Open Educator with Dr. Steve Diasio

The School of Creativity and Innovation

Dr. Steve Diasio is a Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Founder of The School of Creativity and Innovation. Learn more at https://linktr.ee/stevediasio The Youtube Video of these casts can be seen on the Finger Puppet Management TV Channel, part of the Finger Puppet Media Group. www.stevediasio.com

  1. 15 ФЕВР.

    Ray Charles Day - St Petersburg Florida

    Ray Charles didn’t just pass through Florida. In St. Petersburg, he left fingerprints on the keys of the city’s cultural story. This video takes you inside the surprising, soulful history of Ray Charles Day in St. Petersburg, Florida (February 15), and why the city proudly calls him its “Adopted Son.” While many people associate Ray with Georgia, parts of his professional identity were forged on the Gulf Coast, where he performed, recorded, and helped shape the soundtrack of a changing city. You’ll hear the story behind “St. Pete Florida Blues” (1950), a recording that became deeply tied to the city’s musical identity. We explore how a single song can turn into civic memory, why that moment mattered, and how St. Petersburg’s relationship with Ray Charles grew from performance to tradition. From there, we step into the legendary venues that held the heat of live music and community, including the historic Manhattan Casino on 22nd Street South, a landmark woven into St. Pete’s African American heritage. This wasn’t just a stage. It was a cultural engine, a gathering place, and a pulse point for generations of talent and audiences. We also spotlight the deeper layers: the era, the venues, the community pride, and the long arc from local performances to official recognition. Ray Charles Day isn’t only a date on a calendar, it’s a public reminder that music can shape place, and place can shape music. If you love St. Petersburg history, Florida culture, American music, or the hidden stories behind iconic legends, this one is for you. Expect rich visuals, quick context, and a narrative that connects the past to the present. 🎹 In this video: Why St. Petersburg celebrates Ray Charles Day (Feb 15) The story behind “St. Pete Florida Blues” The role of the Manhattan Casino and the Deuces corridor How Ray Charles became St. Pete’s “Adopted Son” Why this legacy still matters today 👇 Drop a comment: What’s your favorite Ray Charles song, and have you ever explored the Deuces or Manhattan Casino history in St. Pete? Like, subscribe, and share if you want more stories that blend Florida history, culture, music, and the unforgettable characters who helped build the city’s creative soul. #RayCharles #RayCharlesDay #StPetersburgFL #StPete #FloridaHistory #ManhattanCasino #TheDeuces #BlackHistory #AmericanMusic #RhythmAndBlues #SoulMusic #JazzHistory #StPeteEvents #TampaBay #StPeteFlorida #LocalHistory #MusicLegends #ThingsToDoInStPete #PinellasCounty #CulturalHeritage

    5 мин.
  2. 15 ФЕВР.

