When do you get great ideas? This was the title of one of my latest posts. 211 Managers and professionals from all over the world described as a comment their eureka or AHA-moments. Thank you to all of them.
Some typical quotes from the research:
"In my dreams, either sleeping or day dreaming, while walking in the woods or outdoors in nature, but rarely when I am in the office."
"Lying in my bed just before sleeping; I often get up then to write down the idea in order not to forget it; when showering; when doing a walk in nature."
"I get mine whilst driving, many a time have I had to call my own phone leaving a voice mail with the idea before I forget it!"
"Walking the dog, I almost see things more clearly than sat at a desk. Quieting the conscious mind giving the unconscious mind room to breath."
"Most of the time it's late at night about 10 min after I go to bed. When my brain has slowed down and I am free to think whatever I want".
Analyzing all the 348 moments creates this top 10 Eureka moments, which accounts for two third of all 'the moments of great ideas'.
- Showering 11.2%;
- Sleeping 9.2% (dreaming);
- Driving 8.6% (my car, motorbike);
- Walking 8.0% (in nature or walking the dogs);
- Working out & running 7.2% (jogging);
- Before sleeping 6.6%;
- Waking up 6.6%;
- Talking to others 3.7%
- Alone 3.2%
- Always 3.2%
If it takes time to get our best ideas you should plan an incubation period between defining your challenge and sharing ideas on this with others who are involved. I have developed a structured method to start innovation in which incubation has an explicit role.
In the FORTH innovation methodology there's a step of 'Observe and Learn' between the kick-off in step one and the ideation workshop in step three. In the 6-week-'Observe and Learn'-phase you get new insights and ideas at those 'not-thinking' moments. During this period you have an 'Observe & Learn' booklet at hand to write down everything which comes to your mind: in the shower, while sleeping and driving home. And this pays off. In the 'Raise Ideas' phase everybody enters the room with booklets full of great ideas :-).
In the FORTH innovation methodology there's a step of 'Observe and Learn' between the kick-off in step one and the ideation workshop in step three. In the 6-week-'Observe and Learn'-phase you get new insights and ideas at those 'not-thinking' moments. During this period you have an 'Observe & Learn' booklet at hand to write down everything which comes to your mind: in the shower, while sleeping and driving home. And this pays off. In the 'Raise Ideas' phase everybody enters the room with booklets full of great ideas :-).
So if you really need a great idea: STOP thinking.
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