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  "headline": "Lego Education's 'Solution Diversity' Metric Is the Leadership Tool Most Companies Are Missing",
  "deck": "Andrew Sliwinski, head of product experience at Lego Education, has a simple test for whether a learning experience actually worked: did ten groups produce ten different things? Leaders who can't answer yes should worry.",
  "tldr": "Lego Education uses a metric called 'solution diversity' to evaluate whether a learning experience generated genuinely divergent thinking — if every group reaches the same answer, the design failed. The principle has direct implications for how companies run brainstorms, develop leaders, and build organizational decision-making. Leaders who train their teams to converge fast on a single answer are, in effect, manufacturing blind spots at scale.",
  "key_takeaways": [
    "Lego Education's 'solution diversity' metric holds that a well-designed learning experience should produce multiple distinct outcomes — identical results signal a flawed design, not a successful one.",
    "Andrew Sliwinski, who previously co-directed MIT Media Lab's Scratch programming tool, argues the goal of real learning is divergence, not convergence on a single correct answer.",
    "The same instinct that redirects 'off-topic' classroom play also shuts down productive reframing in adult workplaces — leaders who suppress divergent thinking are eliminating their own optionality.",
    "Roughly 75% of Fortune 500 top-20 CEOs hold an MBA or other graduate degree, yet business school curricula still predominantly reward finding the 'right answer' over generating multiple viable ones.",
    "In fast-moving categories — AI infrastructure and policy being the current example — markets attach multiple, shifting meanings to new technologies; organizations built around single-reading consensus are structurally exposed."
  ],
  "body_md": "## The Metric\n\nLego Education has a straightforward way to know whether a learning exercise worked: count how many different things came out of it.\n\nIf ten groups of children are given an open-ended building challenge and all ten produce the same structure, the design team goes back to the drawing board. Not because the kids failed — because the exercise did. It offered only one path through, and everyone took it.\n\nAndrew Sliwinski, head of product experience at Lego Education, calls this standard 'solution diversity.' It is, at its core, a quality control metric for thinking.\n\n## Why It Matters Beyond the Classroom\n\nSliwinski's background is worth noting. Before Lego, he co-directed Scratch at the MIT Media Lab — the free programming platform used by hundreds of millions of children worldwide. His career has been built on a single conviction: the point of a real learning experience is not to produce the right answer but to produce many possible answers, and then navigate among them.\n\nThat conviction has an obvious application in product design and education. Its application in corporate leadership is less obvious and more consequential.\n\nThe brainstorm where someone goes 'off topic' and gets redirected to the 'task at hand' is the adult workplace equivalent of the classroom that crowds out imaginative, socially messy play. Both moves feel like efficiency. Both eliminate the reframe that might have been the better path.\n\nLeaders who consistently train their organizations to converge fast — to find the answer, align behind it, and execute — are not building decisive cultures. They are building monocultures with a single point of interpretive failure.\n\n## The Business Case for Divergence\n\nConsider what convergence costs in a genuinely ambiguous market. The AI category currently carries multiple, competing meanings in the public mind: productivity tool, existential risk, infrastructure investment, regulatory target. Those meanings are not fixed. They are being renegotiated continuously, and they affect everything from product adoption curves to data center policy.\n\nAn organization that has trained itself to read the market one way — and act on that reading — has not achieved clarity. It has achieved exposure.\n\nSolution diversity is the organizational hedge against that exposure. It is not a license for endless deliberation. It is a design requirement: build processes that generate multiple viable readings before committing to one.\n\n## The MBA Problem\n\nApproximately 75% of Fortune 500 top-20 CEOs hold an MBA or other graduate degree. Business school is, by most measures, the dominant pipeline for senior leadership. It is also, by design, a system that rewards correct answers.\n\nThat is a reasonable approach to fixed problems. It is a poor approach to the kind of problems that actually define leadership careers — markets that shift, categories that get redefined, organizations that need to see around corners they haven't turned yet.\n\nSliwinski's argument, and the argument embedded in Lego Education's design philosophy, is that the most valuable thing a leadership development program can produce is not better analysis of known problems. It is better tolerance for — and active generation of — multiple framings of unknown ones.\n\n## What Operators Should Take From This\n\nSolution diversity is a metric any organization can steal. Apply it to your next strategy session: did the process generate genuinely different options, or did it generate one option with varying levels of polish?\n\nIf the latter, the process failed — regardless of how good the chosen option looks. You didn't evaluate alternatives. You rationalized a default.\n\nThe fix is not to hire more creative people. It is to stop designing processes that punish divergence before it has a chance to become useful.",
  "faqs": [
    {
      "question": "What is 'solution diversity' as Lego Education defines it?",
      "answer": "It is a metric used to evaluate whether a learning experience generated genuinely divergent outcomes. If ten groups complete the same open-ended challenge and produce the same result, Lego treats that as a design failure — the exercise offered only one path through, which means it didn't test or develop real problem-solving capacity."
