ORGANIZING CREATIVITY

How to generate, capture, and collect ideas to realize creative projects.

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  • Organizing Creativity 3
    • Book Overview and PDF
    • OC 3 – Front Matter
    • Why Organize Creativity
    • OC 3 – Creativity as a System
      • OC 3 – Chapter 1: Creativity
      • OC 3 – Chapter 2: Creative System
      • OC 3 – Chapter 3: Application
      • OC 3 – Supplemental Materials
    • OC 3 – Framework – Foundation
      • OC 3 – Chapter 4: Person
      • OC 3 – Chapter 5: Environment
      • OC 3 – Chapter 6: Capabilities
      • OC 3 – Meta: Tools
    • OC 3 – Framework – Ideas
      • OC 3 – Chapter 7: Generating Ideas
      • OC 3 – Chapter 8: Capturing Ideas
      • OC 3 – Chapter 9: Collecting Ideas
    • OC 3 – Framework – Creative Focus
      • OC 3 – Chapter 10: Creative Direction
      • OC 3 – Chapter 11: Creative Energy
      • OC 3 – Chapter 12: Creative Commitment
    • OC 3 – Framework – Projects
      • OC 3 – Chapter 13: Project Realization
      • OC 3 – Chapter 14: Project Evaluation
      • OC 3 – Chapter 15: Project Release
    • OC 3 – Back Matter
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – Afterword by the Author
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – Afterword by AI
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – Sources and Foundations
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – References
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – About the Author
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – Feedback and Saying Thanks
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – Glossary
      • OC 3 – Back Matter – Appendix
  • Comments & Questions
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  • Portfolio
    • Second Edition of Organizing Creativity
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      • What Readers Say
      • Errata
  • About this Blog

Infrastructure

When do you profit from optimizing a task? Brilliant comic by xkcd

2013-04-29

Xkcd did a brilliant diagram showing you whether it actually makes sense to invest the time needed in optimizing a task. Something to keep in mind in any optimization process.
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Another academic workflow visualization

2013-04-17

Visualized my current workflow when it comes to dealing with academic work. Includes references to apps and postings.
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Beware of data corruption devastating your Workflow Lynchpin

2013-04-16

Encountered the worst and most devastating bug ever. Some catastrophes work like nukes, this one is more like Alzheimer's' disease. Leads to a crucial recommendation: Keep your old backups, you might desperately need them.
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Workshop: Scientific Work — General Tips when Dealing with Literature

2013-03-24

There are tips that do not fit neatly into a category, yet can be impressively useful. Here are some regarding scientific work and literature -- the foundations on which we build our work, and our careers.
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Workshop: Scientific Work — Topic Notebooks

2013-03-24

An introduction to topic notebooks -- a very useful way of keeping your information available for future work (e.g., writing). Contains lots of tips. Highly, highly recommended.
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Workshop: Scientific Work — Possible Academic Literature Workflow

2013-03-14

An overview of my academic workflow. Turns literature into Lego(TM) bricks to work with.
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Keeping Up with Scientific Literature

2013-02-07

You don't have to go looking for journal articles -- just let them come to you. Automatically. Great way to keep an overview of what happens in your field.
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Scientific / Academic Paper Writing Template

2013-02-05

Using a break book by Thomson & Kamler as basis, I created a nice template for planning scientific papers. Three pages of condensed information.
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Holiday Season “Improve your workplace” Sessions

2012-12-05

An interesting holiday activity for organizations to use that special time of the year.
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‘Server not found’ can happen to any site — are you prepared?

2012-09-09

Online information is fleeting. A few ways to deal with it.
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Posts pagination

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Notes, Comments & Search

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Welcome :-)

Besides Blog Postings about multiple topics, the draft version of the third edition of “Organizing Creativity” is freely available as PDF here (direct PDF link).


More information on the book page.


The supplemental materials to the book are currently being being created. The already created material is on the supplemental materials page.


Best regards

Daniel

No Ads, No Sponsored Placements

A comment for those seeking to use this site for personal gain: Given the increase in requests, let me be clear. I write on this blog because I want to. It’s my hobby, my playground. Sometimes people point me to interesting products/services and I write about them. But any request regarding ads or sponsored placements ends up the trash without a reply. And if you think something would be of interest, differentiate yourself from the spammers by referring to a posting — in an intelligent way. (I get enough auto-generated mails to identify them immediately.)

BTW, posts can get updated after I published them if I spot spelling errors (not a native speaker) or think a different wording might improve precision and clarity.

Filter Blog Entries & Categories

This blog is not focused on a single topic, or method. As long as it is relevant to improving creativity (or allowing it in the first place), it's fair game.
Some postings on this blog deal with freedom, as I think that we need freedom of thought, of speech, of association, etc. pp. to solve mankind's problems. Thus, some postings may seem a bit remote when it comes to organizing creativity. Freedom is, however, the bedrock of creativity.
The heterogeneity of the postings can make reading this blog a bit cumbersome, at least if you are only interested in one topic. You can either use the search function (above), or use the categories or the tags to narrow down the postings you see.

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