greater number of creative alternatives generated for an advertising campaign leads to a better chance of developing the optimal campaign. They analyzed data from an experiment in which creative campaign strategies generated by four groups of advertising students were judged by advertising agency personnel. The findings of the study tended to confirm the assumption. "The implication is that the more creative alternatives advertising creatives are asked to generate, the more good ideas agency and client management can expect to receive" (p. 49). Another empirical advertising creativity study reported in 1983 shifted even further away from questions regarding the individual's creative process to how the overall creative decision making process in an agency is managed. Mondroski, Reid & Russell (1983) conducted a decision systems analysis of agency creative decision making. Their case study of a medium-sized southeastern advertising agency presented a flow chart from the agency's viewpoint of decision making in the creative process during the production of one advertising campaign. Decision makers in each step of the process were noted within an integrated chart of the whole management system of creative decision making in the agency. The researchers interviewed all agency personnel involved in the campaign to arrive at their findings. In this case, they found that the process began with the formulation of an advertising strategy; a two-team approach to generating creative alternatives was utilized; and, although management of the agency gave final approval to which alternative would be presented to the client, the creative team presented the work to the client. On the basis of their findings, Mondroski, et al (1983) generally recommended to agency managers that creative personnel be involved in the decision making process from the beginning stage of strategy formulation, through the presentation of the campaign to the client; that the management supervisor of the account should have an adequate creative background; and that a two-team approach to generating creative alternatives would increase the likelihood of producing the optimal campaign concept. The study is presented as a baseline data-based understanding of creative decision making from which survey research could be conducted to elaborate the process and offer more indications for creativity management in advertising. Les enfants terrible: the creatives versus account personnel A series of studies which also focused on creativity management issues followed these initial studies (Vanden Bergh, Smith & Wicks, 1986; Wicks, Vanden Bergh & Smith, 1986; and Tinkham, Lane & Leung, 1987). These three studies addressed the familiar conflict between creative and account personnel, which Ogilvy called "endemic" to advertising, to attempt to offer better understandings of the conflict and how it might be managed. Vanden Bergh, Smith & Wicks (1986) investigated the working relationships between creatives and account management personnel in advertising agencies. The researchers surveyed a sample of account and creative services professionals (256 surveys returned for a 27 percent response rate) and found that creatives, when asked to critically analyze the performance of account managers, were more critical of account managers than were the account managers, when asked to perform the reverse task, of creatives. The authors speculated that this difference may in part be due to the generalist perspective of the account managers versus the specialist perspective of the creatives. Using the same survey data, Wicks, Vanden Bergh & Smith (1986) analyzed in greater detail creatives' opinions of their co-workers in account services and creative services to answer specific questions regarding the perceived problem of inevitable conflict between account management and creative services. The authors found that although conflict between account and creative personnel was more severe than conflict between co-workers within the creative department, the account managers-vs.-creatives conflict was not as severe as it was generally believed to be. According to the creatives, conflicts generally stemmed from an inequality between accounts and creative people, unrealistic deadlines set by account management, misunderstanding of the complexities of each other's work, and lack of communication. Tinkham, Lane & Leung (1987) pursued study of this conflict between account and creative personnel in terms of function and dysfunction according to how the conflict is managed. The authors proposed six potential sources of account-creative conflict: three behavioral factors (attitude and perception, dimensions of task and communication flow) and three organizational factors (organizational structure, nature of roles and style of management), arguing that success in managing conflict toward functional outcomes was predicated