Opposites Attract: How not to generate
awful ideas that almost certainly won’t work…
February
7th, 2013 by iMindMap
Great ideas and pragmatic
solutions are hard to come by. When we approach a problem from the obvious
direction, we are likely only to find a few, obvious answers. In order to
unlock those innovative and game-changing ideas, we need to examine the problem
in a completely opposite way to the prevailing view. In other words, rather
than thinking about ‘what to do,’ we should reverse the challenge by thinking
‘what not to
do.’
It sounds absurd of course but
you must remember that it is incredibly easy to ask ‘what to do?’ I do it every
January 1st when I inevitably decide it’s time to lose some weight and stop
being what I like to call, ‘festively plump.’ Usually I come to the unoriginal
and impractical solution of completely quitting chocolate.
Naturally, by January 2nd I’ve
polished off two giant bars of Cadbury’s, and in a fit of chocoholic rage
bought myself a discounted Christmas selection box. Moral of the story?
Sometimes the solution to a problem is much more difficult to find when you
approach it head on.
As Valentine’s Day is just
around the corner, let’s take the Carrie Bradshaw approach and ask ‘how do I
keep a happy relationship?’ By tackling this question directly you are likely
to come up with tired ideas like buying flowers or chocolates, taking them for
dinner or going on holiday with your partner. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not
saying that these things aren’t appreciated but they all cost money and aren’t
a guaranteed solution to having a happy relationship.
Instead, consider this: ‘How do
I lose a happy relationship?’ By turning the problem on its head you can
approach it from a new direction and jump-start your creativity. You may come
up with some of the following ‘anti-solutions.’
What will probably strike you is how many of these things you
are already doing.
This process allows you to
completely change the focus and create a plethora of ideas about what would
make you lose a happy relationship. It’s a much simpler question and there are
many obvious answers. The next step is to create positive parallels for the
‘anti-solutions,’ and expand upon them.
•Answer
their calls. Maybe even make the effort to call them for a change.
•Don’t flirt with other people. Or better yet, flirt with your partner, however long you have been together.
•Be early. They will be happy to spend more time with you. Let them know if you are running late.
•Don’t play games. Be honest with your partner and yourself. If you have to play games, maybe the happy relationship you want needs to be with someone else?
•Put your partner’s needs first. (At least some of the time…) Take an interest in what is important to them, not just what is important to you
•Don’t flirt with other people. Or better yet, flirt with your partner, however long you have been together.
•Be early. They will be happy to spend more time with you. Let them know if you are running late.
•Don’t play games. Be honest with your partner and yourself. If you have to play games, maybe the happy relationship you want needs to be with someone else?
•Put your partner’s needs first. (At least some of the time…) Take an interest in what is important to them, not just what is important to you
You are now presented with a bunch of fresh ideas, some of which
may surprise you. And this method works exactly the same way in any other walk
of life.
Take business for example. Don’t ask ‘how do I get more
customers?’ That way you will only come up with overused, predictable ideas
such as advertising, discounts or telesales. Although these may eventually
bring you more customers, they are all costly and there are better ideas out
there. What you need to be asking is ‘how does a company lose customers?’
Simple, I hear you cry…
•Poor customer service
•Staff have lack of product knowledge
•Lots of issues with product/service provided
•Staff have lack of product knowledge
•Lots of issues with product/service provided
Once again, if we reverse these ‘anti-solutions,’ and expand
upon them…
These ideas are all things that
can be easily improved upon on without spending tons of money on expensive
advertising campaigns or telesales and will certainly help a company convert
more customers.
Reversing the Problem is a
simple method, which can generate some outside the box thinking, and produce
some fantastic results. It gives you a completely different perspective on a
problem and this puts you in a better position to generate effective solutions.
Just always remember to re-reverse those ‘anti-solutions’ or you’ll end up like
Christian Grey, after he asked himself how to be a loving, sensitive boyfriend.
If this concept, and others
like it interests you, take a look at our accredited ThinkBuzan
Licensed Instructor Courses
Md. Nasir Khan
Director
Central Academic Research & Development
(CARD), Manipur Creative School
ThinkBuzan Licensed Instructor
MindMap, iMindMap, MemorySkills,
SpeedReading & CreativeTeaching
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