    Evaluating Your Creativity: Products/ Services Inputs & Outputs

    What if creativity isn’t something you “have”… but something you ship? In this episode, we go deep into Pillar 4 of The School of Creativity and Innovation’s Creative Audit: Creative Products & Services as Inputs and Outputs. This is where creativity stops being abstract—and starts becoming visible, measurable, and impactful. Because ideas alone don’t change the world. Outputs do. Pillar 4 challenges a powerful assumption: creativity is not just about internal brilliance or great brainstorming sessions. It’s about what you put into the world—and what you consume that shapes what you produce. Every professional is both a creator and a curator. You are constantly taking in inputs—conversations, content, tools, culture, technology—and transforming them into outputs—decisions, strategies, presentations, prototypes, policies, campaigns, experiences. The real question is: Are you doing this intentionally? This pillar reframes creativity as a system of flow:Input → Processing → Output → Feedback → Evolution. When your inputs are narrow, repetitive, and unexamined, your outputs become predictable.When your inputs are diverse, challenging, and cross-disciplinary, your outputs become expansive. We explore how the most innovative professionals design their inputs strategically. They don’t just scroll. They curate. They don’t just consume information—they seek friction, contradiction, and perspective shifts. They expose themselves to ideas outside their industry. They build creative collisions. And then they translate those insights into something tangible. Because Pillar 4 is about courage. It asks: Are you producing work that is useful? Is it novel? Is it meaningful? Does it solve a real problem? Does it reflect your unique voice? In professional contexts—whether you’re in tech, design, business, or HR—creative outputs might look like a redesigned onboarding process, a bold new product concept, a reframed strategy deck, a more human performance review system, or an unexpected partnership. Creativity becomes innovation when it creates value. But here’s the deeper insight: outputs also become new inputs. The presentation you give generates feedback.The prototype you test reveals insights.The idea you share reshapes how others think. This creates a loop. A creative flywheel. Pillar 4 teaches you to measure creativity not by how inspired you feel, but by what you are shipping consistently. It encourages professionals to move from perfectionism to iteration. From hidden ideas to visible prototypes. From safe thinking to meaningful contribution. We also explore the psychological barrier many professionals face at this stage: fear of exposure. Shipping creative work requires vulnerability. It means allowing your thinking to be seen, questioned, refined. But this is where growth happens. This is where confidence is built—not from internal validation, but from real-world feedback. The science supports this. Iteration strengthens creative confidence. Small tests reduce risk. Exposure builds resilience. And measurable outputs build professional credibility. This pillar bridges imagination and execution. It shifts creativity from a personal identity trait to a strategic advantage. For organizations, it becomes a cultural differentiator. Teams that focus on inputs and outputs intentionally outperform teams that rely on random inspiration. They design systems that produce ideas regularly. They create safe-to-try environments. They reward experimentation. They treat innovation as a process, not an accident. For individuals, it becomes a career accelerant. When you can demonstrate that you consistently turn ideas into value, you become indispensable. By the end of this episode, you’ll begin to see your creative life differently. You’ll audit what you’re consuming. You’ll evaluate what you’re producing. And you’ll identify one output you’re ready to ship—not perfectly, but courageously. Because creativity isn’t a mood. It’s a movement.

    7 мин.
  3. 15 ФЕВР.

    Evaluating Your Creativity: Four C's of Creative Thinking

    What if creativity isn’t a lightning bolt… but a system you can train? In this episode, we break down The School of Creativity and Innovation’s Four C’s of Creative Thinking — a practical, research-informed framework designed to help you think faster, generate more ideas, and transform inspiration into impact. If you’ve ever said, “I’m not the creative one,” this conversation will challenge that belief. Because creativity isn’t about talent. It’s about thinking. And thinking can be designed. The Four C’s framework expands how we understand creative intelligence. It moves beyond the myth of the lone genius and into something far more empowering — a repeatable mental discipline. Creativity begins with better questions. Curiosity is the engine of innovation. It’s the willingness to challenge assumptions, explore the unknown, and ask “What if?” instead of “Why not?” In today’s fast-moving world, curiosity separates reactive professionals from adaptive leaders. We explore how curiosity activates cognitive flexibility — your brain’s ability to connect distant ideas and reframe problems. When you intentionally practice curiosity, you stop seeing obstacles as dead ends and start seeing them as design challenges. The audit question becomes:Are you consuming information… or interrogating it? Nothing is completely original — but everything can be recombined. Combinatory thinking is the art of connecting ideas across domains. The best innovations rarely appear from thin air. They emerge when someone links two previously unrelated concepts — technology and storytelling, design and data, psychology and product. This pillar trains you to look horizontally instead of vertically. Instead of going deeper into the same silo, you build bridges between silos. In the podcast, we discuss how creative breakthroughs often happen at intersections — where disciplines collide and perspectives overlap. Ask yourself:What two worlds in your life haven’t talked to each other yet? Quantity fuels quality. Fluency is your ability to generate many ideas rapidly without self-censoring. Most people stop at the first reasonable solution. Creative professionals push past the obvious and into the unexpected. Research in divergent thinking shows that originality increases the longer you stay in idea generation mode. Your 15th idea is often more innovative than your third. In this episode, we unpack how to build idea stamina — the mental endurance to keep producing options even when your brain wants to stop. The real shift?Fluency turns creativity from pressure into practice. Innovation builds on what already exists. Derivative thinking isn’t copying — it’s evolving. It’s understanding that creativity is iterative. You study what works, extract patterns, adapt structures, and refine them into something uniquely yours. Some of the most iconic products, stories, and business models are derivatives — improved, remixed, reframed. Derivative thinking removes the paralysis of perfectionism. You don’t have to invent the universe. You just have to improve it. The question becomes:What can you iterate instead of invent? In an era shaped by artificial intelligence, automation, and constant change, technical skill alone is no longer enough. The competitive edge belongs to those who can question, connect, generate, and evolve ideas consistently. The Four C’s provide a language and system for doing exactly that. You’ll learn how curiosity expands possibility, combinatory thinking unlocks innovation, fluency builds momentum, and derivative thinking sustains progress. Together, they transform creativity from a mysterious talent into a strategic capability. By the end of this episode, you’ll see creativity not as a personality trait — but as a discipline. Not as chaos — but as architecture. Not as luck — but as leverage. Because the future will not be shaped by those who wait for inspiration. It will be shaped by those who train their thinking.

