Tejas Gawande
- “Strategy salons” or “nerd clubs” can be powerful tools for generating ideas and fostering innovation. Use your nerd club as a safe space to explore half-formed ideas. Limit it to a few engaged individuals who genuinely want to participate. Set ground rules for discussions, like using “yes, and” to build on ideas and leaving negative feedback aside... See more
from Alex Komoroske by Lenny Rachitsky
✨ Where great ideas come from
Nerd club as a safe space to explore half-formed ideas
- Read, but don’t just read. Read the best book you can find.
Write, but don’t just write. Write the best idea you can conceive.from 3-2-1: On the power of going for it, the value of sharing what you know, and how to figure out what you really want by James Clear
✨ Where great ideas come from
Commitment to the best.
- Taste is eating software. Taste is the new weapon.
from Taste is Eating Silicon Valley. by Anu Atluru
✨ Where great ideas come from
Utility plus taste is the foundation of software now
from Image
✨ Where great ideas come from
A creativity that can only be unlocked when your back is against the wall.
- “Inspiration comes on the twenty-fifth attempt, not the first. If you want to make something excellent, don’t wait for a brilliant idea to strike. Create twenty-five of what you need and one will be great. Inspiration reveals itself after you get the average ideas out of the way, not before you take the first step.”
from 3-2-1: On the source of inspiration, the bond between love and grief, and the power of hope by James Clear
✨ Where great ideas come from
Ideas take time
Once again I was struck by one of the miracles of the cognitive process—that the act of writing will summon from the buried past exactly what we need exactly when we need it. Memory and intuition and chance associations will always generate a certain percentage of what any writer writes. The remainder is generated by reason.
from Writing to Learn: How to Write - and Think - Clearly About Any Subject at All by William Zinsser
Talking or writing about the things you're interested in is a good way to generate new ideas. When you try to put ideas into words, a missing idea creates a sort of vacuum that draws it out of you. Indeed, there's a kind of thinking that can only be done by writing.
from How to Do Great Work