News

100 Ways To Kill A Concept:


--WHY MOST IDEAS GET SHOT DOWN™

Everyone has ideas. “Cogito Ergo Sum.” (I think, therefore I am.) ~Rene Descartes~ But then what?

For some, it is enough to have the idea. But most people aren’t satisfied by the mere act of thinking. Instead, they want to put those ideas to work. So, next they need to persuade someone else to embrace their newfound ideas in order for those ideas to be accepted and become a reality.

Businesses persuade customers, bosses persuade employees, politicians persuade citizens, men persuade women, mothers persuade fathers, wives persuade husbands, children persuade parents . . . or vice versa. In turn, corporations and governments and colleagues and friends and siblings persuade each other. And sometimes, people just have to convince themselves.

At some level, every human is involved in the generation of ideas and then the solicitation of those ideas. Most of the time, somewhere along the way, a person’s idea gets changed before their concept transaction is completed.

Sometimes their concept lives and evolves, but more often it dies. Once a concept is conceived, persuading someone else to buy into that concept usually causes any of the following circumstances to happen (particularly in business, marketing & sales, the arts, science, government, and any entrepreneurial venture) . . .

1. The boss won’t go for that.

2. The lawyers won’t go for that.

3. The accountants won’t go for that.

4. The client won’t go for that.

5. The salespeople won’t go for that.

6. The investors won’t go for that.

7. So and so won’t like it.

8. It’s not us.

9. It won’t fit into our system.

10. We’re not ready for that yet.

11. I don’t think it will work.

12. I don’t understand.

13. Do you understand?

14. Will anyone understand?

15. What will they think of next?

16. It's politically incorrect.

17. It’s too complicated.

18. It's too late for that now.

19. It's too expensive.

20. We’ll lose money.

21. Why?

22. What!?

23. Who says?

24. Nobody will want that.

25. Where are you coming from?

26. It can’t be done.

27. Have the committee review it.

28. Let’s do more research.

29. Let’s take a vote on it.

30. Let’s play devil’s advocate.

31. I’ve never heard of such a thing.

32. We’ve already tried that.

33. That’s been done before.

34. It’s not how we do things here.

35. We’ve never done anything like that.

36. We’ll get back to you.

37. That’s a subject for another meeting.

38. It creates more problems than it solves.

39. Sounds like too many problems.

40. That only solves some of the problems.

41. That's going to cause problems.

42. Here we go again.

43. That's unique, but . . .

44. Very interesting, but . . .

45. I understand, but . . .

46. I love it, but . . .

47. Great idea, but . . .

48. Yes, but . . .

49. Sounds simple, but . . .

50. But . . .

51. It’s just not for us.

52. Try again.

53. That sucks.

54. Needs more pizzazz!

55. I don’t like it.

56. Have you thought it through?

57. It won’t sell.

58. Maybe next time.

59. Another day.

60. What are people going to say?

61. People will think we’re nuts!

62. That’s BS.

63. Be realistic.

64. How about this instead?

65. Get a grip!

66. Are you serious?

67. That turns me off!

68. The client is too liberal for that.

69. The client is too conservative for that.

70. What else do you have?

71. So!

72. So what?

73. Oh . . .

74. Oh?

75. Oh, really!

76. Get real, it’s not feasible.

77. Sounds crazy!

78. Nobody does that.

79. Are you kidding me?

80. That’s too off the wall.

81. You can’t argue with success.

82. You can’t fight City Hall.

83. We don’t have time to do it.

84. Let’s not reach beyond our grasp.

85. We’re overextended already.

86. Let’s wait 'til we see the numbers.

87. You’re proposing what?

88. Let’s not rock the boat.

89. Silence.

90. Laughter.

91. Boos.

92. Where did that come from?

93. I’ve got a better idea.

94. Hey, there’s a recession going on.

95. No one has ever done anything like that before.

96. The press will kill us.

97. That’s not your decision to make.

98. We’ll step on too many toes.

99. Just leave it to me; I’ll take care of it.

100. You could lose your job for that . . .

. . . What people really mean to say, but would never openly admit, is…they are innately AFRAID. Afraid of anything that is new, improved, unique, different, and/or better (anything that acts like a catalyst for change) and/or things they are not familiar with and/or anything that annoys, threatens, or harms their ego, status, power, or livelihood.

Because of their fear, it is so much easier for most people to say 'NO', rather than 'yes' to your concept. It is understandable that they want to fix it, or change it, or add to it, or subtract from it, or water it down, or make it less simple-direct-and-to-the-point, or put their own imprint on it, or try to make it more conventional, or more familiar, or more safe, or just keep the status quo. People are afraid of evolution, replacements, substitutes, anything that interferes with their past loyalties or modus operandi, or encroaches on their self, special or vested interest, or forces them to give up the bird in their hand for the (different) bird in the bush.