    15 мин.
  4. 15 ФЕВР.

    Evaluating Your Creativity: The Creative Process

    What if the real reason you feel stuck… isn’t a lack of ideas — but a lack of process? In this episode, we dive deep into Pillar 3 of The School of Creativity and Innovation’s Creative Audit: The Creative Process — the engine that turns imagination into momentum and momentum into impact. Most professionals don’t struggle with creativity because they’re “not creative.” They struggle because they don’t have a repeatable way to move from spark to solution. Inspiration comes and goes. Deadlines don’t. And without structure, even great ideas stall. Pillar 3 is where creativity stops being mystical… and starts becoming mechanical. At its core, the Creative Process is about understanding how you generate ideas, how you evaluate them, how you respond when they fail, and how you iterate your way forward. It asks powerful questions: Do you jump to the first answer — or explore multiple possibilities? Do you overthink — or take small experimental action? When something doesn’t work, do you shut down — or refine and try again? In this episode, we unpack the science behind creative flow. Research shows creativity is not a lightning strike — it’s a dynamic dance between two modes of thinking: divergent thinking (generating many possibilities) and convergent thinking (selecting and refining the best ones). The magic happens when you learn to switch intentionally between the two. Pillar 3 trains that switch. You’ll explore tools like rapid Divergent Sprints to expand your idea pool, scenario-based reframing to challenge assumptions, and the signature TRYcycle method — Curiosity, Play, Action — an iterative loop designed to build momentum through small experiments. Instead of waiting for perfect clarity, you take a tiny step.Instead of fearing failure, you treat it as data.Instead of over-planning, you prototype. That shift changes everything. Because the Creative Process isn’t about getting it right the first time. It’s about creating forward motion. This pillar also confronts one of the biggest hidden barriers in professional environments: perfectionism disguised as professionalism. Many talented people stall because they equate creativity with flawless execution. But innovation thrives in iteration. The organizations that move fastest are not those who avoid mistakes — they are those who test, learn, and adapt quickly. Through immersive exercises, you begin mapping your own creative workflow: Where do you generate best — in solitude or collaboration?Do constraints energize you or shut you down?What rituals help you enter flow?What habits break it? You’ll learn that creative process is personal — but it can also be engineered. In the workplace, Pillar 3 becomes a competitive advantage. Teams that understand how to separate idea generation from evaluation make better decisions. Leaders who normalize iteration build cultures of innovation. HR professionals who design safe testing environments unlock employee creativity at scale. And on a personal level, this pillar builds creative confidence. Because when you have a process, you don’t fear the blank page.You don’t fear the uncertain project.You don’t fear the unknown. You trust that you can navigate it. By the end of this episode, you’ll see that creativity isn’t about waiting for inspiration. It’s about designing systems that produce it. It’s about building habits that turn ambiguity into opportunity. It’s about understanding that momentum — not magic — drives innovation. Pillar 3 is where creativity becomes sustainable. Where ideas stop living in notebooks and start living in the world. And where you stop asking, “Am I creative?”And start asking, “What will I build next?”

    16 мин.
  5. 15 ФЕВР.

