No one has ONLY good ideas. Stop buying that lie. We all have ideas; some of them are good and some are bad – that’s life. Accept it.
We must avoid the temptation to become “idea snobs”. Even bad ideas have potential and a place in our creative process.
Every idea deserves the chance to reach its potential. The good ones, the REALLY good ones, stay with us and have to be acted on. But, sometimes the mediocre – or bad – ideas get tossed to the curb and left for dead. Inside some of those bad ideas could be the potential for future successful ideas. How can we tell?
- Write every idea down. Document them. Have a place to come back to them.
- Always give ideas space. Good or bad, they need space to breathe and grow. The worst practice we can have as creative people is moving on ideas right when they are developed. Sometimes we have to, but it’s not a “Best Practice”.
- Allow ourself the freedom to change an idea or use it later. Just because it’s not good for today does not mean it never will work.
- What adjustments can be made to these average ideas to make them become great ideas?
- Maybe these ideas challenge us to ask questions and come out of our problem or production from a different angle.
- Play with a bad idea. Flush it out. Something great might come out of it as we talk through how it would or would not work.
- Share these ideas. Sharing them scares us, but just talking through them can cause your creative community to respond and birth a newer or better version of the idea. Never hold back. Creating in community can save even the worst idea if it spurs a new best idea.
A friend of mine who works at Apple was telling me about the memorial for Steve Jobs this week. apple shut down all of their stores for three hours, papered the windows, and streamed the memorial to all the stores from Cupertino.
When Jonathan Ive (senior VP of design) spoke, he said Steve Jobs had alot of mediocre and some downright bad ideas. But then… every now and then, they’d be sitting together at Mac Cafe’ and Steve would tell him his idea and “it would just suck the air right out of the room.”
The key to having great ideas is having a lot of them…