by Dr Ken Hudson | Aug 18, 2013 | How to accelerate idea generation, Workshop Facilitator
We have just launched our new Ideas Blitz Mobile app to great acclaim. It is free, fast and fun to use. You can use it with your iphone and ipad. It is the ideal app to use in your next brainstorming session. If you are facilitating a Brainstorming session...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Aug 12, 2013 | Creative Thinking Techniques, How to accelerate idea generation
I have just read Mindfulness — An eight week plan for finding peace in a frantic world by Mark Williams and Danny Penman. Their website link is here. Their book is an easy to read, simple and practical guide to the practice of Mindfulness. One of the key...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Aug 9, 2013 | How to accelerate idea generation
Our new Blitz Mobile app is out now. It is fast, simple and it can help you unleash your creativity in minutes. Once you have entered your challenge you then try and generate 9 ideas in 2 minutes. This stops you filtering your ideas so your unconscious creativity can...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Aug 6, 2013 | Creative Thinking Techniques, How to accelerate idea generation, How to boost your productivity, How to run an awesome Brainstorming Session, Speed Thinking, Workshop Facilitator
I am very pleased to announce that Ideas Blitz Mobile is now available. Ideas Blitz mobile is a free (at least for the time being), app that can be used on your iphone or ipad. Its the tool of Speed Thinking. The link to the world’s fastest creativity and...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Jan 27, 2013 | Creative Thinking Techniques, How to accelerate idea generation
According to Steve Jobs, the essence of creativity is to make a connection between (sometimes) two unrelated items. In an interview in Wired Magazine in 1995, he explained this process: “Creativity is just connecting things. When you ask creative people how...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Jan 21, 2013 | How to accelerate idea generation, How to boost your productivity
Many years ago a Russian psychologist named Bluma Zeigarnik noticed that waiters seemed only to remember orders that were still open and had forgotton orders that had been completed. Her theory which later became known as The Ziegarnik Effect (1927) is that tasks that...