Creative Thinking Workshop

A collection of exercises and prompts to boost creative thinking and problem-solving skills.

CT01
🔄
Technique
Reverse Thinking
Problem Solving
CT01
Technique
Reverse Thinking
Flip the problem

Instead of asking "How can we solve this?", ask "How can we make this worse?"

Steps:

  1. List all ways to make the problem worse
  2. Reverse each negative solution
  3. Evaluate the reversed solutions

This technique helps break mental blocks and discover unconventional solutions.

CT02
🎩
Framework
Six Thinking Hats
Edward de Bono
CT02
Framework
Six Thinking Hats
Parallel thinking method

A structured approach to thinking from different perspectives:

  • White Hat: Facts and information
  • Red Hat: Emotions and feelings
  • Black Hat: Risks and caution
  • Yellow Hat: Benefits and optimism
  • Green Hat: Creativity and alternatives
  • Blue Hat: Process and control

Use each hat systematically to explore all angles of a situation.

CT03
Technique
SCAMPER
Ideation Method
CT03
Technique
SCAMPER
Transform existing ideas

SCAMPER is an acronym for creative thinking prompts:

  • Substitute - What can you replace?
  • Combine - What can you merge?
  • Adapt - What can you adjust?
  • Modify - What can you change?
  • Put to other use - New ways to use it?
  • Eliminate - What can you remove?
  • Reverse - What can you flip?

Apply each prompt to your challenge to generate new ideas.

CT04
🎲
Warmup
Random Word
Association Exercise
CT04
Warmup
Random Word
Force new connections

Use a random word to spark unexpected ideas:

  1. Pick a completely random word (book, dictionary, generator)
  2. List its attributes and associations
  3. Force connections between the word and your challenge
  4. Explore the most interesting connections

Example: Designing a new chair + random word "ocean" → Could lead to fluid shapes, wave-like contours, or materials inspired by marine life.

CT05
Analysis
Five Whys
Root Cause Analysis
CT05
Analysis
Five Whys
Dig deeper into problems

A simple but powerful technique to find root causes:

  1. State the problem
  2. Ask "Why does this happen?"
  3. For each answer, ask "Why?" again
  4. Repeat five times (or until you reach the root)
  5. Address the root cause, not symptoms

Tip: Sometimes you need more or fewer than five whys. The number is a guideline, not a rule.

CT06
💡
Icebreaker
Worst Idea
Reverse Brainstorming
CT06
Icebreaker
Worst Idea
Free yourself from judgment

Generate the worst possible ideas first:

Why this works:

  • Removes fear of judgment
  • Makes brainstorming fun and relaxing
  • Bad ideas often contain seeds of good ones
  • Gets creative energy flowing

Process: Spend 5-10 minutes generating deliberately terrible ideas. Then discuss what makes them bad, and see if reversing them creates something useful.