- My passion is for the past 5-6 years has been to try to figure out how people in teams are consistently able to make ideas happen again and again.
- We need to be driven to our work out of our passion.
- Creativity is a double-edged sword.
- It gives us great ideas.
- It also gives us too many great ideas.
- That makes it hard for any single idea to see the idea.
- Some ideas should never happen.
- Even the greatest ideas suffer the against the odds of actually happening.
- Energy and excitement is high when a new idea strikes.
- After a few days, life catches up with us.
- We enter into the doldrums of project management.
- We want to return to the energy and idea when the idea first struck.
- We use our creativity to come with a new idea.
- It’s a repetitious cycle.
- Thee are are more half-written novels in the world than actual novels.
- We have to learn to survive the project plateau.
The Creative’s Pitfalls
- A Love for Idea Generation.
- The Gravitational Force of Operations.
- A Lack of Feeling Organized.
- A Lack of Accountability.
- A Lack of Feedback Exchange.
- Disorganized and Isolated Networks.
What Behance Does
- To help organize the creative word’s work.
- Created a network of creative professionals by developing a platform for them to share their ideas.
- The Behance Network is a “LinkedIn” of the creative world.
- Build a platform for creatives to get more exposure for their work.
- You can organize the creative world’s work when you have it on the same platform.
- Action Method is a method they’ve developed to help people make their ideas happen.
Genius is 1% inspirations and 99% perspiration. – Thomas Edison
- Focus on the 99%.
- There’s too much discussion of where ideas and creativity come from.
- Focus on the execution of those ideas.
How Do Some People and Teams Defy the Odds and Make Ideas Happen?
- Organization & Execution
- Communal Forces
- Leadership Capability
Organization
- We are being inundated with “stuff.”
- Emails, texts, messages, etc.
- We spend our time trying to whittle away at the collected inboxes of our lives.
- We live in an Era of Reactionary Workflow.
- We react to what’s coming at us instead of being proactive to the work that matters.
- We can be constantly reacting and never be proactive.
- We can longer rely on being forced to deep thinking.
- We need a window of non-stimulation in our day where we aren’t reacting or tuning in.
- We need to focused on a short list of 2-3 things that are important to us in the long-term.
- Think about things that are important.
- Spend energy on staying organized.
- Organization is the competitive advantage in the creative field.
- A Formula for Impact: Creativity x Organization = Impact
- You can have all of the greatest ideas and creativity but if you have no organization around them, you will never have impact.
- Spend more time organizing around your ideas.
- Organized teams and companies have a greater impact.
- Organize with a bias to action.
- The best systems for organization or made by ourselves.
- Be proud of what you are developing for yourself.
The Action Method is Just 3 Things:
- Action Steps
- Backburners
- References
Action Steps
- Leave meetings focused with next steps beginning with verbs.
- “Call this person…” “Email…”
Backburners
- Things that could be actionable but aren’t ready yet.
References
- Notes, attachments, and handouts
Meetings
- Meetings are extremely expensive.
- People pull for agenda items to have
- Meetings are an arbitrary measure of time.
- We leave without anything actionable.
- When we have meetings that have no action, should they have been an email instead of a meeting?
- Have a standing meeting… knees get weak as people commentate instead of content-making.
- Have a bias towards action.
- Have a culture of capturing action steps.
- Take time at the end of the meeting going around asking people what they are going to do next. What are their actionable steps?
- Ask people, “Did you capture that?”
Backburners
- Create a backburner ritual.
- File ideas.
- Make a ritual of going through your backburner and taking a pen, editing what is actionable or crossed off the list.
- Something that came up in a meeting 6 months ago could finally be actionable.
Surround Yourself with Progess
- Show your goals and milestones in a visual way.
- The ability to come up with an idea is easy to do when you love what you do.
- The execution is difficult unless you surround yourself with progress.
- Progress is an impetus for action.
Prioritize Projects Visually
- Create an energy line focused on how much energy should be allocated for projects.
- People put too many projects on high or extreme.
- Focus on what’s almost due not on what you are most excited about.
- When teams miss deadlines it’s because you disagreed over where a project should be on the energy line.
Optimize to Surpass Your Horizon of Success
- We are always told to fix what’s not broken.
- However, to make things happen you have to build on your success.
- Success has a horizon that’s blinding.
- We tend to spend a lot of our energy on what’s not working instead of building on what’s already working.