on the ability to identify and analyze the source of conflict. Their exploratory field study compared results of a pilot study of two agencies without a history of dysfunctional conflict and an agency with a history of dysfunctional conflict between account and creative groups. The major data gathering tool was a self-administered questionnaire of agency account and creative personnel which was supplemented by interviews with agency management. Generally, the researchers (Tinkham, et al, 1987) found that within the agency with the history of dysfunctional conflict, account and creative personnel differed significantly in assessing the six source-of-conflict factors. At the agencies without a history of dysfunctional conflict, account and creative personnel differed significantly in assessing only one factor, "dimensions of task." The authors also found creative personnel from both agency samples responded more negatively than account personnel, with the dysfunctional conflict agency creatives responding consistently more negatively than the functional conflict agencies creatives. With regard to the extent and nature (functional or dysfunctional) of conflict, both the creatives and account personnel at the functional conflict agencies evaluated the extent of conflict to be low, but account personnel evaluated the conflict to be more functional when it does occur than did creatives. This was not the case at the dysfunctional conflict agency. Both creatives and account personnel there disagreed on the extent and nature of the conflict, with creatives responding much more negatively compared to account personnel's positive responses. Tinkham, et al (1987) indicate this field investigation is a preliminary study to a larger research project measuring the predictability and influence of the six hypothical dimensions as sources of conflict, which they hope will lead to identifying alternative ways of managing agency account and creative group conflict. Although not specifically designed to address this conflict, account and creative group conflict was also a theme that emerged in Hirschman's (1989) study of the various production roles performed by advertising personnel in creating a television commercial. Hirschman interviewed six people from different client companies or agencies who performed these roles: product manager, account executive, creative director (copywriter), creative director (art director), producer and commercial director. Hirschman's analysis of the interviews yielded six different models of the production/creative process involved in producing the commercial, based on the role of each individual. Three issues emerged from the models: the subjectivity of participant's perspectives (similar to "attitude and perception" in Tinkham, et al, 1987), the determinants of perceived authorship of the ad, and inherent processual conflicts due to the varied personal utilities of the produced ad (which can be likened to "nature of role" in Tinkham, et al, 1987). Although Hirschman's (1989) discussion focuses on how these issues might influence the content and structure of the advertising message itself, the implications of this study for understanding the process of creating advertising are clear. With regard to account-creative conflict, for instance, Hirschman's findings indicate, as she states, that this conflict may be role-based rather than ideologically based. Hirschman's study, unlike those of Vanden Bergh, Smith & Wicks (1986) and Wicks, Vanden Bergh & Smith (1986), describes account-creative conflict as originating in and being perpetuated by "the different avenues the participants utilize for advancing their careers" ( p. 51). Based in a production-of-culture perspective, Hirschman's (1989) report also vividly illustrates the socially interactive, collaborative and competitive process of advertising creation (in a more dynamic way than implied in Mondroski, et al, (1983), a view which reveals the limits of advertising creativity research which conceptualizes the creative process as a strictly individual (or even "creative team") performance. Different drummers? Personality characteristics and work habits of advertising creatives The personality characteristics and work habits of advertising creatives are also a focus of the advertising creativity research dealing with management issues. Hovland, Wilcox and Hoffman (1988) profiled advertising creatives in an attempt to more accurately describe them so managers might be able to learn how to cultivate those traits related to creatives' job success. The researchers mailed a condensed version of the Creative Quotient Test (developed by Eugene Raudsepp, Princeton Creative Research) to 607 award-winning art directors, copywriters and creative directors in both print and broadcast media. The Creative Quotient Test is a questionnaire that requires respondents to provide