Merely an Impulse

What most of us call an idea is merely an impulse. It’s the beginning or germ of an idea, with many possibilities but only if we add to it the factors that give it value.

Merely an impulse

My father was an inventor, and sometimes people would say to him, “I have an idea … the desert needs water … let’s go in business together.” Eight times out of ten, what these people had was not an idea at all—it was an impulse.

Merely recognizing a need for an idea is very far from having the idea. Anyone who undertook to handle such an impulse would have had to add ninety-nine percent to make anything of it. Finding the need is not creation, as it does not change anything. After you find the need, then you first go to work to fill it.

What I am discussing, really, is how to produce a good or practical plan, a suggestion, a new approach, a solution to a problem.

Ways of testing such an impulse will be given later, although this example is so exaggerated that no one would have to test it to know it was ridiculous. Or is it? What about irrigation reclamation projects which have made parts of some deserts to bloom? The virtues of an idea-seed are by no means always obvious.

Since everything starts with an idea, the subject covers enormous territory, as does the definition. However the word “idea” as employed in this book will be the popular and colloquial usage, not the philosophical or technical.

What I am discussing, really, is how to produce a good or practical plan, a suggestion, a new approach, a solution to a problem. An idea, then, starts as an idea-seed, a notion, a vague conception or supposition, a thought or mental impression, from which the idea itself is then developed.

The idea-seed begins as something to which as yet there is no corresponding reality. At the outset it is fantasy, or a fiction or a figment of the imagination.

After it is developed, it will be a plan or purpose or action, an intention or a design. It will be an accurate image or concept of an object which is either tangible or intangible, either concrete or abstract.

Impulses are often valuable beginnings of ideas and they should not be ignored or neglected. Write them down and save them; and some time you’ll find that they combine with other thoughts to make something interesting.

In that statement is a clue to a real idea. An idea is a new combination of old elements. Ideas are for certain pur­poses—to overcome difficulties, to improve things, to enter­tain or attract, to find good or different ways of doing things.

Successful Ideas Are Not Original Thoughts

Genius itself depends upon the information within its reach.

Successful ideas, contrary to belief, are hardly ever based on original thoughts. They come to one as the result of some outside impulse nudging one’s attention: talking to someone, listening to a speaker, reading, hearing some­thing on the radio, looking into a shop window, passing something on the street.

Genius itself depends upon the information within its reach. Even Archimedes, great thinker that he was, around 200 B.C., could not have devised Edison’s inventions be­cause scientific knowledge had not developed to the neces­sary point.

It is obvious that the more we know about a subject, the more abundant and the more effective will be our ideas concerning it. Sometimes this seems to be contradicted by the fact that many innovations come from inexperienced outsiders. But their apparent lack of specialized knowledge is counteracted by their interest and enthusiasm. They find the information. They get the experience.

Recently*, for example, an advertising company had the assignment of promoting a cigarette lighter—a typical man’s product. Newspapers always have columns for women’s and household topics, but there seemed no appropriate section for this man’s novelty. The idea that solved the problem was to design a lighter that could be used as part of a handsome table setting to go with the silverware at dinner. This lighter, when designed, was avidly seized upon by the editors of women’s pages and the new product got enormous publicity. No lighter expert or technician worked up this solution. It came from an enthusiastic outsider. (*Editors Note: Remember that “recently” is relative to the 1961 Copyright date of the original manuscript.)

Successful ideas are not original thoughts

And right here I get the idea, or rather the impulse, of why similar newspaper columns devoted to men’s products could not be promoted.

Ideas are either abstract or concrete. The abstract idea is primarily important to the writer of stories, novels or plays and the author of books of contemporary or other non-fiction nature. On the other hand, concrete or specific ideas are of inter­est to the writer of movies, to painters and artists and engineers, and other workers in pictorial media or graphic presentation, as well as to business people and advertising writers.

Usually the abstract idea is a vague thing in origin. Your mind is in the state known as wandering over miscellaneous odd situations or conditions. All at once one of these subjects attracts you more than others. It “clicks” with some­thing in your mind. It seems to fit in, to belong.

Such an idea is vital to a writer. If you have already mas­tered the art of writing what you mean, your ability to come up with fresh ideas is important to your continued suc­cess. Other factors being equal, your output will vary in quality and vitality, with the force and appeal of your ideas.

The abstract idea seems to come from nowhere, or to bubble up from the depths of your imagination, and usually without reference to preliminary facts. But we shall see later how to expedite such ideas and produce them almost on an assembly line basis. Such casually obtained ideas are all right when there is no time factor involved. A Nobel Prize winner in literature does not have to worry if he gets another idea in a hurry or not. When he gets it, it may be any idea on any sub­ject, just so it’s an idea.

