Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Test Drive New Ideas to Overcome Braincramp

Got a brain cramp?

Drew McLellan of The Marketing Minute created a thoughtfully inspiring post to answer my question - what would you suggest to overcome a brain cramp? Drew tells us his story...

Let me answer that by way of a short story.

When I was a kid, I used to wake up in the middle of the night, yelling for my mom and grabbing the calf of my leg, which was knotted in a spasm.

My mom called them growing pains. (Turns out that's not quite accurate...but it sounded good at the time.) The pain was incredible and the more I moved...the more my leg knotted up. My mom would have to calm me down and have me hold very still. She'd tell me a story so I'd focus on that and then, she'd slowly rub the knot out enough that I could walk around on it.
I can remember the first time she suggested walking on it. I thought she was insane. But she was right...I needed to work out the knot by getting back up on the leg.

Sometimes as adults we get brain cramps. Same knotted feeling. We usually cramp up when we're faced with a new truth. Or maybe a truth we don't really want to see or isn't playing out the way we want it to.

That happens at MMG all the time. Many times, what we recommend or what we uncover during our branding process isn't what the client expected - and they cramp up.

So just like my mom helped me, it's my job to help undo the knots. And just like my mom, I use stories to quiet the clients and help them understand. I love analogies - I find them to be incredibly effective in taking the abstract and making it tangible. After I've told our client a story or two and have them slowly nodding, I know I need to get them to try out the new ideas. They need to walk around on the fresh thoughts and see how they hold up.

They don't want to do it. It seems counter-intuitive. They want to protect the status quo. But my role is to encourage them to slowly stand up and test the new ideas by walking on them for a bit.

Many times, after they take the risk -- they are surprised by their reaction. They see new possibilities. They get fresh perspective. They were ready to take the next step all along.

So what's my prescription for overcoming a brain cramp?

First, don't panic. Breathe deeply. Focus on something else. Then, go ahead and look at what has you cramped up. Is it possible that it might not be all bad? Try to understand it from a different point of view. Maybe use analogies to help grasp the key points.

Then...test drive the new ideas. Slowly at first. Sure, it's going to be uncomfortable. It's new territory. But walk around on them a little.

See if maybe they take you to a different and new place.

Maybe even a place you didn't think you could reach.

Drew, we can actually trick our brain as you show so well here. If we tell ourselves that we can't do something, we give that message to our brain and the brain rewires for that outcome. The more we say it, the less likely we can accomplish it.

By tricking your brain as your Mom modeled so well, you were able to walk on your leg with some pain though you thought it impossible. Fact is, we are able to accomplish so much more than we think, just by stepping out and giving new ideas a test drive!

Keep in mind that Edison had more failures than successes and indicates he learned much from failures, ”I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.” Many times it takes a little more problem solving and adjustment to make ideas work just right.

Why not test drive some of your risky ideas and come back to tell Drew, me and others about it!

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