Creative PR: 4 Idea Generation Techniques

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In 1926, psychologist Graham Wallas outlined the basic creative process, which has been the overall framework for understanding and fostering creativity for almost a century. The Wallas process has four general stages:

  1. Preparation: loading up your mind to be creative
  2. Inspiration/Insight: the process of generating ideas
  3. Incubation: the process of refining and iterating ideas
  4. Verification: the process of validating ideas

Inspiration and Insight are the processes of generating ideas, the way new ideas are created. Ideas, however, rarely occur in a vacuum, even with extensive preparation. Like the formation of crystals or the bubbles in boiling water, ideas need to be anchored to something in order to flourish and grow.Let's look at four idea generating techniques that can help give ideas starting points in order to grow.

Idea generation: lateral thinking

Lateral thinking is the process of making a mental leap to what's next to something, what has similar patterns of activity or growth. What looks like what you're trying to accomplish, or what's nearby conceptually?One of the ways we train people to think about how to use social media and write effective headlines is to move laterally one step away from the core idea. What happens one step before or after the core headline - what's its impact? What impact will reading the content have, or what impact will you suffer if you don't read it? On the other side of the idea, what can you describe about the structure of the idea without giving it away in the headline?Suppose we want to promote our company's new product launch. What does our product do? Take one step back from our solution - what's the core problem our product solves? How do we then transform that problem into a headline? That's a simple example of lateral thinking.

Idea generation: perspective shift

When you're generating ideas and get stuck, perspective shifting can often be helpful. Imagine, for example, that you're generating ideas for store layouts and you get stuck or bogged down in trivia. A perspective shift is to don your secret shopper disguise and visit your own stores, your competitor's stores, and unrelated industry stores to see how they do things from the perspective of a customer. If you have access, either via YouTube or physical travel to stores that have their goods in languages you don't speak, even better. Use that shift in perspective to generate new ideas.What cues are universal in website design, for example, that let you navigate popular websites in other languages, even if you don't speak a lick of that language? Take a look at the Asahi Shimbun or Al-Arabiya. Can you figure out how to navigate those sites even without language clues?A more sophisticated way to approach perspective shift is to use media monitoring tools to scan through all the articles written by journalists in our chosen space/vertical. What do they write about? What language do they use? How do we incorporate their language? For example, industry insiders might talk about SKUs, while consumers and journalists simply say products. By shifting perspective, we'll create ideas and content that reflect how our audience thinks.

Idea generation: concept porting

One of the most powerful ways to come up with great ideas is to port them, a term that comes from computer programming. Porting is the act of translating a computer program from one language, like PHP, to another language, like Ruby. Concept porting works along the same idea. Can you take a great idea, a proven, working concept from one area of expertise and translate it effectively to another?For example, I blog frequently on my personal blog about how World of Warcraft's concepts apply to marketing. I wrote recently about how marketing has cooldowns just as player abilities have cooldowns. There's a tremendous amount of crossover if you're open enough to see how the syntax changes, but the idea doesn't. Take concepts from things you're already expert in, things you love outside of work, and bring those ideas into work to see if they apply in a different realm of expertise.

Idea generation: intentional conflict

The fourth way to generate ideas is through intentional internal conflict. This is especially applicable to content marketing, which marketers and PR professionals are increasingly responsible for. Social media and new media give us the ability to only see, hear, and read things we agree with, which is incredibly self-limiting and dangerous. Make a point to subscribe to content that contains strong opposing points of view, personally and professionally. See what "the other side" is saying, and use your reactions as starting points for new ideas.For example, there's one person in the digital marketing space whose opinions and methods I vehemently oppose. I dislike nearly everything about this person's work, but I stay subscribed to their content because my reactions generate energy and passion that I throw into creating content about what I believe to be the "right" way, or at least a better way, of accomplishing certain digital marketing tasks.Who in your industry writes the most inflammatory articles? Which journalist is always the skeptic? Subscribe to them, listen to them, read them, and pay attention to what occurs to you as you do so. Find your own "hot button" people to read and follow, and you'll never want for ideas.

What’s a Rich Text element?

The rich text element allows you to create and format headings, paragraphs, blockquotes, images, and video all in one place instead of having to add and format them individually. Just double-click and easily create content.

The rich text element allows you to create and format headings, paragraphs, blockquotes, images, and video all in one place instead of having to add and format them individually. Just double-click and easily create content.

Static and dynamic content editing

A rich text element can be used with static or dynamic content. For static content, just drop it into any page and begin editing. For dynamic content, add a rich text field to any collection and then connect a rich text element to that field in the settings panel. Voila!

How to customize formatting for each rich text

Headings, paragraphs, blockquotes, figures, images, and figure captions can all be styled after a class is added to the rich text element using the "When inside of" nested selector system.

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