306 Are the Androids Dreaming Yet? like to ‘sleep on it. Stephen Hawking distracts himself by working on a different problem for a while. Anything that avoids focusing directly on the problem itself seems to allow our creative freewheel run. Environment can be important. The campuses created by Steve Jobs for both Apple and Pixar are designed to foster creativity. The physical environments build team behavior but also cause people to bump into each other. Cross-pollination drives creativity. There are also some myths to dispel about creative people. Inventors are portrayed as eccentric and hopelessly disorganized, but Feynman kept notes of every idea he ever had. I have kept a series of notebooks, now computer based, since I left university. I still have almost all of these ona shelf at home. Creative people may be a little mad, but the successful ones are rarely disorganized. You must allow your brain to free wheel. J.K. Rowling has said the characters in the Harry Potter novels write themselves. I come to my computer each morning having not thought too much overnight and just write. Creation is just that; you must allow yourself to do it. It’s not a process. The Innovator’s Dilemma Why don't big companies create? In 1997, Clayton Christensen of Harvard Business School wrote The Innovator’s Dilemma, the seminal work on creativity within organizations. In it, he shows us why established companies tend not to innovate and why startups exist. Christiansen’s academic research examines how companies handle discontinuous change in technology, focussing on the hard disk industry. You might not think this a very sexy sector. Microprocessors and game consoles would be more fun, but the great advantage with the hard disk is there is a single industry journal that has tracked the progress of every player over 30 years, collecting detailed annual data on every facet of their business. For an academic, this is gold dust. IBM invented the hard disk drive in their researc