Five Easy Steps to Supercharge Creative Thinking Right Now

Disruption continues to unseat market leaders, media continues to fragment and the unstoppable march of technology continues to gain momentum. Can anyone in business today deny that we live and work in a sometimes-chaotic, rapidly-changing, innovation-driven world?

No matter what career path you pursue, the expectation to reinvent, innovate and deliver out-of-the-box solutions weigh heavily on your ability to succeed. In fact, a group of international CEOs recently ranked “creative thinking as the No. 1 leadership quality required for success in business today.”

So what if you don’t consider yourself a creative type?  Can creativity be learned? How can you enhance the idea generating skills you have?

“Anyone can learn to unlock their creative problem-solving genius so essential to success,” says Mitchell Rigie, a creativity trainer and founding partner at SmartStorming.  Mitchell is the co-author of a book chocked full of easy-to-learn approaches he believes anyone can leverage to generate ideas.

I asked Mitchell for his best tips for coming up with big ideas under pressure. Here’s what he shared:

  1. Always clarify your challenge and goals before you begin.

Understand the nature of the challenge you are tackling -- be precise, without vagueness or ambiguity and be sure there are no impor­tant missing facts or pieces of information that might make it more difficult to effectively solve the challenge. Consider if there’s an underlying issue that needs to be addressed.

Then, set a clear goal in mind for your idea generation efforts. How many ideas would you like to generate? Define the nature of the ideas you’d like to produce, whether they are simple conversation starters, or fully fleshed out concepts, strategies or tactics.

  1. Stock your creative pond before fishing for ideas. And preferably, daily.

Take the time to ob­serve, explore, discover, be curious and take note of things that inspire you or that you find interesting, fascinating or provocative. Seek out new and different types of stimuli to help spark your brain’s power of associative thinking and trigger the spontaneous leaps that foster new connections. Stimuli can be anything from information, data, pictures movies/videos, magazines/books, web surfing, museums, performances, nature, history, etc. The more stimuli you have to play with, the more connections you’ll make.

  1. Use a variety of ideation techniques to stimulate new ways of thinking.

Ideation techniques are novel, imagination-stimulating activi­ties designed to help you tackle challenges from a fresh perspective. Here are four of Mitchell’s favorites:

  • Associative Thinking:A process where one idea spontaneously trig­gers another, which triggers another, which triggers another, and so on.
  • Adaptive Thinking:Based on the theory that virtually every new, in­novative concept, product, service or process is really (in one way or another) an adaptation of something else that already exists or has existed in the past.
  • Counterintuitive Thinking:Sometimes a really bad, radical or imprac­tical sounding idea can contain the seeds of a big, game-changing idea within it.
  • Challenging Assumptions:A powerful way to question the status quo and move beyond any perceived limitations or barriers. By doing so, you can imagine bold new solutions never before thought possible.
  1. Manage your “divergent” and “convergent” thinking processes.

When generating ideas, your thinking either diverges outward, in a 360-degree, blue sky exploration of a variety of ideas (employing curiosity, imagination and intuition) with no regard for quality; or converges inward in an effort to evaluate, judge and select ideas.

It’s vitally important not to mix these two modes of thinking.  Convergent thinking will shut-down brainstorming with self-judgments and criti­cisms. And divergent thinking will sidetrack critical, logic-based conver­gent thinking with distractions brought about by new ideas.

As a simple rule, says Mitchell, only when you’re 100% finished generating ideas should you switch to con­vergent thinking to evaluate them.  

  1. Always predetermine objective criteria for evaluating ideas.

Mitchell encourages you to visualize what the perfect solution or result would look like and then, before you even begin brainstorming, create a short list of objective standards to judge it. After you generate as many as you can, rate each idea based on how well it meets your criteria. And voila, you have your solution!

Your mind is a wonderful incubator, and if you learn to stimulate it optimally, the ideas you’ll produce will be both limitless and groundbreaking.

The opinions and points of view expressed in this commentary are exclusively the views of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of MediaVillage/MyersBizNet management or associated bloggers.

Kristi Faulkner

Kristi Faulkner is president and co-founder of Womenkind, where she advises clients who need and want to better reach, engage and motivate women through enhanced marketing messages, product innovation, and organizational evolution. As a creative director, sh… read more