It is also reassuring for some people to take the daring part out of a concept and grind the rough edges, then sandpaper it to death. Oscar Wilde put it this way: “A concept that isn't dangerous is hardly worth calling a concept at all.” It is often the shocking part, the frightening part, the unknown element, the element of risk, which makes a great new concept in the first place.

(Not only do these symptoms apply to the influence others have on your ideas, but also the influence you exert over your own ideas, when ‘idea-suicide’ caused by your own self-doubts and insecurities influence your decisions about your own ideas that guide and form your life.)

When it comes to generating great concepts, and then selling those concepts to whomever so they are acted upon and happen, here are key interrelated principles you need to consider and utilize:..............

...............CHECK OUT the last half of this "NEW AND EXTENDED VERSION 2.0" MANIFESTO -- NOW AVAILABLE at the links below:

(A must read for every creative or idea person.) DOWN LOAD your free PDF copy for your files and reference, at-- Click to Open Web Page

THEN PASS ALONG a free copy to all your friends, at-- Click to Open Web Page

+++++ DEAR VISITOR--Thanks again Adholes for your support and votes that helped to allow me to join the ranks of other authors like: Tom Peters, Seth Godin, Guy Kawasaki, and Hugh Mcleod, by winning this international competition for the most popular new manifesto at the prestigious online publication ChangeThis.com

PLEASE GIVE ME YOUR FEEDBACK, let me know what you thought of the manifesto. Thanks. ~Michael Iva~ +++++

