One of the most effective ways to jumpstart the creative process and get to big ideas quickly, is by leveraging creative tensions; by using polarities to spark story. Wherever you find opposing energies, you’ll find conflict. And where you find conflict, you find the rudiments of narrative.
These tensions can come from anywhere. The tension can come from culture (the national obsession with fast food versus the obsession with being thin). Or it can come from the client’s business category (in auto, it could be horsepower versus the environment).
When a strategy or a campaign is built on top of one of these tensions, great work fairly bursts out of it because there’s a natural energy at these points of stress that make them lively birthplaces for ideas of force and substance.
Join Luke Sullivan on August 30th, at 11 AM ET, when as he shows how to use the principles of conflict to create everything from a campaign to entire new business presentations. Participants will leave the session with a powerful new tool they can use to create more ideas, better ideas, and to get to them faster.
Key Takeaways:
- All drama involves conflict. Without conflict, there is no story.
- Creativity happens in response to a problem. But most briefs are written as solutions.
- Not showing a product benefit is often more interesting than showing it.
- How the human brain is wired to notice conflict.
- Conflict can be as big as good versus evil or Crest versus cavities.
- The product or category doesn’t have any obvious conflicts, make one up.