How to Have an Innovative Idea: Three Simple Steps
Quick: come up with an innovative idea!
If you’re anything like the thousands of professionals and graduate students I’ve coached over the last fifteen years, panic alarms just went off.
“You can’t just do that,” you might think. “Innovation doesn’t obey instructions – or follow rules.”
But the truth is, the creative process is hardly a mystery – in fact, it can be broken down into three simple steps.
Step 1: Make a bug list
It’s a common misconception that ideas come from nowhere, pouncing on unsuspecting ideators unannounced. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
Brilliant ideas come to those who have developed something of an obsession for a particular problem, and so the question begs to be asked: “What’s your problem?”
The simple way to discover your problem is the aforementioned bug list. I’m not referring to errors in lines of code. This is an assignment we’ve been giving students at Stanford since the 1960s, long before computer programming entered common parlance.
Essentially, a bug list is a running list of things that “bug” you. That’s how Lorraine Sarayeldin stumbled upon the initial spark for what would become her food business, Pom Pom Paddock. She became obsessively attuned to the things that annoyed her – like, for example, making cauliflower rice by hand for every meal.
Forget about the solution in these early stages – instead, keep a bug list and, over time, you’ll find a problem worthy of your attention.
Step 2: Generate bad ideas
Why start with bad ideas?
Because limiting your search to “good” is practically hopeless. Instead, you should be looking for more ideas – and the best way to start the flow is to generate bad ones.
In her acceptance speech for the Innovators Award at the 2023 iHeartRadio Music Awards, singer–songwriter Taylor Swift attested to the value of bad ideas within the creative process:
“I really, really want everyone to know, especially young people, that the hundreds or thousands of dumb ideas that I’ve had are what led me to my good ideas. You have to give yourself permission to fail.”
Generate bad ideas, and your failure-avoiding mind will eventually do the rest.
Step 3: Try out more than one
The last piece of the puzzle is to recognise that innovation is a low-yield activity. That is to say, very few innovative ideas actually work.
If you want to know how you can have an innovative idea that works (and who doesn’t want that?), then the answer is, try a bunch of the things that you think might be innovative and see which one actually works.
There it is: three steps to innovative ideas.
***this post is a slight modification to an article originally published by Innovatia in Australia***
Related: Look for Problems (Richard Feynman)
Related: Generate Bad Ideas (Seth Godin)
Related: Beat the Odds
Related: Test Your Material (Jerry Seinfeld)
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The quality of our thinking is deeply influenced by the diversity of the inputs we collect. Implementing practices like Brian Grazer’s “Curiosity Conversations” ensures innovators are well-equipped with a variety of high-quality raw material for problem-solving.