    Evaluating Your Creativity: The Creative Environment

    What if your creativity isn’t blocked… but buried under your environment? In this episode, we dive deep into Pillar 2 of The School of Creativity and Innovation’s Creative Audit: The Creative Environment — the often overlooked force shaping how boldly you think, how freely you imagine, and how confidently you execute. Most professionals assume creativity is internal. Talent. Intelligence. Motivation.But science — and experience — tell a different story. Your environment is not neutral. It is either accelerating your ideas… or quietly suffocating them. Pillar 2 challenges you to ask a radical question: Is your space designed for performance — or just productivity? We explore how creativity does not happen in isolation. It emerges from a dynamic ecosystem that includes: • Your physical space• Your digital inputs• Your social networks• Your emotional climate• Your cultural norms Every meeting structure, every Slack notification, every playlist, every colleague interaction either fuels cognitive expansion or narrows your thinking. In this episode, we unpack how psychological safety acts as oxygen for creativity. When people fear judgment, rejection, or embarrassment, the brain shifts into protective mode. But when individuals feel safe to experiment, question, and risk being wrong, innovation accelerates. You’ll hear why the highest-performing teams aren’t just smart — they are safe.Safe to disagree.Safe to propose half-formed ideas.Safe to iterate publicly. We also explore the neuroscience behind environmental influence. Creativity thrives when the brain can toggle between divergent exploration and focused refinement. Constant interruption, overstimulation, and digital overload disrupt this rhythm. Pillar 2 invites you to intentionally curate your surroundings to protect creative cycles. This episode reframes environment as a strategic asset. We discuss: • How clutter impacts cognitive load• Why “micro-environments” — playlists, lighting, tools — matter more than you think• The role of constraints in sparking ingenuity• How diverse perspectives increase originality• Why isolation kills innovation You’ll learn how to audit your daily inputs: Who energizes your thinking?Who drains it?When do you feel most expansive?When do you shrink? The Creative Environment isn’t just about your office layout. It’s about the emotional architecture you operate within. Are you surrounded by possibility… or pressure? We also explore the idea of environmental courage — the willingness to redesign your context instead of blaming yourself for lack of output. Sometimes the breakthrough isn’t trying harder. It’s changing the room. For early- to mid-career professionals in tech, business, design, and HR, this pillar is especially powerful. You may not control the entire organization — but you can influence your microclimate. You can shape meetings. You can protect creative time. You can curate collaborators. You can introduce rituals that spark openness. Small environmental shifts create exponential creative gains. This episode also introduces practical exercises from the Creative Audit: • Mapping your “creative hotspots”• Identifying environmental triggers that unlock flow• Designing a 30-day creative environment experiment• Building psychological safety inside your team The goal isn’t aesthetic perfection. It’s alignment. When your environment matches your aspirations, creativity feels natural instead of forced. By the end of this episode, you’ll stop asking, “Why am I not more creative?” And start asking, “What does my environment need to unlock what’s already there?” Because creativity is rarely about waiting for inspiration. It’s about designing conditions where inspiration has permission to show up. If Pillar 1 asks who you are… Pillar 2 asks where you are becoming that person. And the answer might change everything.

    8 мин.
  6. 15 ФЕВР.

    Evaluating Your Creativity: The Creative Audit

    What if your greatest competitive advantage isn’t your résumé… but your creativity? In this episode, we unpack the Creative Audit from The School of Creativity and Innovation — a powerful, science-grounded framework designed to help professionals rediscover, measure, and activate their creative edge. This isn’t about painting landscapes or writing poetry. It’s about how you think. How you solve problems. How you navigate uncertainty. How you generate ideas under pressure. And most importantly — how you turn those ideas into meaningful impact. The Creative Audit is built around four core pillars that shape your creative capacity: 1. The Creative SelfWho are you when you are at your most alive, imaginative, and courageous?This pillar explores mindset, identity, curiosity, confidence, and the beliefs that either unlock or limit your potential. We examine the internal narratives that quietly shape performance — the stories about talent, intelligence, and risk that often go unchallenged. You’ll learn how creativity is not a personality trait, but a trainable capability grounded in growth, experimentation, and self-awareness. 2. The Creative EnvironmentIs your environment fueling your creativity — or draining it?Your physical space, digital inputs, social networks, workflows, and emotional climate all influence your creative output. This pillar helps you audit what catalyzes flow and what inhibits it. We explore how psychological safety, cognitive diversity, and intentional constraints can dramatically increase innovation. You’ll begin curating your surroundings like a creative studio — not by accident, but by design. 3. The Creative ProcessHow do you move from idea to action?Many professionals stall not because they lack ideas, but because they lack a repeatable process. This pillar introduces structured tools for divergent thinking, reframing, experimentation, and iteration. You’ll explore the TRYcycle method — Curiosity, Play, Action — and learn how to build creative momentum through small tests instead of waiting for perfect plans. Creativity becomes less mystical and more mechanical — something you can practice, refine, and deploy under pressure. 4. Creative Products & ImpactWhat are you actually putting into the world?Ideas mean nothing without implementation. This pillar challenges you to connect creativity to outcomes: leadership, innovation, entrepreneurship, collaboration, culture. Are your ideas useful? Novel? Meaningful? Are they solving real problems? You’ll evaluate your creative outputs and align them with professional impact — turning imagination into strategic advantage. Throughout the episode, we connect these pillars to neuroscience, performance psychology, and real-world application. You’ll learn how creativity thrives when divergent and convergent thinking are balanced, how experimentation reduces fear of failure, and how immersive learning rewires confidence through experience — not theory. The Creative Audit isn’t a personality quiz. It’s a mirror. A diagnostic. A catalyst. It reveals where you shine, where you’re stuck, and where you’re ready to grow. For early- to mid-career professionals, designers, tech leaders, and HR innovators, this framework provides clarity in a world that demands adaptability. In an age of AI and automation, creativity is not optional — it is the defining human advantage. This conversation will challenge the myth that creativity is reserved for a gifted few. It will invite you to rethink intelligence beyond IQ. It will encourage you to stop forcing inspiration and instead design conditions where ideas emerge naturally. By the end of this episode, you won’t just understand creativity differently. You’ll see yourself differently. Because the future doesn’t belong to those who consume it. It belongs to those who create it.

