How To Get Ideas

by Estelle H. Ries

How To Get Ideas by Estelle H. Ries

Title: How To Get Ideas
Author: Estelle H. Ries
Year of Publication: 1961
Publisher: Pilgrim Books
Length: 158 Pages & 42,328 Words
Status: Public Domain in the United States and countries following the rule of the shorter term.

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It includes:

  • Scanned copy of the original book in editable Word Document format.
  • Scanned PDF of the original book.
  • Ecover.

Note: This book is in the public domain and copyright-free which means there are no usage restrictions and you can do with it whatever you want. Sell it, give it away, turn it into an audio book, rewrite or edit it, use it for ideas or as content for another publication, etc. The list is endless!

How To Get Ideas Index

1 Where Ideas Come From

2 What Is An Idea?

3 The Expert Stumped

4 Imagination and Observation

5 “Thinking Up” An Idea

6 The Formula

7 The Question Technique

8 The Improvement Urge

9 Change Is the Secret

10 Ideas from Nature

11 If You Wish to Invent

12 Abstract Ideas

13 Research

14 Taking and Filing Notes

15 Inspiration and the Subconscious

16 Intuition

17 Relaxation

18 The Correct Use of Idea Energy

19 Verification

Extract of "How To Get Ideas"

Where Ideas Come From

There was once a young preacher who boasted that he could make a sermon out of anything anyone would say, and urged the members to send up their slips with suggestions. A tease among those present sent up a blank slip of paper. The preacher looked at it, turned it over and said, “Here is nothing and there is nothing.” He paused for a moment, considering what text he could get out of this. Then his face brightened and he was off. “Out of nothing, God created the world,” he said.

Unfortunately we are not always so successful when we have to produce an idea out of nothing.

It is the people with ideas who win most of the desirable places in the world. The person who can create something new and different is wanted—and rarely by the police! He is in demand for his ability to develop ideas. Those who achieve conspicuous success in business and advertising, in radio, drama, literature, journalism, in politics, society, and indeed all the professions and walks of life can attribute the large portion of their success to their capacity for getting and using their ideas.

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