You’ve probably participated in brainstorming at one time or another – one of those strategic offsite retreat exercises where you try to solve a problem by coming up with as many potential solution ideas as possible in a short amount of time. No analysis or commenting on each other's ideas is allowed. That’s for the staff/management team to crank through back at HQ after the session is over.
But have you tried "brain streaming"? No, this does not involve hard-wired video streaming directly into your brain, although someone, somewhere is probably working on an app for that.
I am blessed / cursed (depending on your point of view) in being an external thinker. External thinkers do their best thinking while interacting with others. Few deep thoughts occur in the solitude of your office. But connect with someone else in a mutually stimulating discussion of a challenging topic and it’s like sticking your finger in an electrical socket. Your brain goes into overdrive; it’s been zapped.
Brain streaming is most exciting in a pitch or sales meeting when you find yourself connecting with the personal across the table and the ideas begin to flow about how they could benefit from your product or service. (What did I do with that order form?!)
But brain streaming is probably most effective in the context of a finely tuned management team where several senior members are external thinkers. (Internal thinkers don’t need a team – they get their ideas directly from the cosmos.) When this group bears down to tackle an issue, it’s like everyone just grabbed onto a hot electrical wire – the kind you can’t turn loose of until someone turns off the juice. (It’s a fantastic endorphin rush without all that sweaty exercise.)
If you are an external thinker and your teammates are not, a consigliore will do just fine. In a prior life, I had a close adviser who tended to be more of an internal thinker, but he was very good. When I wanted to develop an idea, I would call him in, shut the door, and work the whiteboard for an hour or so. I would sketch out the ideas / options. He would comment, elaborate or push back.
The beauty of this approach was that he (like all good advisers) had no agenda other than helping me develop the idea/issue at hand. Nor was he invested in any of the options. His was a pure intellect; he was only interested in what would work.
Brain streaming is not for the faint of heart (figuratively or literally), but try it. You might like it.
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