(login to vote or comment.)
this comment is pending approval
Wednesday, April 2, 2008. 06:31AM by John Q Public
Apathy kills!
Monday, March 31, 2008. 08:02AM by x x
The 101st way an idea gets shot down: Someone influential, but miserable, poops on it.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008. 06:02PM by michael Iva
With your help and the support of countless readers all over the world, my manifesto is now number 6 on the all time top 10 list of the most popular manifestos at ChangeThis.com http://www.changethis.com/archives?b... It is the first manifesto to make that list since 2005, the first to make that list in three years. And, it all started right here at Adholes as a regular weblog that I wrote, then expanded, then refined into a timeless classic (soon to be both an E-book AND a hard back book) that has the ability to serve you with unique insights and bulletproof principles regarding the true nature and power of creativity, how to be more creative, how to make your ideas as good as possible, and most importantly how to posture and sell your creative ideas so they happen. You can have the best idea in the world but if you can’t make it happen, what do you have…nothing. Increase your idea selling batting average. Increase your odds for success… 100 ways to kill a concept: why most ideas get shot down. KEEP SPREADING THE WORD, and thanks again.
Monday, March 17, 2008. 07:19AM by michael Iva
Be scared, but never afraid....... There is a big difference between those two states of being. The former is a natural and helpful human response that allows you to focus on an effort. The latter tends to be either debilitating or the kiss of death to an endeavor.
Sunday, March 16, 2008. 05:27PM by Sonya B
I heard Steve Farber (author of The Radical Edge, The Radical Leap) speak last month. He said that all great leaders have to have Oh Shit! Moments (OS!Ms). He said that if you're not scared, then you're not doing anything significant. Check out his web site and you'll likely order his books, if you don't own them already.
Thursday, March 13, 2008. 04:07AM by x x
What I really respect, Michael, is that you openly and freely share your wisdom knowing that it will gain you more business, not less. In other words, you practice what you preach. You are not held back by the F word. Fear.
Thursday, March 13, 2008. 04:03AM by x x
You are wise, Michael. Very wise. But you already know that. Because, you know, you're wise.
Thursday, February 14, 2008. 02:10PM by Bret Carpenter
90. Replace Laughter with Mockery [just a suggestion]
Thursday, February 14, 2008. 10:04AM by John Q Public
NOW YOU GOT ME READING IT AGAIN TOO. WOW, I didn't know that, cool. Let's see what else I can learn.
Thursday, February 14, 2008. 06:49AM by Tia Dobi
It's 6:48 a.m. and I just read this again. Thinking of sending it out to a few folk.
Thursday, February 14, 2008. 06:47AM by Buddy 'Friendly' Wachenheimer
Michael, I've read this five times and keep it on my desktop for easy reference. What a wonderful tool of our trade.
Saturday, January 26, 2008. 10:37AM by Jill Noyes
Lack of Vision, Hard Work & Fear of Rejection that's what kills most ideas. Oh and Money to Promote could be a small factor but I believe that works itself in there with hard work.
Thursday, September 6, 2007. 02:41PM by florian meimberg
HA! Very good! Reminds me of an article I wrote! MINOR CHANGES - Why most ads suck http://madvertisingblog.wordpr...
Friday, August 3, 2007. 10:01PM by Leah Lax
i agree with fear being the number one piece of poop in people's cornflakes when it comes to evaluating creative. Granted, there's a time and a place to rightfully kill some concepts. (hey not everything's a winner and SOMEBODY'S kid is always at the bottom of the list in class - the same goes for ideas) But i DO appreciate that ALL the ideas have to come out to get to the ones that may be some real stunners. When you prematurely kill stuff in the brainstorming stage and shut off the faucet, it handicaps the creative severely further down the line. People are guilty of peeing in the idea pool. I've heard just about every one of these excuses. (and yeah, i'll admit, i've even been guilty of uttering some of them myself.) When are people gonna wake up and realize that you don't learn from winning, you learn from losing (because you do THAT 3x as much)...and THAT'S where greatness comes from. i agree.
Tuesday, July 31, 2007. 11:14AM by Bret Carpenter
Fear of appearing stupid of crazy?
Tuesday, July 31, 2007. 11:00AM by michael Iva
“100 Ways To Kill a Concept: Why Most Ideas Get Shot Down™” in 100 words……………Fear is public enemy #1. Fear is responsible for every problem people face. COURAGE IS THE ANTIDOTE TO FEAR. Courage to have the VISION, to practice and perfect your TALENT into consistent SKILL, to develop the DISCERNMENT needed to UNDERSTAND REALITY, and to have the RESOLVE needed to never give up so something can happen. Use these attributes of courage to improve the quality of your selling concepts so they convey VALUE and WORTH to whomever. Then, figure out how to SELL-THE-SELL, so it has a chance to sell your client’s product, service, or issue to the targeted probable purchaser.
Thursday, July 5, 2007. 09:13PM by Chris Grayson
Have you seen this post on Seth Godin's blog?: http://sethgodin.typepad.com...
Wednesday, May 23, 2007. 11:15AM by arthur barbato
thought provoking! Very good read. yes, from a salesperson's POV we love when we can isolate FEAR/AFRAID! This is something we can close on. It's got real meat and meaning. ;)
Monday, May 21, 2007. 05:50AM by David McNamara
Thanks for the article......forward it to others as a "must read". AWESOME!
Tuesday, May 15, 2007. 06:54AM by Chris Grayson
Nice read. Because you ask for feedback, can I make an editor's comment before you publish the print edition? You have listed 99 things that can kill a concept there. #35 and #95 are the same: "We’ve never done anything like that."
Thursday, April 5, 2007. 09:11AM by Anil Gupte
Excellent thoughts and excellent writing! Great job, Dude!
Tuesday, March 13, 2007. 10:06AM by michael Iva
CHECK OUT THE LATEST REPUBLISHED VERSION AT-- http://www.designtaxi.com/features.j...
Tuesday, March 13, 2007. 10:05AM by michael Iva
This message is catching on. It is starting to spread all around the world (and it was just recently published). The power of “word of mouth” at work. Thanks Adholes. Keep spreading the word by passing it along to your friends-- http://www.changethis.com/32.04.100W... and downloading your free PDF files for reference at- http://www.changethis.com/32.04.100W... CHECK OUT THE LATEST REPUBLISHED VERSION AT-- http://www.designtaxi.com/feat...
Sunday, March 11, 2007. 12:05PM by michael Iva
VISITORS / ADHOLES-- Somewhere, something beyond belief, implausible, improbable, unimaginable, or impossible… YET potentially jaw-dropping, mind-boggling, awe-inspiring, breathtaking, and literally wondrous… is waiting to be known by someone who will stumble upon it, turn it into a concept, try to make it happen, only to be judged by some body who does not understand it, care about it, is fearful of it, but holds the power and must decide whether or not it will be allowed to live, die, or somehow be changed… In someway at sometime every man-made thing in history has, is, and will endure this. However, there is a solution to this universal problem; a remedy, an antidote, a fix. Do you know what it is? I do. Check out the TWO links above. (Tell your friends about them too.) Then, give me your feedback, tell me more about what you think. Thanks! ~Michael
Sunday, March 11, 2007. 02:16AM by arnold Santillan
it's real inspiring i can's stop reading this thing. i will pass it around and highligt the important stuff and i will tell them. see think outside the box. nothing venture, nothing gain. you snooze you loose.
Thursday, March 8, 2007. 09:19AM by Tracey Lawrence
Well done! "It is important to be a generalist who specializes in creativity." You've clarified my role in the cosmic miasma. Thank you!
Wednesday, March 7, 2007. 06:33PM by Marc Rapp
you had me at "but most people aren't satisfied with the mere act of thinking." there is where the difference is. if your going to just through the clay in the middle of the table, then walk away. Otherwise, wait until it comes back around to say something. Collaborative.
Wednesday, March 7, 2007. 02:01PM by Bret Carpenter
wow nice pdf...look and content
Wednesday, March 7, 2007. 10:58AM by Marc Lefton
I just sent it to my 30 coworkers, but that's just the tip of the iceberg. Press release, email blast, faxes, etc. on its way soon.