May 06, 2009
Are You an Idea Addict?

IdeaManWithABulb.jpg

There are lots of things in this world that people get addicted to: alcohol, nicotine, heroin, sex, and iphones just to name a few.

But perhaps the biggest addiction is the addiction to our own ideas.

Here's how it works:

We think something up. We feel a buzz. We embrace the idea. We think about it some more. We tweak it, we name it, we pitch it, and POOF, the addiction begins.

At first, like most habits, it's subtle -- a seemingly casual pursuit with a thousand positive side effects: increased energy, renewed focus, a feeling of well-being, a heightened sense of awareness.

Like wow, man.

But then...

We think about it in the shower. We think about it in the car. We think about it when we don't want to think about it. We even dream about it.

Soon we want everyone to know about our idea. We want them to feel the buzz. We want them to nod in agreement. We want them to recognize just how pure our fixation is.

If this is where it ended, it wouldn't be that big of a deal. I wouldn't be calling it an addiction. Maybe I'd be calling it an "inspiration," or a "commitment" or a "visitation from the Muse." But it doesn't end here. It goes on and on and on and on -- and often, to our own detriment.

If you have a business, of course, you want to conjure up cool ideas. That's a good thing. But if you cling to ideas just because they're yours, or just because you've invested major amounts of time in them, then it's definitely a moment to rethink where you're coming from.

It may even be time to get help.

The story behind the creation of the iPhone is a good example of what I'm talking about. Steve Jobs and his Apple team had to face the music and back off their own addiction to what they had created in order to create something even greater.

Here's what Steve had to say about the matter...

"There always seems to come a moment (when what you're doing) is not quite working. Take the iPhone. We had a different enclosure design for the iPhone until way too close to the introduction to ever change it. And I came in one morning, and I said 'I just don't love this. I can't convince myself to fall in love with this. And this is the most important product we've ever done.'

"So we pushed the reset button. We went through all the zillions of models we made and ideas we'd had... It was hell because we had to go to the team and say, 'All the work you've done for the last year, we're going to have to throw it away and start over, and we're going to have to work twice as hard now because we don't have enough time.'

"And you know what everybody said, 'Sign us up.'

That happens more than you think because this is not just engineering and science. There is art, too. Sometimes when you're in the middle of one of these crises, you're not sure you're going to make it to the other end. But we've always made it, and so we have a certain degree of confidence, although sometimes you wonder."

Fortune Magazine (p. 72), March 17, 2008

Photo

Posted by Mitch Ditkoff at May 6, 2009 08:20 PM

Comments

It's called stepping back and not being attached to *any* idea, event if it your own.

And to take that step back, there needs to be either a whole lot of self-confidence, a willingness to take a risk, or a brush with death such that you know you can't lose anything because you've already won.

I think Steve Jobs has all of the above.

Posted by: CB [TypeKey Profile Page] at March 18, 2008 12:38 AM

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