Select, Adapt and Transform Ideas

But most business people need ideas to solve particular problems. They are restricted by the specific facts and con­ditions, and they also have a time limit in which to “come across” with something. This puts a very different approach to the problem than that of the more leisurely “creative” thinker. As a matter of fact, it takes considerably more creativeness to be creative on schedule than to amble along at one’s own serene pace. The tempo of modern business is such that it no longer wishes to wait even for time or tide. It seems to be getting even with the long eons in which time or tide refused to wait for man.

The concrete idea cannot proceed by stretching an arm into the blue sky and drawing down something to do busi­ness with. It depends on specific facts that must be previously gathered, organized and adapted to the purpose in view.

Select, adapt and transform ideas

Playing with ideas without knowing the process is some­thing like constructing a television set by using the trial and error method! You may finally get it done but it would surely be simpler if you knew how at the start.

Most of our ideas come to us from outside by way of see­ing, hearing, feeling or some of the other senses. But these ideas are merely raw material for writers. They are shared in that form with all human beings. A creative mind does something to those ideas. He selects, adapts and transforms them.

For example, my mother had a long siege of insomnia which nothing seemed to help. So I decided that there must be some way of getting the better of it, and determined to do a lot of research and write a little book on How to Sleep Soundly. Was that an idea? No, up to that point it was merely an impulse. The idea only appeared after I did the research and knew how I was going to relate the factors. It became a successful idea after it was published and put all the readers to sleep—except my mother!

It takes considerably more creativeness to be creative on schedule than to amble along at one’s own serene pace.

So, first of all, the writer selects certain impulses that arouse his interest. This determines his basic material, and to a large degree the personality of his writing as well. With other planned methods and skill, these impressions, fleeting glimpses of life and basic facts of human behavior are recombined into work that the writer has every right to call his own.

The same process of gathering raw material, selecting, re­fitting and refining, characterizes all idea development whether abstract or concrete. The chief requisite is imagina­tion. This can be so aided and controlled by devices presently to be explained, that the process of idea-getting be­comes almost automatic.

Ideas result from mental attitudes. They originate in points of view. Hence by seeking true and natural points of view one may secure the best and most superior ideas. The world is governed by ideas—good ones and bad ones. Each nation is ruled by its political policy which is the general expression of the ideas of its leading minds. Each individual is as he is by virtue of the particular ideas which prevail in him.

Creative Energies Will Multiply the Good

It is more necessary today than ever to look for the good. There is a great deal of superficiality, triviality, to say noth­ing of evil, in modern life. When the attention is concen­trated upon the continual discovery or development of good, its creative energies will multiply the good.

Creative energies will multiply the good

There is a better side, a superior side, a beautiful side to everyone and everything. By learning to look for the better and higher qualities in persons and things we ally ourselves with these and not only produce better ideas and more constructive ones, but improve ourselves at the same time by more de­sirable and up building attitudes.

A major requirement in getting an idea is to believe that it is possible. In other words, we said something above about faith. Before you can do anything, you have to believe it can be done. This more than anything, sets the mind in motion to find the way. Your mind always takes its cue from your beliefs. If you believe it cannot be done, your mind will produce the reasons why it cannot. If you believe it can, your mind will be equally proficient in showing how it can. That is a necessary step in releasing creative power.

Of course to get an idea you must be receptive. A dog on Fifth Avenue, New York, may be surrounded by all the idea material which the creative thinker sees. Receptiveness is what you as a human being can make of it. Before you can do anything, you have to believe it can be done. This more than anything, sets the mind in motion to find the way.

Before you can do anything, you have to believe it can be done. This more than anything, sets the mind in motion to find the way.

You cannot harbor in your mind such negative attitudes as fear, worry, resentment, jealousy, anger, anxiety and the like, and at the same time expect to receive any inspiration from the finer portions of your being. The creativeness of a person is of the same substance as universal creativeness. You must ask this creativeness within for what you want, visualizing it as clearly as possible in picture form. Then you must still your mind in an attitude of faith, expectation and confidence that you will get your reply. You can’t pour grain into a sack unless the sack is open to receive, and your subconscious cannot pour ideas into your mind unless your mind is receptive.

Do You Lack the Capacity To Be More Creative?

Do you lack the capacity to be more creative?

I much like the word “amateur” as we might apply it to the subject of getting ideas. From the French verb, “to love,” its literal English meaning is to have such a fondness for a particular endeavor that one cultivates it eagerly without pursuing it professionally. Many notable discoveries in science have been made by amateurs. Newton’s occupation was that of a government employee. His scientific exploits were the hobbies of an “amateur”. To Einstein, mathematics was a hobby, his work being in the Swiss patent office.

