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Nine Ways to Think More Creatively
1. Failure to ask questions. Taking things for granted can kill creativity, while asking impulsive questions can generate insights. Try looking at the world through more-inquisitive eyes. 2. Failure to record ideas. You never know which ideas will help you tomorrow, so keep them all: in a notebook, on scraps of paper in a folder, on voice mail messages to yourself –- whatever method works. Doubling the number of ideas you save enriches the raw materials needed for thinking. 3. Failure to revisit ideas. Review your notes for past projects. Make yourself more aware of old assumptions that become "comfort zones," making it hard to see creative alternatives. 4. Failure to express ideas. Articulate your thoughts to others (or to yourself when you’re alone). Expressing stray thoughts is a good way to consider them carefully. 5. Failure to think in new ways. Get out of the box by doing something new: Instead of making a list of pros and cons, for example, draw pictures or diagrams of the problem you’re working on, then generate fresh perspectives by analyzing these images. 6. Failure to wish for more. Creativity thrives on optimistic speculation. New inventions arise from the wish to improve the status quo. Learn the value of wishful thinking. 7. Failure to try being creative. Avoid the trap of thinking you aren’t a creative person. "Failing to try is the quickest way to derail your creativity," Hiam writes. 8. Failure to keep trying. "Breakthrough" concepts usually come only after you generate hundreds of ideas. It is a big mistake to become discouraged and abandon productive lines of thought prematurely because they appear fruitless. 9. Failure to tolerate creative behavior. Most supervisors communicate a "Stop thinking and get back to work" message to workers, argues Hiam. The way to unlock the creative potential of staff is to encourage imagination, not censor it.
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