6 mes

Brainstorming: You’re Doing it Wrong

It might seem elementary – in fact, elementary school is probably where you first learned it – but there’s a right way and a wrong way to brainstorm. Here’s an education and psychology expert’s 3-step protocol for improving your technique….
por Sarah Moriarty | 2025-02-13

It might seem elementary – in fact, elementary school is probably where you first learned it – but there’s a right way and a wrong way to brainstorm. Here’s an education and psychology expert’s 3-step protocol for improving your technique.

Back in school, it used to involve colorful markers, feverish shouting, and disorganized thoughts on a dirty whiteboard. When you’re an adult, however, brainstorming is… hang on. Actually, it’s probably still a lot like that.

From Fortune 500s to tiny creative shops, brainstorming is a beloved method for generating novel ideas, but the fact of the matter is that hardly anybody does it right.

Most of the time, when we brainstorm we put forth a problem, like “productivity is down” and invite people to throw out solutions. This results in heaps of ideas – buy bananas for the office! Get better chairs! Send us all to workshops! – yet few of them end up actionable, and hardly ever in the short term.

According to R. Keith Sawyer, education and psychology professor at Washington University, there’s actually a clear formula you can use to generate creative-yet-suitable ideas. Sawyer assigns 8 steps, but you can lump them into 3 broad spheres. Here’s what you need to know to use them in the next brainstorming session you lead:

Step 1: Research solutions and offer context

Why this works: Seeing how others have tackled similar challenges arms you with ideas so you can walk into your meeting with a few solutions ready. And remember to prepare your brainstorming committee well: if your goal is to come up with ways to reduce customer support calls by 30% but your committee doesn’t know how customer support works, don’t expect them to offer good solutions. Consider having them sit in on support calls for a few hours before your brainstorming session, or at least give them relevant reading to bone up on.

Step 2: Now you can hold your brainstorming session

Why this works: Brainstorming second makes a lot of sense. With everyone’s background knowledge and research, it should be relatively easy to come up with a few good solutions, and likely many more than you would’ve unearthed without applying a little elbow grease first.

Step 3: Take the best ideas that the session produced, examine, and iterate

Why this works: If the goal of your session is a pool of ideas to review for later, then you’ll need a plan for what to do with them. Try budgeting an hour of alone time afterwards to pull out the half-dozen most promising to pursue and think them through a little further. No initial idea has ever been perfect. Whether you’re producing ideas or products, iteration is the most important part of a brainstorming session. For more on why iterating fast and light works, take a look at The Lean Startup’s MVP technique.

For more on brainstorming right and other creative processes, de-mucked, refined, and demystified, check out David Burkus’ Myths of Creativity. You can also read the 10-minute summary on Blinkist.

Sobre el escritor
Sarah Moriarty

Sarah leads brand marketing at Blinkist. She enjoys reading, writing, and researching publishing innovations. She is a fan of well-organised Google Docs and cheese jokes.\nSarah’s recommended read is \nThe Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up\n by Marie Kondo.

Prueba gratuita de Blinkist

Phone with Blinkist app

¿Qué es Blinkist?

Blinkist es una aplicación que transforma las ideas clave de grandes libros de no ficción en resúmenes rápidos y fáciles de entender. La realidad es que a todo el mundo le gusta leer, pero nadie tiene tiempo. Blinkist llena este vacío de aprendizaje y hace que adquirir nuevos conocimientos no suponga ningún esfuerzo.

Descargar la aplicación Blinkist
  • Facebook Logo
  • Twitter Logo
  • Linkedin Logo
  • Instagram Logo