There are lots of ways for you to learn about systematic creativity. In today’s episode, I’m sharing with you two amazing apps right at your fingertips. At least take a look at them and see what value you might get out of them. Think about how this can benefit your...
Can you teach your children to be more creative? Of course! In fact, the systematic inventive thinking or SIT method that I’ve been covering for the past weeks can be something your kids can learn too. Today, I’m going to share with you 5 ways you can teach your kids...
Chocolate chip cookies, penicillin, Velcro, the microwave oven, and the game of basketball – what do all of those have in common? Well, they’re examples of products that have been derived completely by chance. They’re called serendipitous products because...
Imagine a package of powdered soup, a contact lens, a child’s high chair, and an exercise bicycle. What do you think these items have in common? Each one actually has had something subtracted from them. And that’s what we’re going to discuss today. Learn how the...
How does a company like Procter & Gamble take their air freshener product that’s lagging in the market and all of a sudden propel it to first place, adding 20 points of market share in just a matter of four months? Procter & Gamble assembled a team of...
Once you’ve embraced this idea that creativity can be systematic, and you’ve started to invest time and energy learning the Systematic Inventive Thinking or SIT – a very common question for you at this point is – how do you spread what you know to others?...