The most important way you can boost your output is to get
rid of the zero-sum assumption. If you feel that each idea created limits your
ability to create new ideas, your output will be only a trickle. The best
writers, programmers, designers and idea-generators I know believe that the
supply of ideas is endless. You only need to know how to turn on the flow.Here
are some tips to get you started:
Churn Without Judgment If you stress about the quality of
work you are outputting, then the flow will be cut off. Writers block is a
symptom of perfectionism. Churn first, judge later.
Idea Breeding Use past ideas to generate new ideas. I've
written close to 500 articles in the past two years. If I ever get stuck, all I
need to do is search through past articles. Almost always they leave unanswered
questions that can be tackled with a new article.
Creative Input Feed your brain with books. I read about
50-70 books a year. The most creative people I know can read over a 100. By
devouring knowledge you add to the variety of ideas you can produce.
Be Patient It can take a while for your brain to get into
the right flow. I can write 1500 words in an hour when I'm in the right mental
state. But that state often requires working through twenty minutes where I
type no more than a sentence. Take the time to accelerate your creative flow.
Use Large Time Chunks Since it takes time to warm up your
creative muscles, you can't expect to go fast if you are constantly stopping.
Use large chunks of time where you can build up speed and work for a few hours
before taking a break.
Publish Garbage If you are starting out in a new pursuit,
you have only one goal: boost creative output. This often means publishing junk
until you train yourself to do a better job. Feedback from the world (not
self-judgement) is the fastest way to hone your creative flow.
Set a Quota Give yourself a certain output criteria for each
day, week or month. This will build up a high creative output that can later be
refined. Instead of just creating when you feel like it, set a target.
Sometimes you'll produce garbage. But you'll also produce a lot more winners
than by being a perfectionist.
Hit the Challenge Zone If you set too few standards for
quality, you won't improve. But if you set too high standards, your creative
output will plummet. The challenge zone is the area where you have enough
challenge to improve yourself but not so much that you can't perform.
Aim With Your Challenge Zone There is a tendency to use
external factors to define your standards. For example, you want to become a
musician, so you decide to set your standards to one of your favorite bands.
This is a mistake. By setting the challenge zone to external criteria you kill
your creative output or kill your quality. You only need to compete with
yourself; don't judge yourself by others' standards.
Nuke Those Assumptions If you assume that your creative
output is fixed, it will be. Set yourself a high quota and aim within your
challenge zone. You'll probably be surprised at how much more you can produce
if you force yourself to. More importantly, you'll probably be surprised that
quality doesn't usually suffer when you boost creative output.
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