Creativity is a skill you can train, not a fixed gift that some people are born with. At its core, being creative is combining things you already know in new ways, which means the practice has two parts: gathering wide-ranging raw material, and getting reliable at producing and refining ideas from it. The most creative people are rarely the ones waiting for inspiration; they are the ones who show up and generate, often producing a lot of mediocre work alongside the good. This guide covers the inputs, habits, and techniques that actually increase your creative output.
What creativity actually is
Stripping away the mystique helps you practice it deliberately.
- It is recombination. New ideas are usually old ideas connected in a fresh way. The more varied your inputs, the more combinations you can make.
- It is a numbers game. Quality emerges from quantity. You cannot reliably produce one great idea on demand, but you can produce twenty and find the good ones.
- It is separable into two modes. Generating ideas and judging them are different jobs. Doing both at once kills most ideas before they breathe.
- It is trainable. Like any skill, creative output rises with consistent, deliberate practice. Waiting for a muse is the least reliable method there is.
How to be more creative, step by step
- Feed your inputs widely. Read outside your field, talk to different people, and pay attention to how unrelated domains solve problems. Narrow inputs produce narrow ideas.
- Generate volume without judging. Set a target — say, twenty ideas — and write them all down, including the bad ones. Suspend criticism until the list is done.
- Separate generating from editing. Brainstorm first, evaluate later. Judging each idea as it arrives shuts down the flow.
- Add constraints. A blank page is paralyzing. Limit the time, the budget, the word count, or the form, and watch ideas appear. Constraints are a creative tool, not an obstacle.
- Capture and revisit. Keep a running notes file of ideas, fragments, and questions. Good ideas often arrive incomplete and connect later.
Creative work depends on showing up regularly, which makes it a habit problem as much as a talent one. How to build good habits in 2026 covers how to make daily creative practice stick.
Techniques that reliably help
| Technique |
What it does |
When to use it |
| Brain dump |
Empties the obvious ideas so fresh ones can surface |
At the start of any session |
| Forced constraints |
Triggers novel solutions under limits |
When you feel stuck or generic |
| Combine two unrelated things |
Sparks unexpected connections |
When ideas feel safe and obvious |
| Step away |
Lets the subconscious work |
When you are stuck after real effort |
| Ask a different question |
Reframes the problem entirely |
When every answer feels stale |
The "step away" point is real: a walk or a shower after focused effort often surfaces the idea you were grinding for. The key is that it follows hard work, not replaces it.
Common mistakes
- Waiting for inspiration. The muse shows up for people who are already working. Schedule the practice and let inspiration find you mid-effort.
- Judging ideas instantly. Critiquing each idea as it appears stops the flow. Generate freely first, edit ruthlessly later.
- Chasing the perfect tool. A new app or notebook does not make you creative. The bottleneck is practice and inputs, not gear.
- Working in a silo. Cutting yourself off from new inputs starves your creativity. Read, explore, and talk to people outside your bubble.
- Demanding perfection on the first try. First drafts are supposed to be rough. Creativity is iterative; the magic is usually in the editing.
FAQ
Can anyone become more creative, or is it inborn?
Anyone can become more creative. Creativity is largely the skill of combining existing ideas in new ways, and it improves with varied inputs and consistent practice. Some people start with more interest or temperament for it, but the ceiling is set by practice, not by birth.
How do I get past creative block?
Lower the bar and generate volume without judging, ideally with a constraint to push against. Block is usually a mix of perfectionism and a blank page. Producing twenty deliberately rough ideas breaks the freeze far better than waiting to feel inspired.
Does using AI make me less creative?
It depends how you use it. As a tool to generate raw options, get unstuck, or handle grunt work, it can free you to do the higher-level combining and judging. Used to skip the thinking entirely, it can dull your own idea generation. Treat it as a sparring partner, not a replacement for your judgment.
Why do my best ideas come in the shower?
Stepping away after focused effort lets your mind keep working in the background and make connections without the pressure of forcing them. The catch is that it works because of the focused effort beforehand, not instead of it.
Where to go next
How to build good habits in 2026, How to stay focused in 2026, and How to be more productive at work in 2026.