Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation

Finding Creative Ideas with Fresh Eyes


Listen Later

It's hard to believe that I've been in the innovation game as long as I have. I've been thinking of creative ideas, inventing, launching services, and teaching others to do the same for many years. While this experience is good, it can sometimes be hurtful. Finding yourself doing the same thing over and over again can be tedious.

We all fall into this type of rut. People often do this with morning routines. The good part is you know what step is coming next. The bad part is when something happens to throw you off, you might overlook things. Routines are problematic when dealing with innovation. To successfully find creative ideas, you need to look at things with fresh eyes constantly. By looking with fresh eyes, I mean seeing something as if you are seeing it for the first time.

Breaking The Rut with Creative Ideas

How do you break the rut to cause your brain to think differently? You need to observe things, not just look at things and take in information. When I was at HP, I would observe customers while shopping for products at BestBuy. When they picked one that wasn't an HP product, I would walk up to them and introduce myself. I'd ask them what made them choose that product over the HP one to understand their reasoning. Observing isn't just about seeing with your eyes. It is also about asking questions and having an inquisitive nature.

Innovation Example

In some cases, solving problems with fresh eyes doesn't work. In this case, you may have to bring someone in from the outside who has fresh eyes. Here is an example of this. A major manufacturer of potato chips was struggling with a problem: their chips were too greasy. They previously had too much salt on the chips, so they shook them. Tried this with the grease, but it did not work as well. They tried to shake the chips even harder, and it left them with broken products.

They finally decided to crowdsource, soliciting ideas from people on how to get rid of excess oil on the chips. The solution came from a concert violinist who realized the problem resembled something they had seen. When a violin hits a precise tone, the resonance of the tone will cause water to dance. The violinist proposed they play a specific note to get the oil to jump off the chip, and it worked. Here was a solution not found by those with years of experience but from an unexpected source.

3 Steps to Seeing with Fresh Eyes
  1. Be aware that you are seeing with old eyes.
  2. Build up the habit of looking at everything with fresh eyes.
  3. This means doing this differently, asking things differently, and asking different people.
  4. Ask for fresh eyes from non-experts. It is crucial to get in the habit of exercising your observation skills. Drive a different way to work or challenge a process you've used for a while. Ask someone who isn't an expert to give you feedback, such as the potato chip manufacturer did. You can learn from people with different expertise, country, background, age, etc.
  5. After implementing these things, you will begin to see with fresh eyes, which will lead to the creation of new ideas.

    To know more about finding creative ideas with fresh eyes, listen to this week's show: Finding Creative Ideas with Fresh Eyes.

    RELATED:   Subscribe To The Newsletter and Killer Innovations Podcast
    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And InnovationBy Phil McKinney

    • 4.6
    • 4.6
    • 4.6
    • 4.6
    • 4.6

    4.6

    74 ratings


    More shows like Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation

    View all
    Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders (ETL) by Stanford eCorner

    Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders (ETL)

    710 Listeners

    HBR IdeaCast by Harvard Business Review

    HBR IdeaCast

    1,828 Listeners

    Coaching for Leaders by Dave Stachowiak

    Coaching for Leaders

    1,459 Listeners

    a16z Podcast by Andreessen Horowitz

    a16z Podcast

    1,030 Listeners

    The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish by Shane Parrish

    The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish

    2,634 Listeners

    Founders by David Senra

    Founders

    1,870 Listeners

    Make Me Smart by Marketplace

    Make Me Smart

    5,494 Listeners

    Masters of Scale by WaitWhat

    Masters of Scale

    3,991 Listeners

    Choiceology with Katy Milkman by Charles Schwab

    Choiceology with Katy Milkman

    1,435 Listeners

    Guy Kawasaki's Remarkable People by Guy Kawasaki

    Guy Kawasaki's Remarkable People

    656 Listeners

    All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg by All-In Podcast, LLC

    All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg

    9,045 Listeners

    Coaching Real Leaders by Harvard Business Review / Muriel Wilkins

    Coaching Real Leaders

    648 Listeners

    The AI Daily Brief (Formerly The AI Breakdown): Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis by Nathaniel Whittemore

    The AI Daily Brief (Formerly The AI Breakdown): Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis

    458 Listeners

    HBR On Strategy by Harvard Business Review

    HBR On Strategy

    86 Listeners

    HBR On Leadership by Harvard Business Review

    HBR On Leadership

    153 Listeners