Deborah G. Estes is a speaker and consultant for companies and
organizations wanting to understand how the brain works when
brainstorming. "You have to stimulate the brain to make it go
into a brainstorming mode," says Estes, a former teacher and
principal. She thinks and talks a lot about dendrites, which wire
our brains to our nerves. "The more dendrites you have, the
more ways you have to solve problems, the more connections your
brain is making, and the more creative you can be," says
Estes. So if you're looking for a business idea but you
don't want to depend on dumb luck, you need to stimulate those
dendrites.
Estes recommends brainstorming in a group. If you already have a
potential business partner or friends who are willing to help you,
gather them together, start talking and taking notes--with a
cavalier, "anything goes" attitude--and see what you come
up with.
And don't worry if your creative sessions aren't
logical. "They're not supposed to be logical," says
Estes, who adds that, above all, your brainstorming sessions should
be adventuresome. "Keep it creative and playful," she
says.
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If you can't always bring somebody else into your
brainstorming sessions, you're going to have to operate solo
and dance with the dendrites. "Go someplace you've never
been before and take notes," advises Estes. "Talk to
people you wouldn't normally talk to. Drive a different way to
work, go to a museum or start journaling."
But here's the biggest mistake most people make when
brainstorming: "They simply don't cover enough
ground," says Tom Monahan, who runs Before & After Inc., a
creative coaching business in Tiverton, Rhode Island. "They
don't work out enough ideas, and they tend to go with their
first idea or their first good idea. In a competitive business
world, your first good idea is likely to be an idea that somebody
else [has thought about already]."
He should know. Monahan wrote The Do-It-Yourself Lobotomy (John Wiley
& Sons), a book that teaches people how to think creatively. He
has also helped large corporations such as AT&T, Frito-Lay, GTE
and United Way with the brainstorming process.
In his book, he outlines several methods to brainstorming, like
the 180-degree method, in which you think of the worst possible
outcomes for a business. Let's say you love coffee, and
you're thinking of opening a coffeehouse. The worst thing you
could do to your customers is throw hot coffee on them, right? So
you might come up with a business that manufactures special coffee
gloves.
Admittedly, it's probably the stupidest idea in the world,
but in the world of brainstorming, there are no stupid ideas. Or
you might start thinking about a company that sells soothing hand
lotions for minor burns, and suddenly you're light years away
from your coffeehouse idea.
Whatever technique you use to concoct a new business idea,
Monahan suggests you think of it this way: "I like to look at
what problems consumers have in any given area. I think problems
are the biggest springboards for ideas."
Brainstorming can be a lonely business, so don't allow
yourself to get discouraged, warns Estes. "The brain believes
what you tell it. It has no reason not to trust you. And when you
make the statement 'I can't do this,' your brain will
believe it."
Monahan offers more encouragement. "There is no such thing
as absolute creativity," he says. "Every new idea is
merely a spin on an old idea. [Knowing that] takes the pressure off
from thinking [you] have to be totally creative. You don't.
Sometimes it's one slight twist to an old idea that makes all
the difference."
| Think Tank |
- JPB Creative, a
company that specializes in innovative thinking, offers a Web site
devoted to creativity, featuring a 10-step brainstorming
program.
- Tom Monahan suggests visiting www.do-it-yourselflobotomy.com.
Mostly a Web site for his business and book, it also provides ideas
you could adapt on your own.
- Log on to www.mindtools.com. This online retail
store sells products that inspire you to think and offers plenty of
suggestions for books and software to help you brainstorm
better.
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