    17 мин.
  7. 08.11.2023

    Season 5 Episode 2: TikTok Star and Content Creator Tiffany Kerr

    In today’s gripping episode, we welcomed Tiffany Kerr, a dynamic entrepreneur and social media influencer, to our podcast. Broadcasting from her current base, she took us on her remarkable journey from St. Pete to the star-studded streets of LA, sharing how she turned challenges into stepping stones during the pandemic lockdown. Tiffany highlighted the importance of consistency and discipline across her social platforms and her passion project, Truth Jewelry, which supports the fight against human trafficking. Embracing the entrepreneurial spirit, Tiffany spoke candidly about the relentless pursuit of balance in her life and her disdain for restrictive titles. Despite the pressures of relocating to LA right before a global crisis, Tiffany's resilience shone through. She recounted the pivotal moments of working at Walmart and a chiropractor's office before diving into the world of social media purely for fun. It wasn’t long before her relatable content captured hearts, leading her into the influencer industry. A graduate of an entrepreneur and innovation program, Tiffany's main takeaway was the invaluable lesson of not fearing failure but seeing it as a pathway to success. She shared the complexities behind the influencer veneer, discussing the courage it takes to face public scrutiny and the importance of building a trustworthy community. She walked us through her daily routine and her ‘3 priority technique’ that helps manage her diverse projects. Tiffany also stressed the ever-evolving nature of social media and the need to remain adaptable, constantly testing new strategies to stay ahead. Acting, she explained, has bolstered her empathy, a trait crucial to both her personal growth and entrepreneurial ventures. When asked about her dream collaborations, names like Marvel and Rihanna's Fenty Brands came up, reflecting her ambitious vision. Scaling social media influence, Tiffany advocated for authenticity, especially on platforms like TikTok, where scripted content can often feel disingenuous. She also emphasized the importance of negotiation skills and building a supportive team for monetization efforts. Looking forward, Tiffany's personal goals include expanding her influencer business and championing the curly hair community. She offered advice to students and aspiring entrepreneurs, urging them to explore widely and find their true passion. Finally, Tiffany reflected on the evolving landscape of social media influence, the need for continuous learning, and the significance of having a robust support system. With a heartfelt message about self-acceptance and a mission to inspire, Tiffany left us with profound insights and her social media handles for anyone wishing to connect with her inspiring journey. #TiffanyOnPodcast #EntrepreneurJourney #SocialMediaInfluence #TruthJewelry #EmpoweringEntrepreneurs #BalanceInBusiness #InfluencerInsights #OvercomingAdversity #PersonalBranding #ContentCreationTips #MonetizationStrategies #CurlyHairCommunity #ActingAndEmpathy #DreamCollaborations #ContinuousLearning #SocialMediaStrategy #EmpowermentThroughSocialMedia #InnovationAndEntrepreneurship #SuccessMindset

    29 мин.

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Dr. Steve Diasio is a Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Founder of The School of Creativity and Innovation. Learn more at https://linktr.ee/stevediasio The Youtube Video of these casts can be seen on the Finger Puppet Management TV Channel, part of the Finger Puppet Media Group. www.stevediasio.com