A creative block is defined as an uninspired mood. But the term can be deceiving as people from all industries can suffer from a creative block. The uninspired mood makes people indecisive, thus making it difficult for them to make small decisions regarding their everyday work and perform their best.

As a manager, it might be challenging for you to find your employees suffering from a creative block as you could be worried about both the wellbeing of your employees and the deadlines they have to meet. However, there are ways for you to help your team members overcome a creative block. Let’s take a look at these ways:

Suggest a Change of Space

Creative blocks often arise from working from the same physical space every day. Since our physical space or environment has greater chances of impacting our mood, working in the same environment every day can make the work feel monotonous and redundant. Therefore, the opposite might help.

If you find a team member struggling with a creative block, suggest a change of space for work. If the workplace allows employees to take their laptops in the office cafeteria or even in a nearby coffee shop, encourage your team member to follow through with this freedom. Alternatively, you can also suggest your employee take a walk or even work from home until they overcome the creative block.

Encourage Research and Learning

While research is sometimes a part of work, it can also help overcome a creative block. If your employee cannot develop ideas or strategies and cannot make important decisions regarding work, suggest a change in their approach. Instead of coming up with decisions and ideas, encourage the employee to learn more about their work.

Learning boosts our cognitive functions like no other activity. Learning and researching about similar successful work by others is sure to lift your team member’s creative block and spark a few ideas in their mind.

Help Them Build a Mood Board

Mood boards can greatly help overcome a creative block and find a direction. While a mood board is usually built after finalizing an idea, reversing the technique and making the mood board first can work too. Mood boards require different texts, mediums, and visuals. The visuals can also have various colors or styles. Instead of narrowing down the details of the mood board through the idea, help your team member build a mood board with all the ideas at once.

Making an extensive mood board will help your team member overcome a creative block in two ways. First, it will help them release all the confusing ideas in their head that they cannot put into words. Second, they might pick the right ideas after seeing them depicted visually. From there, they can expand on this right idea and narrow down the direction in which they should work.

 

Last but not least, managers can also help their team members by helping them approach the problem from different angles. Don’t hesitate to engage in conversations and discussions about work with your team members. Great ideas often come from meaningful conversations.