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GUEST COLUMN
Bookmark and Share   Subscribe to the Guest Column RSS Feed November 3, 2009
Inspiration. It’s Not What You Think.
 

What inspires you? Most of us would answer with the name of someone we admire. But do heroes actually inspire us or do we simply wish to emulate them? Inspiration is defined as something that stimulates the human mind to creative thought. Heroes don’t stimulate creative thought. They stimulate us to want a creative thought like theirs. If you agree, consider the following and then call on inspiration at will.

1. We talk ourselves out of inspiration because we don’t accept where inspiration really comes from. Thomas Edison said that genius is 99 percent perspiration and one percent inspiration. That’s it. From perspiration, comes inspiration. Now that is not exactly what Mr. Edison said, but think about it. Have you ever known inspiration to consistently happen for you any other way? Accept that inspiration is a process of discovery.

2. Don’t stare at a blank piece of paper. Scribble. There may be a few prodigies like Mozart, who write down a masterpiece perfectly on the first draft, but most people who create are more like Beethoven. His manuscripts were a mess. Revisions and corrections scribbled all over the page until it was probably only understandable to him. Why? He had to get rid of the dross to get to the gold. There is nothing wrong with finding inspiration like Beethoven did.

3. Talk to one of your heroes. Ask them how they do it. They will say that their best work did not come from some magical gift of genetics. It happened in a most ordinary way: they worked their magical tail off.

4. Ignore the looming disaster. Push down the fear that when you dip your bucket into the inspiration well, you will find it dry. Remember the typical reasons for failure: not enough time, too many restrictions, etc. These exist in all examples of success. Failure doesn’t happen because of obstacles. Failure happens when people talk themselves out of success. Champion athletes all say they imagine success before they go out and succeed. Masters champion, Ray Floyd said he willed long putts into the hole. He was in the moment, totally focused on the task at hand. When you can focus like that, there is no room left for doubt.

5. Inspiration comes during the doing. You can’t do a trick on a skateboard until you get the skateboard moving. The same principle applies to an inspired idea. It’s all about momentum. One idea leads to another, then another. And there aren’t great tricks without falling a few times and letting a little blood. Jump on your creation skateboard and get moving. You’ll soon move past ollies to a trick no one else has done. Don’t be surprised if they name it after you.

6. Identify your motivation. I remember a line from a movie with Cary Grant playing an ad executive. He’s asked where he gets his inspiration to create ads.

“The landlady delivers it once a month,” he says.

As humorous as his answer is, it is something to seriously consider. If you don’t have an end goal or purpose, there is no way to sustain your motivation to become inspired. A friend of mine used the acronym BEHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal) to describe what is needed for inspiration. I find it ironic that “behag” means pleasure in Swedish. So the planets are aligned, you must have a BEHAG if you want to be inspired.

I read that Einstein was motivated by the desire to formulate physics in terms of observable quantities. Note that he was motivated by a desire before he was inspired. So too was Cary Grant’s character. He desired not to sleep on the street, so he was motivated to pay the rent.

This may sound rudimentary, but I’m always talking with people in my industry who want to make great ads, but don’t seem to know why. Granted being recognized by your peers comes to mind, but do that a couple of times and you’ll soon lose your motivation. A moment in the limelight just doesn’t feel good enough to keep one motivated for a career. Madonna’s answer to Dick Clark when he asked what she wanted in life was; “I want to rule the world.”


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Carmen Ferraro (Richmond Virginia) on 09 Nov 2009 at 11:49 am

Inspiration is all around us. All you need to do is open your eyes to it. Those small moments in time (past and present) that constantly present themselves will and can jump start that gelatin creative mass between you ears. You'll be surprised how many of those sound bites inspire your thoughts. A CD of mine once told me, "If coming up with great creative ideas were easy, everybody would be doing it."

Good article Bart. I really liked the "Purification" project.

Carmen Ferraro (Richmond Virginia) on 05 Nov 2009 at 9:34 am

Your article is good food for thought. Thinking about it, inspiration is all around us – you need just to open your eyes to it. Observing what is going on around you will get the gears moving. And the most unexpected situations can induce that "Aha!" moment.

These trying times are inspiring many to be innovative in how the approach business, clients and life in general.

Bart, really liked the "Purification" project.

Ceasar Galeano (Long Beach, NY) on 05 Nov 2009 at 1:54 am

Right now, my clients inspire me... what they seek to achieve, how they seek to meet that goal... and there it is – handed to me.
Now go do something.
Of course, the thoughts are zooming in and out as you meet with them.
Now, you sit at your Mac and begin to assemble the puzzle.
As complex as you may think it to be, in time – it falls into place.

Bart, no more monkeys on my back. Great Article by the way.

Bart Cleveland (Albuquerque, NM) on 04 Nov 2009 at 7:55 pm

Thanks everyone for the feedback. Your thoughts are very encouraging.

jerry matthews (SoCal) on 03 Nov 2009 at 7:28 pm

All good things to consider, Bart. So often, that spark of inspiration comes from being involved, interacting with others, and remaining observant. Lately I've found it to be very productive to "scribble" away from the computer...putting lead to paper. And seeing where the moment takes me.

Thanks for sharing. I hear great things about you....and your agency. Sure there's a lot of your inspiration (and perspiration) in there to generate that kind of street cred.

Debbie Maddox (Atlanta) on 03 Nov 2009 at 1:27 pm

Great article Bart. Glad to see you're still inspired, I always enjoyed working with you. My favorite line in this whole article is "Failure comes when people talk themselves out of success". Boy is this true. This article couldn't have come at a better time, thanks.

Don Ruge (Springfield, MA) on 03 Nov 2009 at 12:06 pm

Great article, Bart! I appreciate the fact that you've taken a somewhat abstract process and made it more concrete. I especially like your second suggestion to "start scribbling," if for no other reason than it gets you away from the computer and forces you to experience the lost art of putting pencil to paper!

Giomilio (USA) on 03 Nov 2009 at 11:44 am

Absolutely!
Edison's point is tried and true.

Yes, you could get lucky, inherit a ton of money, hit the lottery, marry the owner's daughter, find a wallet full of cash, save the billionaire's daughter from drowning in the icy lake, etc. but the odds of that are daunting. The sure fire way to inspiration and therefore success is to work your tushy off, plan often and enough, stay the course.

The funny thing is that inspiration breeds inspiration, so you work harder, smarter and along comes more inspiration. You build this momentum, one small inspired victory at a time, until it is a 200 ton locomotive with boilers at full steam going through anything that gets in the way.
Inspiration is contagious, it's like a commodity and yet it's free, it is the most powerful force for morale and success, go for it!.

Ken Hamlett (Atlanta, GA) on 03 Nov 2009 at 8:53 am

What a great article Bart. I totally agree. When I'm having a creative slump and don't feel inspired, the simple act of getting up and photographing something, anything even if it's with a camera phone helps to get my creative juices flowing.

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Bart Cleveland wants you to know that New Mexico actually is part of the United States and actually a great place to be creative. He's the creative director and a partner at McKee Wallwork Cleveland in Albuquerque. During his career, he has won nearly every award you can think of and has fought passionately for great ideas.

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