    },
    {
      "question": "Who is Andrew Sliwinski and why is his background relevant?",
      "answer": "Sliwinski is head of product experience at Lego Education. Before that, he co-directed Scratch at the MIT Media Lab, the free programming tool used by hundreds of millions of children. His career has centered on building learning products designed to produce multiple outcomes rather than a single correct answer."
    },
    {
      "question": "How does solution diversity apply to corporate leadership, not just education?",
      "answer": "The same instinct that redirects off-topic classroom discussion also shuts down productive reframing in adult workplaces. Leaders who build cultures that converge quickly on a single answer are eliminating optionality and creating organizational blind spots — particularly costly in markets where the dominant interpretation of a category is actively shifting."
    },
    {
      "question": "Does prioritizing divergent thinking conflict with the need for decisive execution?",
      "answer": "Solution diversity is a design requirement for the front end of decision-making, not a substitute for commitment at the back end. The goal is to ensure that when an organization does commit to a direction, it has genuinely evaluated alternatives — not simply rationalized the default option."
    },
    {
      "question": "What does this mean for MBA programs and leadership development?",
      "answer": "Business school curricula predominantly reward identifying the correct answer, which is well-suited to fixed problems but poorly suited to the ambiguous, shifting conditions that define most senior leadership challenges. The argument here is that leadership development programs should explicitly build capacity for generating and holding multiple framings — not just optimizing within a single one."
    }
  ],
  "citations": [
    {
      "title": "Lego Leader Talks About the Power of 'Solution Diversity'",
      "url": "https://www.fastcompany.com/91549343/lego-leader-talks-about-the-power-of-solution-diversity",
      "accessed_at": "2026-06-09",
      "claim": "Andrew Sliwinski, head of product experience at Lego Education, describes 'solution diversity' as a metric for evaluating whether a learning experience produced genuinely divergent outcomes; roughly 75% of Fortune 500 top-20 CEOs hold an MBA or other graduate degree."
    },
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      "claim": "Scratch is a free programming tool co-directed by Andrew Sliwinski at the MIT Media Lab, used by hundreds of millions of children worldwide.",
      "title": "Scratch — Imagine, Program, Share (MIT Media Lab)",
      "url": "https://scratch.mit.edu",
      "accessed_at": "2026-06-09"
    },
    {
      "claim": "Lego Education is the division of the Lego Group that applies the company's play-based philosophy to educational pedagogy, with programs in school systems across multiple countries including the United States, South Korea, and Denmark.",
      "url": "https://education.lego.com/en-us/about-us/",
      "title": "Lego Education — About",
      "accessed_at": "2026-06-09"
    }
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  "topic_tags": [
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  "author_name": "Elena Brooks",
  "published_at": "2026-06-09T12:16:07.880Z",
  "modified_at": "2026-06-09T12:16:07.880Z",
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