While working in the games industry in Japan, I attended a seminar about brainstorming. The instructor, professor Hidenori Satō, has written dozens of books on the subject. Unfortunately for many of us it seems his work has not been translated from Japanese, so here’s a brief introduction to his approach. I’ve translated the method he introduced to us as “Spark Ideas” (スパーク発想法). At the beginning of his seminar Prof. Satō led in with the following quote attributed to Thomas Edison: “Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration”. I read this in two ways: first, even if you have ideas, they mean nothing if you don’t put in sufficient effort to realize them; second, you may have a sudden bright idea once in a while, but to generate ideas continuously, you need to make an active effort – and probably use a tool like the one I describe here.

The brainstorming process

Often we try to think of ideas directly from a theme. Unless you’re in a moment of “inspiration” this is hard. For the “perspiration” moments, we need hints, like the one Newton got from an apple falling from a tree. The best way of getting these hints is by changing the Point of View. And that’s all you need to remember! (*^ω^*)

Brainstorming process: Spark Ideas

Brainstorming process

 

You can think of the Spark method as a “cheat sheet” with a series of keywords to help you get started with your brainstorming.

Points of View for Spark Ideas

Prof. Satō lists up 5 basic Points of View (PoV) to get started with the exercise:

  1. State of affairs
  2. Point of view of the other
  3. Change character
  4. Change case
  5. Free of constraints

Working through these first five perspectives is usually enough, but there’s an extra list if you want to dig deeper:

  1. Triple ease
  2. Fun
  3. Positivation
  4. Indirection
  5. 3D expansion
  6. Similar case
  7. General case

I will describe all these points in detail later, but let’s jump first to how to do the exercise.

Brainstorming with the Spark Sheet

I recommend time-boxing the exercise. From experience, the “State of affairs” is usually the most important PoV, so expect to spend at least twice the time in that one as opposed to the others. If you need tons of ideas, you may want to attempt all 12 PoVs, though it may take too long. Even if you spend only 10 minutes per PoV, it will take at least 2 hours to finish.

If you are doing the exercise with enough people you may choose to divide them into groups. You could assign a couple of PoVs per group, with one group dedicated solely to “State of Affairs”.

Once you have allocated time, and appropriately divided people into groups, you just need paper or a whiteboard. Write the PoV and the theme on the top, and draw 3 columns. The first column are hints, that should come from the PoV. Write hints with as much detail as possible. The middle column will be for direct ideas, coming straight from the hints. These too should be as detailed as possible.

The third column is for ideas from association, things related to an idea from the middle column. These can be something that follows on in order from the initial idea, is the exact opposite of the idea, or just things that go together. It helps to have a cheat sheet with keywords on one side. Your sheet of paper will look like this:

 

Brainstorming example: Spark Sheet Pollution

Spark Sheet about Pollution

 

Keywords to get started

I’ve tried to select a few keywords for each PoV so you can get started.

(1) State of affairs

  1. Status
    1. Where are we at? Contents, outlook, flow, related work, schedule, place
    2. Domain, level, quantity, season, important factors
  2. Target
    1. Characteristics, functionality, structure, processes, elements, type
    2. Materials, size, weight, color, design, definition
  3. Self
    1. Company values, our technology, our resources, strengths & weaknesses
    2. Budget, available developers, external opportunities
  4. Main point
    1. Reason for it, difficulties
    2. Essential conditions

(2) PoV of the other

  1. Target user(s), as detailed as possible
    1. Adult A, kid B, high-school girl C, athlete, married person, old lady from the neighbourhood, a person with 2 dogs, etc.
  2. Requests/needs, correct & detailed
    1. Can we ask/have we asked users?
    2. Person status, surroundings, circumstance, specialty, personality, real thinking, new thinking, needs, values, requests, dissatisfaction, worries, likes, opinions, feeling, goals, and conditions.

(3) Change character

  1. Think of another person and write down their name.
  2. How would they do things?
    1. Way of thinking, behaviour, performance, personality, strengths
    2. Ask them directly whenever possible!
  3. Examples
    1. Close person: colleague, boss, junior staff, from another team, related, from same industry, family member, friend, someone with similar/opposite interests, acquaintance, neighbour, professor, student of a higher/lower grade
    2. Famous/historical: Buddha, Jesus, Bono, Björk, John Lennon, Messi, Trump, Picasso, Tom Daley, Tom Adeyoola, Tom Jones, Tom & Jerry
    3. Role model: an expert, specialist, experienced person, aficionado, protagonist of a story/tale

(4) Change case

  1. Think of the theme and target, and find a similar topic
  2. Write down the contents (status, method, conditions) in detail
  3. Examples
    1. Direct method (visual): picture the theme in a broader sense, and give an example from intuition. E.g. “reduce stock” → “reduce ingredients”
    2. Indirect method (logical): think of the essence of the theme, and from it give another example. E.g. “reduce stock” → “reduce unnecessary stuff” (essence) → “reduce flavour additives”
    3. Close example (change from same class): e.g. “sell cameras” → “sell computers”
    4. Far example (different class): e.g. “sell cameras” → “become famous” (sell brand)

(5) Free of constraints

  1. Ideal
    1. What is the state we want to be in? (in detail)
    2. What’s the ideal, the best situation?
    3. Write down the “ideals” as Hints, and how to realize/get close to those as Ideas.
  2. Break norms
    1. Try to break the rules: odd techniques, silly things, nonsensical, fancy, dream, insane, not common sense, innovation, daring
    2. Write down as Ideas the way you’d get there.

Extra PoVs

  1. Triple ease
    1. Low-hanging fruit: do easy things first
    2. Divide-and-conquer: divide in several parts, and assign to different people/teams
    3. Reduction: reduce the quantity or targets. Make our lives easier.
  2. Fun
    1. Make it fun or interesting; add hobbies; gamify
  3. Positivation
    1. turn upside-down; take the negatives and turn them into positives;
    2. find the positives and work on them
  4. Indirection
    1. Soften/cushion the blow;
    2. Make it indirect; mediation
  5. 3D Expansion: think of these 3 dimensions
    1. Space: expand the space, the area; change the place.
    2. Time: expand time. Think of the future and the past. Think in a longer span.
    3. Human: expand the human circle. Think of others. Get help from the crowd.
  6. Similar case
    1. Compare to similar cases
    2. Compare with cases that offer contrast
  7. General case
    1. Remove the particular case. Look at the forest, not at the tree.
    2. Think of the system

Rank the ideas

Once you’re done, you will end up with dozens of ideas. You may want to quickly eyeball the ones that lack detail or that are obviously flawed in some way and discard them to save time. Or you can focus on the ideas with many arrows coming to them. For the ideas you select to explore further, use a ranking mechanism, a simple example being the combination of impact and feasibility. For instance,

 

Theme: Do something about pollution — Best 3 ideas  Impact Feasibility Expectation (I×F) Rank
Bring leaflets to schools  2 4 8 2
Gather signatures in online petition about cigarettes 3 2 6 3
Create a game where each stage is about a pollutant 3 4 12 1

 

Hopefully your Spark Sheets will be sufficiently detailed that they will also help you to start producing a plan for those selected ideas.

 

Conclusion

Generating novel ideas from nothing is a big challenge to some of us but a bit of structure in a brainstorming session can make a huge difference.  If you’re stuck, try using a tool like this and be surprised at the volume of ideas your brains can produce. And as in so many other things, the more you practice the better you’ll get at it.