To do anything with the spirit of love is to add profoundly to its potentiality for success. Everyone knows that love is magnetic. In the field of thought it attracts other thoughts that are needed, in a mysterious way. It removes much of the stress and strain of compulsion and adds the glow of happiness and inspiration.

When your dominant mental attitude is aspiring, harmonious and positive your mental powers will be directed into constructive channels. If the state of mind is discordant, apathetic, negative, then the forces will be misdirected and wasted. Attitudes of harmony and goodwill promote improved conditions of satisfaction and progress. Only trouble and discontent, confusion and discord can result from destructive attitudes. Creative skills enable us to deal ably with every problem of living. They aid us in developing our individual character to an increasingly higher creative level. Since it is creative skill which enables us to advance to economic stability and to enjoy life at the highest level, the development of creative skill is a most important practice for each of us to undertake.

To do anything with the spirit of love is to add profoundly to its potentiality for success.

Creativeness in the production of ideas when successful is far more than a financial asset, for it serves in a big way as an emotional outlet as well. Such ills as nervousness, discouragement, the inferiority sense, and general restlessness are due to the feeling that one is not contributing to life to the hilt of their capacities.

A single new idea may reshape your whole future. It is worth trying for. The results of ideas extend far beyond money. They bring one into new business and social contacts. They furnish the priceless opportunity to be of service, and thereby achieve appreciation, so yearningly desired by every human being. They justify one’s existence, for one has no right to consume all the pleasures and benefits and comforts of life without producing some in return. The idea producer also gains in the pleasures and rewards of alertness, interest in surroundings, the conquest of boredom, and the possession of a hobby with many challenging qualities. The successful idea producer also develops their own personality by adding interest, enthusiasm, purpose to their life. They increase their mental stature by becoming more observant, more analytical, and more concentrated. Most people however, do not lack the capacity to be more creative. The difficulty up to now has been that the methods of accomplishing such a purpose have nowhere been imparted to them. As a result, they view the subject with awe and mystery and ineptly allow themselves to be stumped by imaginary obstacles.

One has only to look around at the world to see in the most casual glance that there is untold opportunity for improvement and change. Granting the tremendous need for creative thinking and for new ideas, it is high time to place their production on a more systematic and reliable basis than has hertofore been done.

Where Do Ideas Come From?

There was once a young preacher who boasted that he could make a sermon out of anything anyone would say, and urged the members to send up their slips with sug­gestions. A tease among those present sent up a blank slip of paper. The preacher looked at it, turned it over and read, “Here is nothing and there is nothing.” He paused for a moment, considering what text he could get out of this. Then his face brightened and he was off. “Out of nothing, God created the world!”

Unfortunately we are not always so successful when we have to produce an idea out of nothing. It is the people with ideas who win most of the desirable places in the world. The person who can create something new and different is wanted—and rarely by the police! He is in demand for his ability to develop ideas. Those who achieve conspicuous success in business and advertis­ing, in radio, drama, literature, journalism, in politics, so­ciety, and indeed all the professions and walks of life can attribute the large portion of their success to their capacity for getting and using their ideas.

Since every new idea is merely a combination of two or more old ideas or parts of old ideas, every new idea contains parts or material for a still newer one.

Many large corporations maintain research departments which do nothing but look for and create new ideas. It is the new in automobiles, airplanes and technology in general—the new in government, politics, labor and industrial relations—the new in fashions, entertaining, advertising, books—that people constantly seek. We even say “What’s new?” as a greeting instead of “Hello.”

Many people work long and hard at a piece of work only to discover that their idea was no good to begin with. Why not make your ideas count for something? Do you have difficulty in getting ideas in the first place?

It is interesting to note that your education, race, age or experience have nothing to do with your success as an idea producer. You do not have to be a scientist, a technician, a writer, an artist. If your idea requires skills in these direc­tions you can hire them later if needed. Successful ideas come from persons in all walks of life, all ages and the least experience. No credentials are needed to go in the idea producing business. Even the sick and disabled can participate in this rewarding activity.

Neither do your ideas have to be of long lasting value. As soon as they are utilized they make their contribution in increased production, jobs and sales even if only for a short time. Change and novelty may be useful in themselves and may encourage further ideas. Since every new idea is merely a combination of two or more old ideas or parts of old ideas, every new idea contains parts or material for a still newer one.

The need for new ideas is universal. Nothing in the world is completed to finality and cannot ever be, for the world changes from instant to instant. And nowhere is change so persistent, so quickly taken up, as lively and active as in the United States. We are an active people, quickly bored, restless, and eager for change. Whole books have been written about induced obsolescence, the deliberate creation of changes in things which still possess much utility, wear, or beauty, merely to make them old fashioned or dated, so that new and different things will be purchased. It may be highly uneconomic, but it is profitable, especially to the idea producer.

