How Innovative Ideas AriseYou don't need to be original to come up with a great idea.

ByJames Clear

This story originally appeared onJamesClear.com

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In 2010, Thomas Thwaites decided he wanted to build a toaster from scratch. He walked into a shop, purchased the cheapest toaster he could find and promptly went home and broke it down piece by piece.

Thwaites had assumed the toaster would be a relatively simple machine. By the time he was finished deconstructing it, however, there were more than 400 components laid out on his floor. The toaster contained over 100 different materials with three of the primary ones being plastic, nickel and steel.

Related:Why Creativity Is a Process, Not an Event

He decided to create the steel components first. After discovering that iron ore was required to make steel, Thwaites called up an iron mine in his region and asked if they would let him use some for the project.

Surprisingly, they agreed.

The 'Toaster Project'

The victory was short-lived.

When it came time to create the plastic case for his toaster, Thwaites realized he would need crude oil to make the plastic. This time, he called up BP and asked if they would fly him out to an oil rig and lend him some oil for the project. They immediately refused. It seems oil companies aren't nearly as generous as iron mines.

Thwaites had to settle for collecting plastic scraps and melting them into the shape of his toaster case. This is not as easy as it sounds. The homemade toaster ended up looking more like a melted cake than a kitchen appliance.

This pattern continued for the entire span of The Toaster Project. It was nearly impossible to move forward without the help of some previous process. To create the nickel components, for example, he had to resort to melting old coins. He would later say, "I realized that if you started absolutely from scratch you could easily spend your life making a toaster."

Thomas Thwaites set out to build a toaster from scratch. The Toaster Project, as it came to be known, ended up looking more like a melted cake.
Image credit: Daniel Alexander

Don't start from scratch

Starting from scratch is usually a bad idea.

Related:Stay on the Bus: The Proven Path to Doing Unique Work

Too often, we assumeinnovative ideasand meaningful changes require a blank slate. When business projects fail, we say things like, "Let's go back to the drawing board." When we consider thehabitswe would like to change, we think, "I just need a fresh start." However, creative progress is rarely the result of throwing out all previous ideas and completely re-imagining of the world.

Consider an example from nature:

Some experts believe the feathers of birds evolved from reptilian scales. Through the forces of evolution, scales gradually became small feathers, which were used for warmth and insulation at first. Eventually, these small fluffs developed into larger feathers capable of flight.

There wasn't a magical moment when the animal kingdom said, "Let's start from scratch and create an animal that can fly." The development of flying birds was a gradual process of iterating and expanding upon ideas that already worked.

The process of human flight followed a similar path. We typically credit Orville and Wilbur Wright as the inventors of modern flight. However, we seldom discuss the aviation pioneers who preceded them like Otto Lilienthal, Samuel Langley and Octave Chanute. The Wright brothers learned from and built upon the work of these people during their quest to create the world's first flying machine.

Related:The Reason We Don't Follow Through on What We Set Out to Do

The most creative innovations are oftennew combinations of old ideas.创新ative thinkers don't create, theyconnect.Furthermore, the most effective way to make progress is usually bymaking 1 percent improvements to what already worksrather than breaking down the whole system and starting over.

Iterate, don't originate

烤面包机项目经常是我们的一个例子fail to notice the complexity of our modern world. When you buy a toaster, you don't think about everything that has to happen before it appears in the store. You aren't aware of the iron being carved out of the mountain or the oil being drawn up from the earth.

We are mostly blind to the remarkable interconnectedness of things. This is important to understand because in a complex world it is hard to see which forces are working for you as well as which forces are working against you. Similar to buying a toaster, we tend to focus on the final product and fail to recognize the many processes leading up to it.

When you are dealing with a complex problem, it is usually better to build upon what already works. Any idea that is currently working has passed a lot of tests.Old ideas are a secret weaponbecause they have already managed to survive in a complex world.

Iterate, don't originate.

James Clear

Writer, Entrepreneur and Behavior Science Expert

James Clear is a writer and speaker focused on habits, decision making, and continuous improvement. He is the author of the no. 1New York Timesbestseller,Atomic Habits.The book has sold over 5 million copies worldwide and has been translated into more than 50 languages.

Clear is a regular speaker at Fortune 500 companies and his work has been featured in places likeTimemagazine, theNew York Times,Wall Street Journaland onCBS This Morning.His popular "3-2-1" email newsletter is sent out each week to more than 1 million subscribers. You can learn more and sign up atjamesclear.com

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