Alex Faickney Osborn
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image
Alex Faickney Osborn (May 24, 1888 – May 5, 1966) was an American advertising executive and the author of the creativity technique named brainstorming.
Founding of BBDO
In 1919, Osborn joined with Bruce Fairchild Barton and Roy Sarles Durstine to form the BDO advertising agency. Osborn acted as manager of BDO's Buffalo branch. He was largely responsible for the 1928 merger of BDO (Barton, Durstine & Osborn) with the George Batten Company to create BBDO.
After years of success and having survived the Great Depression, BBDO underwent a crisis in 1938, losing many of its clients and key personnel. Osborn commuted to New York City and eventually saved the company by securing the Goodrich tire account. In 1939, he became BBDO's executive vice president after Durstine resigned. Osborn was crucial in recruiting many top employees, including Ben Duffy, who eventually became the president of BBDO.[1]
Creativity theorist
Osborn became increasingly active as an author, and published several books on creative thinking. In his 1942 book How To Think Up he presented the technique of brainstorming, which had been used at BBDO. Eventually, Osborn's writing career overtook his work in advertising, and in 1960, after more than forty years, he resigned from BBDO's board of directors.
In 1954, Osborn set up the Creative Education Foundation, sustained by the royalties earned from his books. Along with Sidney Parnes, Osborn developed the "Osborn-Parnes Creative Problem Solving Process" (commonly referred to as CPS). He co-founded the Creative Education Foundation's Creative Problem Solving Institute, the world's longest-running international creativity conference, and CPS has been taught for more than 50 years.
Notable advertising work
- General Electric
- Armstrong Cork
- Chrysler
- General Baking
- Royal Crown Cola
- American Tobacco
- BF Goodrich
- Du Pont
- Wildroot Hair Tonic
Books
- A Short Course in Advertising, London, New York: Sir I. Pitman & Son, 1921. Template:Catalog lookup link
- How to "Think Up", New York, London: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1942. Template:Catalog lookup link
- Your Creative Power, Scribner, 1948. Template:Catalog lookup link
- Wake Up Your Mind: 101 Ways to Develop Creativeness, New York, London: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1952. Template:Catalog lookup link
- Translated into Japanese by Kazuo Kuwana 想像の翼をのばせ : 創造力をきたえる101の方法 Tōkyō : Jitsumu Kyōiku Shuppan, 1968 Template:Catalog lookup link
- Applied Imagination: Principles and Procedures of Creative Problem Solving New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1953. Template:Catalog lookup link [2]
- Revised edition, New York, Scribner, 1957 Template:Catalog lookup link
- 3rd ed. New York C. Scribner 1963 Template:Catalog lookup link
- French translation by Georges Rona and Pierre Dupont, L'Imagination constructive. Principes et processus de la Pensée créative et du Brainstorming, Paris, Dunod, 1959.
- Chinese translation by Ikkō Shō, 応用想像力 Taipei : Kyōshi Kōgyō Sōsho Shuppan Kofun Yūgen Kōshi, 1965 Template:Catalog lookup link
Osborn also contributed frequently to trade publications such as Printers' Ink.
Family life
On September 15, 1916, he married Helen Coatsworth, the daughter of a wealthy Buffalo lawyer. They had five children: Katharine, Joan, Marion, Russell, and Elinor. Osborn died of cancer May 5, 1966, in Roswell Park Memorial Institute, where he had been a patient since April 1, 1966. He was 77 years old.[3] He was cremated and his ashes are in a niche at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Buffalo, New York.[4]
Sources
Bruce Fairchild Barton, Roy Sarles Durstine, and Alex Faickney Osborn, Joan Vidal, João Lins. Template:Webarchive
References
Template:Reflist Template:Authority control
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ World Cat entry
- ↑ "Alex F. Osborn, 77, a founder and officer of B.B.D.& O., dies". (1966, May 6). New York Times, p. 47.
- ↑ Template:Cite magazine