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How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea

By | July 27, 2011

By Caitlin Elsaesser

In competitive environments, businesses need fresh, creative ideas to stay on top. Unfortunately, it can seem like coming up with a brilliant new idea is a matter of luck or talent — neither or which you have, especially when you need it most.

Brothers Kevin and Shawn Coyne think otherwise. In their new book, “Brainsteering: A Better Approach to Breakthrough Ideas,” the authors lay out a method for generating new ideas that anyone can learn.

Business owners often fail to come up with great ideas because they are using the wrong approach — too broad and unfocused — say the authors. According to their book, two principles lead to fruitful idea generation: asking the right questions and adding enough structure to focus efforts.

While at the consulting firm McKinsey & Company, Kevin worked on a project to improve the firm’s own ability to generate ideas. He looked at extremely successful businesses: ones that had either reshaped the entire industry or went from zero to a billion dollars in sales in under six years.

In 42 of the 43 businesses, says Shawn Coyne, “the founder had asked a single question at outset — or could have asked a certain question — that would have led you to same idea.”

Arm & Hammer Baking Soda is one of the authors’ model companies. Until the early 1970s, according to Shawn, Arm & Hammer was mostly used for baking. Then the company asked, “Who uses our product in surprisingly large quantities and how can we get more people to use our product that way?” When the company noticed a small number of customers using its product to deodorize refrigerators or to aid in washing clothes, it created a campaign to encourage customers to expand their use of baking soda. Today, the majority of its business comes from these other uses, he says.

The brothers deduced a set of guidelines based on such examples that can help other businesses come up with similarly groundbreaking ideas:

  • Acknowledge your constraints upfront. Brainstorming often fails because it is too unfocused, scattering participants’ creative energy. In the real world, constraints exist.
  • Ask focused questions. A good question forces you to look at a problem from a different angle. Instead of asking an overly broad question such as “How can we increase profits?” ask a more focused question like, “What’s the biggest hassle customers face when using products/services in our category, and how could we eliminate that hassle (in ways that others haven’t done already)?”
  • Don’t assume that you (or your staff) can’t come up with creative ideas. The stereotype that some people are analytical and others are creative, but that people can’t be both, is not true. These are complementary forces that work together to produce better ideas. One helps you evaluate whether ideas are good or bad, while the other gives you perspective to help identify a new category of ideas.

Shawn says that the brainsteering method can be used for all types of businesses, but he has one note of caution. “If you are not willing to put real time and energy into brainsteering, don’t waste your time,” he says.

Talkback Most Recent of 33 Talkbacks

RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
Great article but I really don't want to pay for the book.


http://www.arthurspools.com/
ZDNet Gravatar
bestwater
07/27/2011 01:06 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@bestwater

Then don't buy it...
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Jeffp77
07/27/2011 04:01 PM
RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
I only signed on to Bnet yesterday, but after having read a few of the articles, I have to say they're NOT chockfull of deep insights. Plus, after I signed up, I couldn't find my way back to the page from which my free set of Word shortcut tips was to be available from. And I'm getting too many emails from Bnet. (I must adjust my preferences.)
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SCNY_Boyle
07/27/2011 01:56 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
Wow. . .Some real cynics on here. . .I find BNET to be both insightful and very useful for leadership development and everyday business practical application.
ZDNet Gravatar
jldante56
07/27/2011 01:59 PM
RE: RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@jldante56
I agree jldante56. Whether the info sharing is simple and basic or deeply analytical, the important thing is that bnet offers a platform for those of us interested in business, commerce, careers and such to share. Besides, sometimes we become so complex in our thinking about business matters that we overlook basics. Thanks bnet. . .and I have no affiliation with the company. Just a reader.
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mihbizz
07/27/2011 03:46 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@SCNY_Boyle Yes, I suggest adjusting your preferences. But I'm keeping mine to receiving BNET emails. Even though I am tempted to delete them, I keep getting this feeling that if I do, I might miss something good. Whoever is writing their titles is very clever!
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Pamela Hongsakul
07/27/2011 04:41 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@SCNY_Boyle. I mostly prefer 'Jeff Haden's - Owners' Manual. They are usually quite insightful and rich. Very proactive and present the winning formulas.
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Maggie8
07/29/2011 12:36 AM
RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
BNET is pretty good.
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joza36
07/27/2011 02:12 PM
RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
I have to agree with SCNY_Boyle. I have subscribed to BNET for quite some time and to summarize: Great Headlines. Very lite/soft articles. It does appear to be a good forum to sell resources with more insight. Maybe that is itss purpose. We all need sponsors and I do not begrudge them that.

I might actually buy one if the one page article actually provided a true pearl or two.
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bavasso@...
07/27/2011 02:17 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@bavasso@...

Try looking at Jeff Haden's (Owners' Manual) blogs. They are usually pretty good.
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Jeffp77
07/27/2011 04:07 PM
RE: RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@Jeffp77

Agreed. I've subscribed to Bnet for a year now and regularly scan the stories (they certainly know how to write a persuasive headline). I think Jeff Haden is one of the better columnists here. He knows how to wrap a good insight up in a memorable story.
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aliaskate
07/28/2011 03:05 AM
RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
The 'Asked focused questions' section is spot on. When I ask my clients "What's your contribution to the problem?" and they answer honestly they quickly discover solutions that are simple, inexpensive and easy to implement. Kudos to all for sharing this message.
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DaleFurtwengler
07/27/2011 02:21 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@DaleFurtwengler So true. The challenge is to ask the RIGHT questions which I find it hard to do at times.
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number51
07/31/2011 05:29 PM
RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
It's sort of in the middle for me so far--usually good at writing touts that get response ... once I get into the story it's basic stuff, but we need to be reminded more than instructed, so I find it occasionally/a little useful.

This story is a good example. Nothing earth-shattering, and it's two guys hawking their book. OK, no big whoop. Some good reminders, even if the last line is obscenely dumb: it boils down to "if you're not willing to put in the time, don't put in the time." Right. Gotcha.
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GKChesterton
07/27/2011 02:27 PM
RE: RE: How to Come Up With a Brilliant Idea
@GKChesterton I agree with everything you said. The titles are great, and remind us, or trigger us towards our own insights, rather than tell us anything new. However, I must say that many of my BNET emails get saved to my read later folder, but other info emails go directly to the trash.
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Pamela Hongsakul
07/27/2011 04:37 PM
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