I used to think of creating ideas as something tinged with considerable mystery. Like many others, I believed that it could not be developed, that it happened or did not happen. Yet I could not reconcile myself to the notion that God was bothering to send inspirations in the form of better mouse traps or fancier perfume bottles. I came to the con­clusion that getting an idea was a process—part of the cause and effect processes that control all of life. Since there must be a reason for what happens, the matter comes down to knowing the reason and applying the method.

What then is the process of creating ideas?

People have been successful in extracting the wealth of the earth for their use but they have not learned to seek for the untold wealth which lies hidden in their own hearts and minds. It is in human beings as it is in soils where sometimes there is a vein of gold concealed.
To get ideas is a matter of creative thinking. It is a method for those who wish to get results in their own fields of work and in their own lives, for people with ideas live more enjoyably and more profitably than those without. A method of producing ideas is fundamental for any occupa­tion and for life itself.

Everything that man produces begins as an idea. From the wrapper on a loaf of bread or the tube of shave cream all the way up to the latest best-seller; from nylon stock­ings to television; from seedless grapes to a magazine printed in Braille for the blind—all began as an idea.

Most of our ideas come from someone else. Where does “the someone else” get them? Is there any way we can get an idea, better yet, a succession of ideas, by ourselves? Yes, there is a way, and I don’t mean inspiration which some people would like to meet by appointment in a lunch room.

Developing an idea is much like developing an invention. Sir Joshua Reynolds, the great painter and founder of the Royal Academy, tells us that invention is little more than a new combination of those images which have been pre­viously gathered and deposited in the memory. Despite the ingenious preacher, nothing can come of nothing, at least by manmade efforts. He who has laid up no materials can produce no combinations.

Accordingly, the idea searcher explores human experi­ence and thought—history, psychology, science—anything and everything for analogies and stepping stones for the imagination. The more extensive our acquaintance with the work of those who have excelled, the more extensive will be our own ingenuity. Then when an image comes to us, we can use it, juggle with it, be receptive to its possibilities, not simply hold it isolated as an amusing or interesting curiosity, but have it as a basis for experiment. Most of us get ideas that we do not develop in this way, and nothing ever comes of them.

Some people have their heads full of so-called bright ideas all the time, but only too often they are merely half-baked notions. The techniques suggested herein should im­prove the quality of the ideas so they really become work­able and useful. Practicing better methods need not mean getting more ideas when one is prolific already, but it should mean getting better ones.

To be receptive to the creative impulse, one must have a certain discontent, a confidence in the potential ideal, a sense that betterment is always possible. This gives birth to constructive curiosity.

We are all inventors in minor things. The one who would improve a thing must realize its present qualities and its possibilities; must recognize that the possibility of per­fection outweighs the probability of imperfection. We do not, for example, believe that violin strings have been made to create horrible discord, although the probability of dis­cord is far greater than that of harmony, and for one who can play the violin, there are thousands who cannot.

To get an idea, observation is the first requisite, analysis the second, faith the third. Without observation, the need or opportunity would not be recognized. Without analysis, the method would not be devised. Without faith, the im­pulse would be lacking. The successful effort, then, com­bines a physical, a mental and a spiritual activity—in other words, a union of all our available powers directed toward a single goal.

Perhaps this sounds harder than it is. How does one create in nature? One plants a seed. One allows it to germinate. Surely that is a simple pattern. But it involves the same three points Observation. You see a need or a chance to grow a certain thing. Analysis: You do not plant a grapefruit seed to grow a beet. You consider the condi­tions and other factors. Faith: If you did not expect a grapefruit plant to grow from a grapefruit seed, you wouldn’t bother in the first place. We must keep a sense of direction toward our goal. A traveler in Rome asked some­one, “If I go straight from here, how far is it to the Vati­can?” “Well,” was the reply, “if you keep straight on the way you are going, it is nearly 25,000 miles, but if you turn around and walk the other way, it is about a mile and a half.”

In the production of ideas there is a similarly straight road, a definite method, so clear that it may be called a technique. Whenever an idea is produced, this procedure is followed, knowingly or not. And this technique can be cultivated. It is the purpose of this book to show you both in theory and practical analysis, how to arrive at new ideas, together with specific methods for developing meaningful ideas quickly and at will.

The early portion of the book necessarily deals in part with the theories. But the major part of it concerns actual formulas, techniques and practical examples of how people have used them to produce the ideas that are more or less familiar to us now, and how you may use them to forward your own purposes.

The new frontiers of the coming age will not only be in the form of new worlds to conquer, but in the conquest of the world we know, as well. And this can be accomplished only by ideas. We stand upon the threshold of a new world of ideas. On the other side of the door can be a bright tomorrow.