Setting the Stage for Great Ideas

Description

How to begin an idea generation session in the most positive and stimulating way
Alex Dalton
Note by Alex Dalton, updated more than 1 year ago
Alex Dalton
Created by Alex Dalton over 8 years ago
18
0

Resource summary

Page 1

Setting the Stage for Great Ideas

All too often, creative sessions fall flat right from the start because the participants are offered a stale and overly complex challenge to work through, which does little to stimulate bold ideas. How much does this brief fire your imagination? “We need ideas for a returnable format which will engage female audiences over 60 and introduce the concept of prioritising self-development as they consider retirement. The ideas should be informative and educational whilst remaining entertaining and accessible to viewers outside the target audience.” It’s cluttered and overly formal and feels tricky to solve. Here are some tips on how to soften and liven up this brief. Keep it simple Express challenges as SIMPLY as possible. Think; “How would my mum express this?” “How would a ten year old express this?” Thinking simply takes jargon and management speak out of a challenge and thus gives you a far clearer idea of what’s expected of you when it comes to generating ideas. There’s nothing more certain to take the energy out of a room than a challenge full of clichés and vague generalisations. The magic of ‘How Might We?” Whatever your brief, beginning the challenge with ‘how might we?’ is a great open and inviting way to draw your participants into a session. It’s subtly less intimidating than ‘how can we?’ or ‘how will we?’ It offers the idea of multiple solutions and invites people to be a little more playful. Create lots of different options before settling for ‘the one’ It’s worth generating several options for expressing your challenge rather than settling for the first that comes into your head. Look at your brief from different perspectives (it’s always worth looking at it from the audience’s perspective as they’re the people you’re trying to appeal to) and try expressing it in different ways. With this in mind let’s look at our retirement challenge again. How might we make retirement feel like the best years of our audience’s lives? How might we offer an irresistible pick and mix of retirement opportunities for our audience? How might we inspire our mums to break all their habits and try something new? How might we create content that makes retired women fist pump? Once you’ve got a great list of challenges, converge and select one to generate ideas around. If you have time and teams are enjoying themselves offer a second challenge to see if that takes people in a slightly different direction.

"How Might We ..." is a well used opening for creative sessions across the innovation industry. IDEO are world leaders in innovative design - here's what they have to say about the magic phrase ...http://www.designkit.org/methods/3And this is what the Stanford Design School offer as a quick tool for generating great "How Might We" statements. Stanford Design School offer one of the leading design programmes in the world.http://dschool.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/HMW-METHODCARD.pdf

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

37. Four Ways to be Creative
Lisbeth Ramirez
DKE Part 4: Evolutionary Model of Innovation
stella.kalis
Finding Insights to Kick Start Ideas
Alex Dalton
Creatividad e Innovación
C AL
How can we enhance the entertainment experience in public spaces?
Francisco Fragoso
Fact Finding Questions
Alex Dalton
NEW: ExamTime's Mind Map Maker
Andrea Leyden
Innovative Uses of Technology
John Marttila
Steve Jobs 1955-2011
Andrea Leyden
Encouraging Creativity in the Classroom
miminoma
Educational Technology QUIZ 1
Mirna Uribe