self-descriptions in eight categories: value orientations, attitudes toward work, problem solving behaviors, childhood-adolescence, interpersonal relations, personality dimensions and a self-perception checklist. The researchers report that the overall scores of the 212 (35 percent response rate) respondents show about two-thirds of them scored above average on creativity, with respondents evenly distributed within this group when categorized by position (e.g., copywriter, art director, creative director). The researchers found it surprising, given this particular sample of creatives award-winning abilities, that none of the respondents scored as "exceptionally creative" (the top of the scale) and only 6.1 percent scored as "very creative" (the second from top of the scale). The authors also found that the advertising creatives share personality characteristics and work habits with each other and with creative people in general. The subjects can be described as open to their feelings, intuitive, risk-takers, enthusiastic, motivated, nonconformists, hard workers, goal directed, imaginative and self confident. They also enjoy toying with ideas, express feminine (if man) and masculine (if woman) interests, like the unknown, do not mind being alone, are not afraid to ask questions (curious), and are interested in aesthetics (Hovland, et al, 1988, p. RC143). The authors' suggestion for further research involve studies which would validate the use of the Creative Quotient Test as a "diagnostic tool" for evaluating creativity and indicating potential creative performance. No other published studies using the Creative Quotient Test with advertising creatives were found as of early 1995, so its value in predicting creative performance or evaluating creative characteristics of creative advertising personnel is unknown. Insofar as the test is a valid measure when used with advertising creatives, however, the findings of this study (Hovland, et al, 1988) tend to confirm general beliefs about characteristics of advertising creatives but also reveal that in comparison to "exceptionally" or "very" creative individuals (as measured by the test), most advertising creatives can be considered less creative, scoring as "above average." In his study of the personality characteristics typical of an "advertising executive" Tinkham (1990) tested the truism (supported by the Hovland, et al, 1988 study) that advertising executives are more creative and independent, indeed, a "breed apart" from other business executives and the general population in personality traits. Unlike the Hovland, et al (1988) study, Tinkham did not measure creative potential alone, but correlated a host of personality traits as measured by the 16PF (Personality Factor) Test with respondents' categorization as "advertising executive" on the Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory (SCII). His subjects were college student volunteers. Tinkham (1990) concludes that his findings show some support for the idea that successful advertising executives are different from the general population in terms of basic personality traits, but show only weak support for the notion that advertising practitioners are a "breed" of creative practitioner. "Rather, one may infer a syndrome of interests that more generally characterizes those in involved in applied communication. This syndrome may be linked to, and determined in part, by similar personality structures" (p. RC38). Those personality traits, as measured by the 16PF Test, include higher levels of independence and creativity, a greater likelihood of being accident or error prone, and a greater tendency to behave in a way that is inconsistent with social norms. Interestingly, just as the studies discussed above (Wicks, et al, 1986; Tinkham, et al, 1987; and Hirschman, 1989) Tinkham's findings do not support the common attribution of personality trait differences as the source of account vs. creative personnel conflict in advertising. "The results of this research, however, argue more persuasively for greater rather than less similarity of basic temperament characteristics across the functional areas of advertising" (p. RC38). Fletcher (1990a and 1990b) addressed the research on personality traits of creative people and what they might indicate for managers of creatives. Drawing on selected literature of the creativity and personality characteristics of artists, the literature on the management of creative individuals and interviews with managers in the "creative industries" in Britain (one of whom was an advertising executive), Fletcher (1990b) describes creatives as possessing specific personality traits. "Creatives then, tend to be insecure, egotistical, stubborn, rebellious, poor timekeepers, perfectionists who seek fame and are not necessarily all that intelligent" ( p. 8). These traits, he argues, make managing creatives a quite