Creating Contagious Enthusiasm

a discussion by Robin Blandford.

Robin Blandford

Contagious enthusiasm to plan, design, and implement really exciting digital media. Robin is the Director of Decisions For Heroes [D4H] - a web app that saves lives.



Robin is based in Dublin London Singapore Chicago Dublin Cambridge, UK Dublin and loves to collaborate with people through the comments on this blog, on facebook, twitter, or individually by sending an email. Is there anything he can help you with today?
 

Step 3. Store Up Massive Potential Energy

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AWESOMENESS METHODOLOGY - A group of us made up "rules of professional etiquette" for a youth group about 10 years ago. The second rule of professional etiquette was "Protect Your Cadets".... Cadets were the youngest members of the group, and everybody's job was to protect them. Make sure they survive until they are strong enough to protect the new Cadets. And so, with awesome idea generation Step 3 is about protection. Protecting your "tiny little idea babies".

All of you reading. All of your scribbles. All of your notes. All of your thinking. All of this is about one thing - storing up MASSIVE potential energy. Generating enough positive thought armoury, enough defensive thinking, enough mind walls to block negativity. When someone comes at your idea baby, you're going to be able to protect it with common-sense thinking, case studies, and evidence.

The easiest thing for anyone to do, is to stamp on your idea while it's small. While it's too small to defend itself. Some people make a habit of doing this to ideas - killing them off. Actually, I'm convinced some people, the people who don't have their own good ideas, actually get a thrill from killing others ideas.

This isn't about retaliating or defending - always remember advice is not a debate - this is about your own internal dialogue. The only person who can kill your idea in your mind is you. While you remain confident about an idea - it is still alive. Once you loose confidence in it - it's all over.

So read, talk, think a lot. Build up your massive potential energy store - and have it ready in your mind to keep yourself with the glass overflowing - not just half full.
Posted on March 22, 2010 and filed under awesomeness methodology, ideas, potential energy,
 

The Awesomeness Methodology

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AWESOMENESS METHODOLOGY - I'm often asked how I came up with such an awesome idea for Decisions For Heroes. Can you believe, most people actually call it "Awesome". So when I was asked to speak about something interesting at a TEDx in Ireland, I decided that I would research awesomeness - what does being awesome mean, and how can we replicate it. I'm going to bring you the result here to robinblandford.com - my Awesomeness Methodology over the next few weeks.

Let's start with what does awesome mean? Well straight up it means you are in 'awe' of it, or as g:define tells us, "an overwhelming feeling of wonder or admiration", "an emotion comparable to wonder but less joyous, and more fearful or respectful", "causing awe or terror; inspiring wonder or excitement; excellent, exciting, remarkable", "to control by inspiring dread", "Adult Webmaster Empire (AWE) is a live webcam affiliate program" hmmmm.

My favourite definition of ''awesomeness' comes from Umair Haque - who promotes that awesomeness is the new innovation, that today "we've got an economy where everything's for sale. Yet, little fundamentally new is being created", that we "we are focused still on selling the same old toxic, industrial era junk in slightly better ways". We need to learn to create fundamentally better stuff in the first place. Umair continues "Beancounters feel challenged and threatened by [Awesomeness], because it feels fuzzy and imprecise. Yet, it's anything but. Gen M knows 'awesomeness' when we see it — that's why its part of our vernacular. It's a precise concept, with meaning, depth, and resonance."

Let's look at his definition:

Awesomeness happens when thick — real, meaningful — value is created by people who love what they do, added to insanely great stuff, and multiplied by communities who are delighted and inspired because they are authentically better off.
So to achieve awesomeness, we need an idea that people will love what they do (rescue - some people even do it as a hobby, donate to it, have emotion to it), we need to make some insanely great stuff (my passion for implementing digital media - and my ability as a finisher), and we need to multiply that by communities (I'm part of that rescue community already - let's amplify that), and we're making people authentically better off (saving lives).
Next up is 'Step 1. Buy an Expensive Notebook' on the journey reaching this point and the methodology behind it. Then I'll go into some detail on thick and thin value I've noted.
Comments please.
Posted on February 26, 2010 and filed under awesome, awesomeness methodology, idea creation, ideas,