Thursday, October 29, 2015

Brainstorming about brainstorming techniques

I'm about to attend a hackathon in Helsinki where I study right now. The team has already brought together, but finding an idea to hack the hell out of is not that simple. That's why I started thinking how to make brainstorming easier, how can I help my brain in the process. Here I share two approaches that I came up with - I'm not saying I was the first to figure these out, though; I have no clue.

Montage brainstorming

For the hackathon, the team had to choose, which gadget(s) to use - if more, than which combination - to build a creative, promising product. There was 20 of them so this decision alone was far from trivial. We agreed to try out a neuro headband, but still, there are a again a million ways to hack further brain signals with the other devices. There, it came to my mind, what if I constitute a montage, images of all devices cut and pasted side by side in a single image to view. It's so much easier to make associations between devices - or more abstractly, between choices of a parameter of an idea - than keeping your mind updating over and over again of the choices available. You just look at the montage and let your brain connect the dots for you. This technique, of course, is only convenient when you have all the possible choices available and their number doesn't exceed, let's say, 30. For most parameters of a hackathon / startup idea, montage brainstorming is not applicable. Don't worry, the other brainstorming method I'm going to show is just for those difficult cases.

The actual montage of devices that I assembled. Lots of tools to hack!