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“

A camel is a horse designed by a committee.

” ~Sir Alec Issigonis
ArticlesIdeation

Random Rules for Ideas

Written by Rick van der Wal in February 2010
 

It’s the reason I still use iGoogle as my homepage. Even when I don’t have the energy to browse through 700 items in my RSS feed I still get random lines from some of my favorite blogs, one of my most favorite being the Seth Godin Blog. Today he surprised me with a list of ‘Random rules for ideas worth spreading’ and I’ve noted down a few of my favorites, just as a reminder to myself.

  • Think big. Bigger than that.
  • Are you a serial idea-starting person? If so, what can you change to end that cycle? The goal is to be an idea-shipping person.
  • Waiting for inspiration is another way of saying that you’re stalling. You don’t wait for inspiration, you command it to appear.
  • Don’t poll your friends. It’s your art, not an election.
  • Be prepared for the Dip.
  • The hard part is finishing, so enjoy the starting part.

Most of these ‘rules’ are about finishing an idea – seeing it through to the end (or in case of the ‘the Dip‘, knowing when to quit).

Read the rest of the list over on Seth’s blog, there’s more than a few left worth reading! (and yes this was a little bit of a Seth Godin fanpost but I really feel he’s on a role lately with the ’shipping’ thing!)

Booksgtd

The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles

Written by Rick van der Wal in January 2010
 

Initially, I picked up this book just for the sheer brilliance of its title. As it turned out it was the right book at the right time as well. The War of Art is about realizing your ideas, and with that you creative potential. Steven Pressfield, bestselling author of fiction novels ‘The Legend of Bagger Vance’ and ‘Gates of Fire’ reveals his secrets ‘to getting things done’ by dissecting the element of ‘resistance’, the thing standing between you and putting your creativity into practice.

“There never was a moment, and never will be, when we are without the power to alter our destiny. This second, we can turn the tables on Resistance. This second, we can sit down and do our work.”

The reason this book worked for me was because it didn’t focus on the solution, but on the problem. It effectively speaks to the inner nay-sayer in all of us that sabotages your ideas the moment they threaten to become to real.

Loved it because:

  • The War of Art provides great context for a recognizable problem, drawing a beautiful metaphor with ‘The Art of War’ – overcoming your fears and knowing your ‘enemy’.
  • The author speaks from experience and has a very credible record writing multiple best-sellers
  • It manages to inspire effectively with the use of good examples and quotes, making it a real page-turner

You might not like it because:

  • The Art of War is an almost philosophical approach to creativity and ‘getting things done’. If you are looking for real ‘GTD methods’ this book offers not many ‘tangible’ pointers to put ideas into practice (and see them get done to the end).
See this book on amazon.com »

Start the week inspired!

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Recent Comments

  • Rick van der Wal commented on:
    Random Rules for Ideas:

    "Certainly true, though not always easy to make the distinction even when you are ware of your o..."

  • Raymond commented on:
    Random Rules for Ideas:

    "Nice post. I was not aware of Seth's blog. I have added it to my rss feed. One of the rules tha..."

  • Peter Jones commented on:
    The Box: Why Brainstorms Fail:

    "Great! As Arne said "I'll be back!" I really like your posts - right up my street. Can we pleas..."

  • Tammy commented on:
    The Box: Why Brainstorms Fail:

    "Interesting that the buzz words for creativity, "out of the box" hamper creativity! We met annu..."

  • Kamala commented on:
    Creativity overcomes everything:

    "dreaming is a relavent aspect to creativity....many inventions, and profound miracles came from..."

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  • Battle of Concepts for Heineken 3.0

    Concept contest to build a Heineken 3.0 website, building their brand in the 'party scene'.

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    Small booklet that will be a recource for managing, facilitating and participating in a Brainstorm.

  • Imaginarium

    A forum/social part of the website used for idea notations, development and discussion.

  • Creativity lecture and workshop

    My second creativity, inspiration and ideation lecture and workshop for the School of Applied sciences in Rotterdam

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