Communal Forces
- How do you leverage your comunity to find traction for your ideas.
3 Types of People
- The Dreamers – have a tendency to come up with something new.
- The Doer – the “Debbie Downer” of the world. Constantly at odds with the dreamer.
- The Incrementalist – rotates between being a Dreamer and a Doer. They do too many things.
Regardless of who you are, you need people. Ideas don’t happen in isolation. The idea of the lone creative is a myth.
Share Ideas Liberally
- The benefits of sharing your ideas outweighs the cost.
- The community provides accountabillity.
Share Ownership of Ideas
- You have a decision to make about an idea.
- Do people work with you?
- Are you empowering others to make decisions?
- Are you willing to share ownership to engage your team.
Seek Competition
- Competition is a dirty word.
- We are all colleagues.
- The impetus to act on an idea can come from your community in the form of competition.
- Pace yourself… with other people on your team and people in your community.
Find Your Way to Breakthroughs
- There is a benefit to fighting.
- People have strong opinions about how execution should happen.
- Explore one another’s opinions.
- Unfortunately, we get heated… we care about the solution.
- Suddenly, someone will let go of the rope.
- Apathy hurts our constituents.
- Fight apathy ruthlessly.
- Care enough to battle.
Don’t Become Burdened by Consensus
- What are the sacred extremes?
- What are the 1 or 2 things that cannot be compromised.
- Don’t settle for the least common denominator.
- What will move people?
- Hold 1 or 2 things dear.
Overcome the Stigma of Self-Marketing
- Our community needs to be aware of what we’re capable of doing.
- BUT, we can’t be overly-promoting of who we are and what we are capable of doing.
- We don’t want to be overlooked.
- We have to overcome the stigma of self-marketing.
- Have a respect-based self-marketing strategy.
- Gain credibility by becoming a curator.
- Share about things that interest you.
- Build a following.
- Whenever you embark on a new project, everyone will already know.
- Care for the stream that you create for people.
Leadership Capability
- What great leaders are doing or not doing in the creative world to keep their teams engaged with projects.
Leaders Talk Last
- Silence the visionary.
- Buy engagement from your team.
- People will leave their jobs because they don’t feel fully utilized.
- They aren’t being asked first about what we should do.
- We need to listen first.
- We shouldn’t tell people what we think the plan should be.
- Engagement leads to involvement in a project through its completion.
Find and empower the “Hot Spots”
- Your contributions should outlast your stay.
- Who are the nodes that people look up to in your organization?
- It’s rarely the senior leader… it’s the assistants.
- The nodes to be kept and empowered.
Value the Team’s Immune System
- The human body has an immune system that keeps us healthy.
- It kills anything new that tries to enter into our body.
- In a creative team, the doers are the immunes system.
- The doers kill off everything that is new.
- They keep us healthy.
- During a brainstorm, the dreams are empowered and the doers are suppressed.
- You need dreamers and doers.
- Great creative teams often fail because their leader is a dreamer.
- A group of dreamers are intoxicated by ideas and have no sober monitors.
Seek Restraints
- Failure in most teams centered around the problem of not having a l
- In the creative community we shun restraints.
- Restrains are empowering for the creative process.
- When they aren’t given we need to seek them.
Be the Bureaucracy Breaker
- The best way to break it is to ask the annoying questions:
- “Why can’t we try this?”
- “Who needs to sign off on this?”
- “Why do we have to wait?”
- As stewards of ideas, we need to ask our bosses to make decisions.
- Ask difficult and annoying questions to keep things moving.
- They pierce with annoying questions.
Push People Into the Intersection
- Successful people live in the intersection of their Interests, Skills, and Opportunities.
- How can we make sure we are working in our overlap?
- How can we push people into working from their overlap?
- Give people opportunities that match their passions and skills.
Gain Confidence From Doubt
- The more people doubt you the more you are probably onto something.
- Society is hypocritical.
- We shun people before we celebrate them.
- Gain confidence from being doubted.
- Nothing extraordinary is ever achieved through ordinary means.
See Yourself As the Steward of Your Ideas
- Responsibility > Opportunity
- Are you a prototypical creative mind?
- Where does the responsibility lie?
- See your creativity not as an opportunity but as a responsibility.
- Make your ideas happen.
- Embrace the practices that push ideas to fruition.
- That’s what moves the world forward.
- Ideas are greater than ourselves.

