ORGANIZING CREATIVITY

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

  • Blog Entries
    • Entries by Category
    • Entries by Tags
    • What other bloggers and authors say …
  • 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
    • Leave a Comment
    • Feedback
  • Portfolio
    • Second Edition of Organizing Creativity
      • Download
      • Presentation
      • If you like it …
      • Poster
      • Table of Contents
      • Sample Pages
      • What Readers Say
      • Errata
  • About this Blog

Something to Think About

Recommendation: “I Need a Hashtag” by Remy

2015-01-31

A 2 minute music clip that pretty much sums up hashtivism
[show the article]

Sex Work and Art

2015-01-29

A comment about a sex worker who tried to get her stage name legally recognized in her passport served as an interesting case about what art is -- or rather, what an artist is.

Image from "Dangerous Beauty" (1998).
[show the article]

The Power of Silence (and the little green (wo)man)

2015-01-14

The Thesis Whisperer has a beautiful posting about an anything-but-beautiful situation: A person working for a prof is being exploited and goes (almost) crazy due to the seriously impaired communication. Two short comments.
[show the article]

Questionable Views in Academia

2015-01-12

There was an interesting question on stackexchange Academia regarding how to deal with the questionable views of a colleague and whether his prospective employer should be warned about them. I repost the question and one answer (mine) here.
[show the article]

Intelligence Squared Debates — like a TED Talk where you hear more than one side (also: paying for sex)

2015-01-10

A shout out to a series of very interesting debates: Intelligence Squared. They cover different topics, are usually very good (with a few exceptions) and are very well moderated.
[show the article]

Support Roles

2015-01-09

A comment on an interesting posting at LessWrong about the importance of sidekicks.
[show the article]

Fuck Censorship and Draw On!

2015-01-08

A rant about the cowardly attack on Charlie Hebdo.
[show the article]

Self-Defeating Self-Talk, or: The Enemy in Your Head, Where Your Friend Should be

2014-11-03

I recently listened to an interview with David Allen (founder of Getting Things Done), and he had a brilliant remark about the tiny voice in our head and how you can shut it up.
[show the article]

Everyday (online) Sadism

2014-10-31

Some short remarks regarding a study about trolling. And a rant in the context of #GamerGate.
[show the article]

Why should I care about #GamerGate — I’m not even interested in computer games?

2014-10-27

A short comment about a current and surprisingly long-living hashtag campaign.
[show the article]

Posts pagination

« 1 … 41 42 43 … 58 »

Notes, Comments & Search

This website uses cookies and user analytics. See the imprint for more information. If you don't like it, don't browse here.

Comments are disabled, got bored deleting the ubiquitous spam (even with Akismet Anti-Spam). If you see something you like, or even better, something you don't like but you do constructive discussions, send me a message.

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.

Categories

Copyright © 2026 | Theme by MH Themes (modified by Daniel Wessel). | Imprint / Impressum / Legal Notice / Datenschutz/DSGVO