Do Great Ideas Require Loose Cannons?


About twenty years or so ago I had a disagreement with a co-worker about a project we were working on.

We were on deadline and I had three ideas I wanted to submit but he kept trying to stall because he said the three ideas I had come up with weren’t thought out and vetted the way he wanted them to be.

I suggested that he was skirting around the real issue and asked him if he didn’t like them because he couldn’t present them as his ideas.

He insisted I was wrong and suggested that it was better to miss our deadline so we could offer something spectacular instead of just average

I just shook my head and smiled at him.

“Why are you smiling?”

“Because I’m not left handed.”

I remember his looking confused and telling him I was paraphrasing The Princess Bride and how he told me he hated the movie.

“It is just dumb.”

I shook my head again and muttered something about having spent years developing an immunity to Iocane powder.

If you are not familiar with the movie it probably sounds like gibberish and even if you are it might sound like an obscure reference but it was an important moment.

The Conception Of An Idea

If you don’t speak Wilner you won’t recognize that moment was the beginning of a conception of an idea.

During our debate about what to turn in and when I had continued to try to come up with better ideas to present but it had taken the push back between us for me to recognize I had stumbled upon a fragment of an idea that I thought was better than everything we had come up with.

And it happened because when I got irritated with his attitude I went for broke inside my head and stopped playing it safe.

Because until we started our debate that was what I had done. I had stuck to very conservative themes that I was sure would make people happy and would be unlikely to get us yelled at for being ridiculous.

What Came Next

If you were watching this tale on screen this would be the time where you’d see the protagonist pitch the revised idea and you’d find out if he was the hero or the goat but that won’t happen here.

And it is not because it is not a movie.

It is because I don’t remember enough of the details to you tell you how it all played out.

What I do remember is how my colleague protested again and how I refused to miss a deadline because he thought everything had to be perfect.

That doesn’t mean I don’t believe in trying to turn in perfection but that I understand sometimes you compromise and provide very good because perfection is useless if your idea gets killed because you missed your deadline.

Did I mention that my former colleague was known for fighting with anyone and everyone who didn’t want to present one of his ideas.

He was a man who believed that if you shouted loudly and held your ground you would always get your way. It didn’t always work out as well as he wanted because we learned how to manage him but I digress.

How Parenting Influenced The Idea Factory

One of the many things my children taught/reminded me was the beauty of taking the shackles off of our minds and imaginations.

Kids don’t set limitations on their imaginations. They don’t worry about what is possible or whether people will think they are stupid because of what they say.

They just say and do it.

So I went back to saying and doing it too.

I stopped worrying about whether an idea might be embarrassing and used brainstorming sessions to their full potential.

Anything and everything could be thrown on the table and examined.

That is what brainstorming is for.

If you went back in time and were a fly on the wall during that debate with my old colleague you would have heard him tell me I was being a loose cannon.

You would have also heard me ask him to prove to me that great ideas couldn’t come from loose cannons and heard him acknowledge he couldn’t.

If he and I were to have that discussion I would take a different approach then I did back then.

But not because I was wrong, but because age has made me more skilled at finding solutions to challenging situations, or at least I think it has.

If you go back to The Princess Bride and think about the interplay between The Man In Black and Vizzini you’ll recall how Vizzini’s ego was his downfall.

His belief that he knew more and was smarter than everyone else blinded him to the possibility that someone might best him and then it happened.

Parts And Pieces

What I like about that Stephen King quote above is the push to look at the parts and pieces as well as the whole.

Sometimes the way to make something special is by taking parts and pieces from elsewhere and melding them together.

That doesn’t mean that turning the box inside out and upside down will always lead to turning the ordinary into the extraordinary but it might mean that you get a fragment of an idea that you store in the back of your mind for use later on.

What do you think?

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By Joshua Wilner

Hi, I am Josh Wilner and I am happy that you have decided to visit my corner of cyberspace. I am a writer/marketer/friend and family man. My professional background includes more than twenty years in working with businesses to help them do a better job of connecting with their existing and prospective customers. More specifically I have worked with companies of all sizes from the Fortune 500 to the new start up to help them build, develop and grow their social media and marketing plans. I love spending time with my family and friends. I enjoy music, reading, writing, playing sports and laughing.

2 comments

  1. I’ve been using OneNote a lot recently to store my ideas. It feels more natural to me than Evernote and is somewhere I can just park an idea and mull on it.

    What I find is that I end up combining some of those ideas to form a blog post. So, you’re spot on when it comes to fragments of ideas!

    1. TheJackB – Someone complained that this page doesn’t tell you what to expect to find here in this blog so I aim to rectify this with the next line. I am a father who writes about life, parenting, business, politics and fiction. I don’t use an editorial calendar because I don’t map out what I am going to write that far in advance. The primary focus will be on things that relate to children and parenting. But the nifty thing about that is that encompasses a wide range of things. Sometimes I work with companies on their PR/Marketing efforts. If they provide products or services I will disclose it. Here is an incomplete list of companies that I am currently or have recently worked with: Nintendo, Philips Norelco, Subway, Frigidaire and Mattel. Want to know more about me, keep reading. If I wanted to provide a professional description it would looks similar to this: Jack has a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from California State University Northridge. He has been writing for print and web publications for more than twenty years, covering a wide range of topics including: business, technology, parenting, politics, education, sports and religion. That is far too serious so I prefer to use something like: The Jack B. is a writer and author of 39 unpublished books and three screenplays. A former athlete and would be superhero he still fights for truth, justice and the American Way. Though he may look like a grown man, don’t fool yourself he is still a boy at heart. When he is not engaged in Walter Mitty like fantasies he is a husband, father and friend and blogs at TheJackB. Hmm…obviously I have since moved from Random Thoughts over to this place, but that is ok. This page is a work in progress which is a good description for me. I’ll probably tweak this on a regular basis so feel free to keep checking back in because you never know what might show up. I am a prolific writer and update frequently so don’t forget to scroll down the page to see what nugget of wisdom you just might have missed. Here is a short selection of posts to get you started. A Father Describes Parenting A Father’s Burden How Sister’s Helped to Train A Father of “Daddy’s Girl” Inside the Blogger’s Studio- A Dream, Er Nightmare The GermoPhobe What I Dream About I am In Love Becoming a Dad Dad’s Most Important Job A Decade of Dad Grandpa Donuts Why Your Post Sucks and Everyone Hates Your Blog A Letter To My Children- Things That Matter A Letter To My Children-2011 Dad Balances Fear Versus Reality Q&A With Daddy Blogger JackB Save The Last Dance For Me- 75 Years of Marriage An Uncertain Certainty Four Generations & A Wedding The Best Thing My Father Ever Said To Me 1 Foolproof Way To Become a Better Writer The Story Of A House- The Final Days He Died A Hero Twenty-Five Links That Will Make You A Better Writer/Blogger Thanks for coming by, I hope you like it. If you want to reach me use the contact form or try talk-to-jacknow-at-gmail-dotcom You can also find more information by clicking About Me and reading my profile there. Also, I encourage you to sign up for my newsletter using the form on the top right hand side of the page.
      Joshua says:

      I have not tried OneNote before but I might check it out. I never took to Evernote, might be time to investigate something new.

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