By Mariel Alison L. Aguinaldo

Ideating is a term that gets thrown around in business circles so often that people assume they know how to do it.

鈥淎s much as we are expected to give ideas, we were never taught how to properly ideate,鈥 said Aaron Palileo, co-founder of creative and brand consultancy firm CIA Bootleg Manila, during a recent online event organized by incubator StartUp Village.

Proper ideation, according to Mr. Palileo, produces work that effectively delivers to consumer needs while being different from anything that has been seen before. It also produces ideas that delight consumers, connecting with their emotions through their senses.

鈥淚.D.E.A.鈥 is Mr. Palileo鈥檚 on-the-nose mnemonic for four techniques for ideation.

1. Invert traditions.

To come up with a fresh idea, turn an industry-specific clich茅 on its head. Afterwards, check market viability by doing research.

Toymaker Hasbro鈥攂eloved by children for its Nerf, My Little Pony, and Transformers product lines鈥攕ubverted expectations with Joy for All, a line of robotic therapy pets for senior citizens. To validate this idea and pinpoint consumer needs, they to senior citizens and their caregivers.

London-based Ugly Models Agency looks for talents with features and body types that don鈥檛 fall under conventional beauty standards. On the agency鈥檚 website, one can find wee folks who are below five feet and giants who tower over seven feet. Ugly Models鈥 extensive includes work for brands such as Calvin Klein and Burger King.

2. Discover things outside your industry.

While inverting involves thinking within the industry, discovering explores what鈥檚 beyond it. 鈥淒iscover cool ideas, new things, interesting concepts that are totally unrelated from your own world,鈥 said Mr. Palileo.

Film director Alfred Hitchcock drew inspiration from the works of Edward Hopper, a realist painter, for the of some of his movies such as Psycho. American Girl, an educational line of period-specific dolls, was born after its founder Colonial Williamsburg, an early American settlement.

3. Empathize with your audience.

To learn about a person, ask about their interests and their irritants.

鈥淕o online. Just compare and contrast how people praise versus how people complain and rant. The complaints and rants are so long鈥 It鈥檚 more passionate,鈥 said Mr. Palileo.

Frame questions in three ways. First, ask what product feature or benefit they think is missing. Anytime Fitness, for example, was for a gym that was available at any time of day.


Second, ask what existing product features they dislike or find annoying. The rise of Bluetooth headphones removed the frequent hassle of tangled wires.

Third, ask what great idea with terrible execution has disappointed them. While Microsoft鈥檚 Tablet PC launched in 2001 was ahead of its time, its functions what consumers needed from it. Apple鈥檚 iPad triumphed instead because Steve Jobs that it was a third category device distinct from the smartphone and computer. It was not the flat PC that Bill Gates envisioned.

4. Adapt the product or service for different uses.

A product or service isn鈥檛 limited to its current state. Try imagining how they can be put to different uses. Consider鈥檚 pencils and spoons, which contain seeds that can be planted when the products are no longer usable. There is also Nike鈥檚 sneakers collection made of waste materials from their factories.

鈥淟ook at the creative mind: seeing all of these things that are just there on the floor and saying, 鈥業鈥檓 going to make a pair of shoes that are so nice that people will鈥 buy it expensively. That is the audacity of the creative mind,鈥 said Mr. Palileo.