different task than managing other types of workers and suggests that advertising managers need to understand the creative personality in order to improve their management of creatives. He offers no other specific suggestions for managers, except that to offer sympathetic understanding to creatives should not lead to making concessions to them. Morris, Lancaster and Cho (1991) surveyed creative and media directors to determine differences between them in their use of intuition in advertising problem-solving. The researchers used a self-administered questionnaired which asked for self-descriptions about their use of inution, activities and conditions associated with creative hunches, and the nature and effectiveness of creative hunches. They received 377 completed questionnaires, for a 37.7 percent response rate. Morris, et al (1991) found that both creative and media directors used intuition, but that the creative function fosters it to a greater extent than the media function. Creative directors and others with high use of intuition reported more frequent and more productive creative hunches and ranked hunches as a problem-solving aid relatively highly. They urged managers who want to encourage intuitive and more creative problem-solving approaches in their employees to provide more private work space, flexible working hours, more freedom from interruption and physical and psychological wellness programs. West (1993a and 1993b) conducted a cross-national study of creativity in advertising and its management. West surveyed Senior Creative Directors (SCDs) from a quota sample of the top 300 advertising agencies in the U.S., the U.K. and of the top 100 agencies in Canada. The questionnaire included items measuring attitudes regarding creativity management, creative personality, creative strategies and executions, the creative process and agency philosophies. West reports on the results of 303 returned surveys (34 percent response rate). He statistically analyzes the survey responses for both categorical answers and comparisons among countries. In one article West (1993a) analyzes the data focusing on SCDs' descriptions of the creative work practices of the creative teams under their supervision, the perceived effect on a creative of experience working at different agencies and in different countries, the use of competitive creative teams on accounts, the perceived effect of awards and deadlines on creative output, and how the SCD described his or her main management role with regard to the creative staff. West found no significant differences among the respondents based on country. In general, the findings indicate the use of similar work habits of creative teams to aid in the creative process (e.g., working morning, working alone, drinking coffee or tea, etc.). The SCDs reported that generally a creative's experience working at other agencies or abroad had a positive effect on creative output, as did the use of competitive creative teams, which was a widespread practice (although some SCDs reported they never participated in the practice). Awards and deadlines were also assessed as positive influences on creatives. Most of the SCDs (just over two-thirds) reported their management role as "bringing out the best in team," cultivating and inspiring creativity, rather than "being a good practitioner," leading by example. In comparison to artistic creativity, agency creativity had some similarities, but diverse work patterns and activities were much more restricted in the agency. West's study supports the earlier definition of advertising creativity that, unlike the novelist who may work at odd hours and in varied surroundings, agency creatives' work practices are constrained by the business of advertising and the agency office environment. In another article, West (1993b) analyzed a broader portion of his survey data, focusing on which personal qualities SCDs counted as important when hiring creatives, on the characteristics of the creative personality, on the extent of control and participation creatives held in account problem-solving and on use and type of agency philosophy. West found little or no differences among the three countries on questions relating to creatives. He found that the most important personal qualities SCDs looked for in hiring creatives were originality, intelligence, vision, strategic thinking, confidence and resilience. West also found that about half of the SCDs fit the "artistic" personality type (based on a part of the SCII) of people who prefer free, unstructured situations with maximum opportunities for self-expression. SCDs had the most control and participation , and the most freedom, when the account problem-solving process was in the stages of generating ideas, selecting the idea and verifying the idea (those stages at the crux of the creative process). West's studies (1993a and 1993b) generally measure the