One more way to get a good idea, I get from Hendrik Edberg’s blog (www.positivityblog.com)
It has become a common conversation that looking for the idea, done in a way makes little difference. Distinction of any kind has been done by the community at large.
Though, to be able to make one a good idea, we first have to have lots of ideas. These ideas will then be filtered to be a good idea. A lot of reading, reading book, reading the situation, read the environment, read the daily activities of a neighbor, read the daily activities of your children is a set of tools to expand your horizons to have lots of ideas.
Thomas Edison, requiring thousands of ideas, to get some good ideas, let's call it the light bulb, phonograph, the Kinetoscope, and others.
So, the conclusion is to get a good idea, we need a lot of ideas.
For example, when Hendrik Edberg, was slow in updating their blogs. Then he would sit down and take a piece of paper. Using a pen and write down 20 new ideas for the theme of the article. Then he would write 10 more. It may take time, especially at the end, when the ideas are clear and variations began to dry up. But by writing down his ideas, he was having quite a lot of ideas that he could manage.
Some of these ideas may be very ugly, and many others may be overlap and can be integrated into an article. However, there are ideas quite well.
Hendrik Edberg said that this method gets from Earl Nightingale's Lead the Field ".
How to do it:
Use a pen and a piece of paper to write down 20 ideas to improve things. This can be a business, health or money that you will get your life in general or any other ideas you would like to improve.
In this way, it will be a lot of ideas that previously would never have thought emerged into the post.
The interesting thing about sitting down and start writing your idea is when the ideas contained in a paper; it does make your ideas flow like a river.
And the hardest part is getting started early. If you've become accustomed, this expertise will be yours.
You don’t have to like Thomas Edison, who used the basement to look for good ideas. All you need is to relax and let your ideas flow. If you cannot force the idea out, even you will be saturated. So, write down your ideas, delete ideas that you don’t like, save the ones you need, and combine your great ideas.
Good luck!
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