Where do great ideas come from? The cliched
view is that they come fully formed in a flash of inspiration. You’ve probably
seen this in films or on TV, a character might be working over night trying to
come up with a big idea, and suddenly their idea hits them.
However, the reality is actually far more
complicated. The truly great ideas, are the product of processes. They are the
product of what a person sees and gets in touch with every day that combine to
influence a thought. A random thought turns into an idea, then the idea is
worked on.
Consider twitter, twitter was originally not
conceived as as a social network, but instead as an alternative to SMS
messaging. The original 140 wasn’t a creative gimmick, but was instead
reflected the technological limitations of the mobile phone format (at the
time).1
Uber came from a conversation between friends where
they were complaining about how hard it was to find a decent taxi.2
The idea for Airbnb came when the founders were
struggling to pay rent, and needed a way to earn some extra money. Most of the
hotel rooms in the city were booked up thanks to a local conference, so they
thought that they could exploit this by providing extra space in their
apartment for overnight guests.3
All of these ideas came to revolutionize their
respective fields, and none of them came fully formed at the very beginning.
Our view of how great ideas are born is thus inaccurate and is even potentially
harmful.
We
murder good ideas that are incubating
Usually when we hear about these ideas, it is when
they are at their most successful. We don’t see the weeks, months, and years
where the initial idea was developed, or the successes and early failures of
the business. As a result we naturally assume the ideas were fantastic and
fully formed from the start.
We assume that is where good ideas come from.A study
has shown that the human brain favors any action or option which uses the least
amount of energy.4 So where it might be more useful to come up with ten
different ideas for us to work on, we struggle to come up with one to save up
energy. So we try very hard to come up with a fantastic idea.
But even if we do come up with an idea, we have no
idea whether it is good or not because it doesn’t have concrete details on how
it’s going to work. Without the details and a plan to take action on the idea,
we judge its failure early before it can incubate into something great. Unless
an idea is executed, our brains are unable to determine whether an idea is
going to be great or not.
Think about the companies mentioned at the beginning
of this article. The idea for each one of them came from the creators trying
fulfill a need, they found themselves faced with a particular problem (like
failing to find a good taxi as in the case with Uber), and as a result they
came up with a random idea directly related to it, that random idea became the
solution to it.
But if we think we will come up with the next big
idea without placing ourselves in the right context, and don’t allow for ideas
to come to us naturally, then it is guaranteed that they won’t come to us at
all. Instead we get stuck.
The
truth is, good ideas are random
One day you might come up with ten ideas, of those
ten, one might be an okay idea. We might often instinctively reject an idea
that we judge to merely be “okay”. However, an okay idea can become a fantastic
idea with work, and ideas that are truly great from the start are so rare that
they might as well not exist.
It’s like with novel writing. A truly brilliant book
tends to be the product of months if not years of hard work, of endless
re-writes. But as we read the novel at the time it is finished, we assume it
was great from the start.
There is a famous story about Jack Kerouac, an
American novelist, who wrote his famous novel On the Road over a
three week period, almost without stopping for a break. For this to have been
possible, surely the idea must have been brilliant from the start right? Well,
this famous story isn’t true.
Sure, he once typed up a draft of it in three weeks.
But from him coming up with the idea, to finishing the book took over seven
years. The ideas for the story came to him naturally while he was travelling,
or at times he wrote about things that actually happened to him. There was
never a point where he suddenly had this brilliant idea that he was able to
quickly turn into a masterpiece of literature.
All
that is needed is the right stimulation
Great ideas then come from what we see, what we
hear, the people we speak to, and most importantly, a great idea can come as
the solution to a problem, (like what we saw with Twitter, Uber, and
Airbnb). This can be tricky, it can often be easy to be disheartened when
faced with a problem.
But that’s what innovation is, true innovation comes
from either resolving a problem or finding a gap in the market which can be
filled by a great idea. So next time you are faced with a problem, see
this as an opportunity. Even if a solution exists, you might be able to
think of a better one.
Your next great idea might not seem great at first.
It might just seem like an okay idea, a mediocre one, or even a bad one, all
ideas need work. So don’t judge any at first, let ideas come naturally and
write them down. It doesn’t matter how bad they seem, just write them down.
Don’t worry about organizing them either, in fact
it’s good not to. You might miss a good idea while you’re working on the
organization. Organizing at this stage will just mean that you’re giving
yourself an extra job to do which may slow you down or even make you lose
motivation.
Remember, great ideas don’t come fully formed, so
don’t try to force them.
BY: Leon Ho
Leon Ho is the Founder and CEO of Lifehack, which he
started in 2005 as a way to share his personal productivity hacks to make life
easier.
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