opinions of SCDs (except in the case of his questionable use of a small part of the SCII), and, as such, his findings (like those of Morris, et al, 1991) are not like the findings in the studies by Tinkham (1990) and Hovland, et al (1988), which attempted to measure the various personality characteristics, making comparisons between the studies problematic. A burgeoning literature on managing creative personnel and fostering creativity in the workplace is developing from researchers in management (e.g. Yong, 1994). This literature should provide advertising researchers with additional information in designing future studies on managing creatives in advertising. How does the research measure up, and where do we go from here? More than ten years ago, in their review of the research on ideation and creativity, Reid & Moriarty (1983) suggested several avenues for future research on creativity in advertising. Principal among them were studies on advertising creatives' creative process rather than creative capacity. This area of study has received cursory attention by Moriarty & Vanden Bergh (1984) in their study of how advertising creatives perceive their own creative process. Alvey (1991) took a similar approach, but asked creatives to describe their creative process both with and without the use of computers. Many other studies outside of the disciplines of advertising have been conducted on the individual's creative process (recently, e.g., Marsh and Vollmer, 1991) that some of the advertising creativity research utilizes. Much of this research on the creative process of "pure" artists and writers cannot be unproblematically applied to advertising creatives because of the difference in their creative tasks, that is the specific contraints within which advertising creatives work. Reid & Moriarty (1983) further recommended empirical research that studies interactive effects between group and individual creative performance in the hope that a better understanding of how to manage advertising creativity might be developed. Mondroski, et al (1983) and Hirschman (1989) have only begun to address this area. Reid & Moriarty (1983) also cautioned researchers to study creative capacity in its multidimensional aspects, rather than as a unidimensional capacity, in order to develop a personality profile of the advertising creative in relation to multiple traits of creative capacity. The Hovland, et al (1988) and Tinkham (1990) studies using measurement instruments address this question most directly. Fletcher's (1990a and 1990b) interviews and analytic literature review and the Morris, et al (1991) and West (1993a and 1993b) survey studies provide information on the attitudes and opinions of advertising creatives. Whether or not intelligence is related to creativity in advertising, and the areas of deferred judgment and incubation in the creative process, and creativity training programs were also subjects ripe for study according to Reid & Moriarty (1983). The research on the relationship of intelligence to creativity outside of the field of advertising research has tended to show that creative ability is not necessarily related to high intelligence (Fletcher, 1990b), although a minimum level of intelligence is required. These findings stand in contrast to West's (1993b) study which showed that personal intelligence was the personal characteristic, second only to originality, that senior creative directors valued when hiring advertising creatives. To date no empirical study of the role of incubation in the creative process or creativity training programs has been published which is specifically engaged with advertising creatives. More recently, Stewart (1992) has repeated some of Reid's and Moriarty's (1983) concerns, arguing that research on creativity in advertising should become a central focus of advertising research. Stewart particularly advocates research questions which address the creative process itself, what kind of methods or approaches might facilitate the creative process in advertising (for example, what kinds of market research advertising creatives would find most useful in developing the "big idea") and what it is about individuals and agencies that make them more creative. Vanden Bergh, et al (1983), Mondroski, et al (1983), Hirschman (1989) and Morris, et al (1991) have made preliminary steps toward addressing what might facilitate the creative process. Moriarty (1992) has offered recommendations for greater use of interpretive research by creatives in developing advertising. None of the published research reveiwed here attempted to correlate an individual's or agency's creative success with any other character istics. While not measuring success per se, Tinkham, et al (1987) did, however, identify their agencies according functional vs dysfunctional conflict, which could be a factor in the ultimate creative success of the