Convergent thinking
Convergent thinking is narrowing down multiple possibilities to the most accurate, useful or criteria-compliant solution.
Definition
Convergent thinking structures the selection phase after the exploration phase. It helps you evaluate options according to criteria, evidence, costs and constraints. It is needed so that creativity does not turn into chaos without decisions.
Key ideas
Missing key ideas.
Practice and life
After generating ideas, establish three criteria: impact, feasibility and cost. Rate each option on a scale of 1-5.
Common misunderstanding
It's a mistake to narrow down too early, before enough options become available. The second mistake is choosing by mood instead of criteria.
Questions for self-reflection
No questions for self-reflection.
Sources
No sources.