Forced Connections: The Power of Unlikely Pairs
Here’s a technique that’s simple but genuinely effective. Take two completely unrelated objects or concepts and force yourself to find connections between them. It sounds weird, but your brain adapts incredibly fast.
Let’s say you’re designing a better water bottle. Normally you’d think about materials, insulation, grip. But what if you forced a connection between a water bottle and a tree? A tree absorbs water through roots and transports it upward against gravity. It stores water in branches. It adapts to seasons. Suddenly you’re thinking about your bottle differently—maybe it needs flexible walls that expand and contract, or channels that mimic how plants move water.
You can use this with anything. Stuck on marketing strategy? Connect your product to a compass. To a beehive. To a library. Each connection pulls your thinking in new directions. Most connections won’t be useful, but you only need one good idea to break through.