agencies' work. Stewart (1992) also speculates that past advertising research on advertising creativity may not necessarily be a good guide to future research, especially with regard to methods, noting that context has become increasingly important to any understanding of advertising. Methodologically, of the studies published to date, Hirschman's (1989) study of advertising creatives has been the one which inherently takes into account the agency and personal context, although the Mondroski et al (1983) and Tinkham, et al (1987) studies are by research focus somewhat sensitive to agency context. (Outside the field of advertising research, Hunsaker (1992) argues for an ethnographic perspective, which is always context-specific, on creativity research.) Zinkhan (1993) echoes Stewart's call for more research on creativity in advertising while advocating the value of methods used in the humanities in such research. "Typical social science research techniques can reveal only so much about [the creative process and creativity in advertising]" (p. 3). Zinkhan urges advertising researchers to consider using methods common to literary criticism in order to come to a greater understanding of the "creative spark" in advertising. Increasingly, a greater variety of methodological approaches are being used by advertising researchers today, even within the agencies own research departments.[3] The incorporation of diverse methods in research on creativity in advertising is perhaps most important to deepening our understanding of the creative process in advertising, which does not easily lend itself to traditional social science methods. This is the case especially when it comes to questions of how to foster creativity in advertising, for the focus on the individual and his or her creative process, characteristics, etc. that psycholgical/behavioral social science research techniques encourage may not be as fruitful as a more context-focused interactionist technique might allow. As advertising creatives themselves have said, the environment of the advertising agency, most often intensely competitive, greatly influences the work practices and creative process of creatives (Otnes, Spooner and Triese, 1993 and Otnes, Oviatt and Triese, 1995). Future research should use methods and ask questions that take agency environment into account. Few conclusions can be safely drawn from the research on advertising creativty to date, since most of it has been exploratory. Creativity is still, in most ways, the X factor in advertising. References Alvey, P.A. (1991). Design revolutions: Technology's impact on the advertising designer's creative problem solving process, an exploration. Proceedings of the 1991 Conference of The American Academy of Advertising, 104-113. R.H. Holman, Ed. Auer, E. (1976). Creative advertising students: How different? Journal of Advertising 5(1), 5-10. Basadur, M., Graen, G. & Wakabayashi, M. (1990). Identifying individual differences in creative problem solving style. Journal of Creative Behavior 24 (2), 111-131. Blasko, V.J. &, Mokwa, M.P. (1986). Creativity in advertising: A Janusian perspective. Journal of Advertising 15(4), 43-50, 72. Blasko, V.J. &, Mokwa, M.P. (1988). Paradox, advertising and the creative process. Current Issues and Research in Advertising 1988., 351-365. de Bono, E. (1970). Lateral thinking: Creativity step by step. New York: Harper & Row. Dillon, T. (1975). The triumph of creativity over imagination. Journal of Advertising 4(3), 15-18. Fletcher, W. (1990a). Creative people--How to manage them and maximize their creativity. London: Hutchinson Business Books Ltd. Fletcher, W. (1990b). The management of creativity. International Journal of Advertising, 9(Spring), 1-11. Fox, S. (1984). The mirror makers. New York, NY: William Morrow and Co., Inc. Higgins, D. (1965). The art of writing advertising: Conversations with masters of the craft. Lincolnwood, IL: NTC Business Books. Hirschman, E. C. (1989). Role-based models of advertising creation and production. Journal of Advertising 18(4), 42-53. Hovland, R., Wilcox, G.B. & Hoffman, T. (1988). An exploratory study identifying characteristics of advertising creatives: The Creative Quotient Test. Proceedings of the 1988 Conference of the American Academy of Advertising, RC142-RC143. J.D. Leckenby, Ed. Hunsaker, S.L. (1992). Toward an ethnographic perspective on creativity research. Journal of Creative Behavior 26(4), 235-241. Koestler, A. (1978). Janus. New York: Vintage Books. Levenson, B. (1987). Bill Bernbach's book. New York: Villard Books. MacFarquhar, L. (1994). This semiotician went to market. Lingua Franca September/October. Marsh, D.T. & Vollmer, J. (1991). The polyphonic creative process: Experiences of artists and writers. Journal of Creative Behavior 25(2), 106-115. Mondroski, M.M., Reid, L.N. & Russell, J.T. (1983). Agency creative decision making: a decision systems analysis. In Leigh, J.H. and Martin, C.R. Jr. (Eds.), Current Issues and Research in Advertising, 57-69. