This inspires me.
This inspires me.
by Mitch Ditkoff
- Ask the most creative people at work for their ideas.
- Brainstorm daily with a co-worker.
- Tape record your ideas on your commute to and from work.
- Present your challenge to a child.
- Take your team off-site for a day.
- Listen to your inner muse.
- Play music in your office.
- Go for a daily brainstorming walk.
- Ask someone to collaborate with you on your favorite project.
- Exercise during your lunch break.
- Turn on a radio at random times and listen for a "message."
- Invite your customers to brainstorming sessions.
- Think of three other ways to define your challenge.
- Remember your dreams.
- Reward yourself, in specific ways, for small successes.
- Introduce odd catalysts into your daily routine.
- Get out of the office more regularly.
- Play with fun toys in your office whenever you get stuck.
- Take more naps.
- Ask for help.
- Work in cafes.
- Transform your assumptions into "How can I?" questions.
- Write down as many ideas as you can think of in five minutes
- Redesign your office.
- Take regular daydreaming breaks.
- Dissolve turf boundaries.
- Initiate cross-functional brainstorming sessions.
- Arrive earlier to the office than anyone else.
- Turn a conference room into an upbeat "think tank" room.
- Read odd books - having nothing to do with your work.
- Block off time on your calendar for creative thinking.
- Take a shower in the middle of the day.
- Keep an idea notebook at your desk.
- Decorate your office with inspiring quotes and images.
- Create a headline of the future and the story behind it.
- Choose to be more creative.
- Recall a time in your life when you were very creative.
- Wander around a bookstore while thinking about your challenge.
- Trust your instincts more.
- Immerse yourself in your most exciting project.
- Open a magazine and free associate off of a word or image.
- Write down your ideas when you first wake up in the morning.
- Ask yourself what the simplest solution is.
- Get fast feedback from people you trust.
- Conduct more experiments.
- Ask yourself what the market wants or needs.
- Ask "What's the worst thing that could happen if I fail?"
- Pilot your idea, even if it's not ready.
- Work "in the cracks" - small bursts of creative energy.
- Incubate (sleep on it).
- Test existing boundaries - and then test them again.
- Schedule time with the smartest people at work.
- Visit your customers more frequently.
- Benchmark your competitors - then adapt their successes.
- Enroll your boss or peers into your most fascinating project.
- Imagine you already know the answer. What would it be?
- Create ground rules with your team that foster new thinking.
- Ask stupid questions. Then ask some more.
- Challenge everything you do.
- Give yourself a deadline - and stick to it
- Look for three alternatives to every solution you originate.
- Write your ideas in a notebook and review them regularly.
- Make connections between seemingly disconnected things.
- Use creative thinking techniques.
- Play with the Free the Genie cards.
- Use similes and metaphors when describing your ideas.
- Have more fun. Be sillier than usual.
- Ask "How can I accomplish my goal in half the time?"
- Take a break when you are stuck on a problem.
- Think how your biggest hero might approach your challenge.
- Declare Friday afternoons a "no-email zone."
- Ask three people how they would improve your idea.
- Create a wall of images that inspires you.
- Do more of what already helps you be creative off the job.
- Laugh more, worry less.
- Remember your dreams - then write them down.
- Ask impossible questions.
- Eliminate all unnecessary bureaucracy and admin tasks.
- Create a compelling vision of what you want to accomplish.
- Work on hottest project every day, even if only 5 minutes.
- Do whatever is necessary to create a sense of urgency.
- Go for a walk anytime you're stuck.
- Meditate or do relaxation exercises.
- Take more breaks.
- Go out for lunch with your team more often.
- Eat lunch with a different person each day.
- Ask for forgiveness, not permission.
- Invite an outside facilitator to lead a brainstorming session.
- Take more risks outside of the office (i.e. surf, ski, box etc.)
- Ask for help when you need it.
- Know that it is possible to make a difference.
- Find a mentor.
- Acknowledge all your successes at the end of each day.
- Create an "idea piggy bank" and make deposits daily.
- Have shorter meetings.
- Try the techniques in "Awake at the Wheel"
- Don't listen to or watch the news for 24 hours.
- Make drawings of your ideas.
- Bring your project or challenge to mind before going to bed.
- Divide your idea into component parts. Then rethink each part.
- Post this list near your desk and read it daily.
KIND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO: Anne Howe, David Beath, Jim Aubele, Gary Kvistad, Howard Moody, Farrell Reynolds, Hector Cruz Rosa, Jill Peckinpaugh, and Marcy Turkington for their wonderful suggestions.
Don't miss an article - Subscribe to our RSS feed and join our Continuous Innovation group!Mitch Ditkoff is the Co-Founder and President of Idea Champions and the author of "Awake at the Wheel", as well as the very popular Heart of Innovation blog.
Labels: Brainstorming, collaboration, Collaborative Innovation, Creative Genius, Creativity, Ideas, Mitch Ditkoff

I love looking at old photographs. Making comparisons and seeing how we progress over time makes it even more enjoyable. Check out this great gallery on Flickr from Ed Hunsinger.
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