For a More Creative Brain Follow These 5 Steps
Nearly all great ideas
follow a similar creative
process and this article explains how this process works. Understanding this is important because creative thinking
is one of the most useful
skills you can possess.
Nearly every problem you face
in work and in life can benefit from innovative solutions, lateral thinking,
and creative
ideas.
Anyone can learn to be creative
by using these five
steps. That's not to say being creative is easy. Uncovering your creative genius requires courage and tons of practice. However, this five-step approach should help demystify the creative process and illuminate the path to more innovative thinking.
To explain how this process
works, let me tell you a short
story.
A Problem in Need of a Creative Solution
In the 1870s, newspapers and printers faced a very specific and very costly problem.
Photography was a new and exciting medium
at the time. Readers
wanted to see more pictures, but nobody
could figure out how to print images quickly
and cheaply.
For example, if a newspaper wanted to print
an image
in the 1870s, they had to commission an engraver to etch a copy of the photograph onto a steel plate by hand.
These plates
were used to press the image
onto the page, but they often broke after just a few uses. This process of photoengraving, you can imagine,
was remarkably time consuming and expensive.
The man who invented a solution to this problem
was named
Frederic Eugene Ives. He went on to become a trailblazer in the field of photography and held over 70 patents by the end of his career.
His story
of creativity and innovation, which I will share now, is a useful
case study for understanding the 5 key steps
of the creative
process.
A Flash of Insight
Ives got his start
as a printer’s apprentice in Ithaca, New York. After two years of learning the ins and outs of the printing process,
he began managing the photographic laboratory at nearby Cornell University. He spent
the rest of the decade experimenting with new photography techniques and learning
about cameras,
printers,
and optics.
In 1881, Ives
had a flash
of insight
regarding a better
printing
technique.
“While
operating my photostereotype process
in Ithaca,
I studied the problem of halftone
process,”
Ives said. “I went to bed
one night
in a state of brain
fog over the problem,
and the instant
I woke in the morning
saw before
me, apparently projected on the ceiling, the completely worked out process and
equipment in operation.”
Ives quickly translated his vision into
reality and patented his printing approach in 1881. He spent the remainder of
the decade improving upon it. By 1885, he had developed a simplified process
that delivered even better results. The Ives Process, as it came to be known,
reduced the cost of printing images by 15x and remained the standard printing
technique for the next 80 years.
Alright, now let's discuss what lessons we can
learn from Ives about the creative process.
The 5 Stages of the Creative Process
In 1940, an advertising executive named James
Webb Young published a short guide titled, A Technique for Producing
Ideas. In this guide, he made a simple, but profound statement about generating
creative ideas.
According to Young, innovative ideas happen
when you develop new combinations of old elements. In other words, creative
thinking is not about generating something new from a blank slate, but rather
about taking what is already present and combining those bits and pieces
in a way that has not been done previously.
Most important, the ability to generate new
combinations hinges upon your ability to see the relationships between
concepts. If you can form a new link between two old ideas, you have done
something creative.
Young believed this process of creative
connection always occurred in five steps.
1. Gather new material. At first, you learn. During this stage
you focus on 1) learning specific material directly related to your task and 2)
learning general material by becoming fascinated with a wide range of concepts.
2. Thoroughly work over
the materials in your mind. During
this stage, you examine what you have learned by looking at the facts from
different angles and experimenting with fitting various ideas together.
3. Step away from the
problem. Next, you put
the problem completely out of your mind and go do something else that excites
you and energizes you.
4. Let your idea return
to you. At some point,
but only after you have stopped thinking about it, your idea will come back to
you with a flash of insight and renewed energy.
5. Shape and develop your
idea based on feedback. For
any idea to succeed, you must release it out into the world, submit it to
criticism, and adapt it as needed.
The Idea in Practice
The creative process used by Frederic Eugene
Ives offers a perfect example of these five steps in action.
First, Ives gathered new material. He spent
two years working as a printer's apprentice and then four years running the
photographic laboratory at Cornell University. These experiences gave him a lot
of material to draw upon and make associations between photography and
printing.
Second, Ives began to mentally work over
everything he learned. By 1878, Ives was spending nearly all of his time
experimenting with new techniques. He was constantly tinkering and
experimenting with different ways of putting ideas together.
Third, Ives stepped away from the problem. In
this case, he went to sleep for a few hours before his flash of insight.
Letting creative challenges sit for longer periods of time can work as well.
Regardless of how long you step away, you need to do something that interests
you and takes your mind off of the problem.
Fourth, his idea returned to him. Ives awoke
with the solution to his problem laid out before him. (On a personal note, I
often find creative ideas hit me just as I am lying down for sleep. Once I give
my brain permission to stop working for the day, the solution appears easily.)
Finally, Ives continued to revise his idea for years. In fact, he improved so many aspects of the process he filed a second patent. This is a critical point and is often overlooked. It can be easy to fall in love with the initial version of your idea, but great ideas always evolve.
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