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Moriarty, S.E. & Vanden Bergh, B.G., (1984). Advertising creatives look at creativity. Journal of Creative Behavior 18(3), 162-174. Moriarty, S.E. (1992). The creative approach to insightful research. Proceedings of the 1992 Conference of the American Academy of Advertising, 204-207. L.N. Reid, Ed. Morris, J.L., Lancaster, K.M. & Cho, J. (1991). The role of intuition in advertising decision-making. Proceedings of the 1991 Conference of The American Academy of Advertising, 91-101. R.H. Holman, Ed. Ogilvy, D. (1988) [1963]. Confessions of an advertising man. New York, NY: Atheneum. Ogilvy, D. (1985). Ogilvy on advertising. New York, NY: Vintage Books. Osborn, A.F. (1963). Applied imagination. 3rd rev. ed. New York, NY: Scribners. Otnes, C., Spooner, E. & Triese, D. (1993). Advertising curriculum ideas from 'new creatives.' Journalism Educator Autumn, 1993, 9-17. Otnes, C., Oviatt, A.A. & Triese, D. (1995.) Views on advertising curricula from experienced 'creatives.' Journalism Educator Winter, 1995, 21-30. Politz, A. (1975). Creativeness and imagination. Journal of Advertising 4(3), 11-14. Reeves, R. (1961). Reality in advertising. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Reid, L.N. (1977). Are advertising educators good judges of creative talent? Journal of Advertising 6, 42-43. Reid, L.N. (1978a). Factors affecting creativity in the generation of advertising. Journalism Quarterly 55(4), 781-785. Reid, L.N. (1978b). Predicting the creatives in advertising. Proceedings of the 1978 Conference of the American Academy of Advertising, 123-127. Reid, L.N. & Moriarty, S.E. (1983). Ideation: A review of research. In Leigh, J.H. and Martin, C.R. Jr. (Eds.), Current Issues and Research in Advertising, 119-134. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Administration. Reid, L.N. & Rotfeld, H.J. (1976). Toward an associative model of advertising creativity. Journal of Advertising 5(4) 24-29, 19. Stewart, D.W. (1992). Speculations on the future of advertising research. Journal of Advertising 21(3), 18. Taylor, I.A., Austin, G.A., & Sutton, D.F. (1974). A note on 'instant creativity' at CPSI. Journal of Creative Behavior 8(3), 208-210. Tinkham, S.F. (1990). Is there an 'advertising executive' personality? Proceedings of the 1990 Conference of The American Academy of Advertising, RC35-RC39. P.A. Stout, Ed. Tinkham, S.F., Lane, R.W. & Leung, A. (1987). Conflict between account and creative personnel within the advertising agency: A field investigation. Proceedings of the 1987 Conference of The American Academy of Advertising, R38-R42. F. Feasley, Ed. Vanden Bergh, B.G. (1981). Radio copy projects turn student talent 'upside down'. Journalism Educator, January, 102-104. Vanden Bergh, B.G., & Adler, K. (1983). Managing the creative process. Proceedings of the 1983 Conference of The American Academy of Advertising, pp. D. Jugenheimer, Ed. Vanden Bergh, B.G., Reid, L.N. & Schorin, G.A. (1983). How many creative alternatives to generate? Journal of Advertising 12(4), 46-49. Vanden Bergh, B.G., Smith, S.J. & Wicks, J.L. (1986). Internal agency relationships: Account services and creative personnel. Journal of Advertising 15(2), 55-59, 60. Wallas, G. (1926). The art of thought. New York City: Harcourt. Walston, C.F. (1990). An audience of one: The art of creating advertising for oneself. Proceedings of the 1990 Conference of The American Academy of Advertising, RC29-RC34. P.A. Stout, Ed. West, D.C. (1993a). Restricted creativity: Advertising agency work practices in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. Journal of Creative Behavior 27(3), 200-213. West, D.C. (1993b). Cross-national creative personalities, processes, and agency philosophies. Journal of Advertising Research, September/October. Wicks, J.L., Smith, S.J. & Vanden Bergh, B.G. (1986). Views from the muses: what creatives think of their co-workers in account services and the creative department. Proceedings of the 1986 Conference of the American Academy of Advertising, R112-R115. E.F. Larkin, Ed. White, G.E. (1972). Creativity: The x factor in advertising theory. Journal of Advertising 1(1), 28-32. Yong, L.M. (1994). Managing creative people. Journal of Creative Behavior 28(1), 16-20. Young, J.W. (1975). A technique for producing ideas. 3rd ed. Chicago: Crain Books. Zinkhan, G.M. (1993). Creativity in advertising. Journal of Advertising 22(2), 1-3. [1] See also Dillon (1975) and Politz (1975) who discuss applied or fu nctional creativity and the constraints advertising pu ts on individual creativity. [2] For a condensed review of creative process theories, see White (1972). [3] See, for example, MacFarquhar ( 1994) on the use of semiotic methods in market researc h and advertising strategy development.