Install
openclaw skills install ideaspark-navigatorFacilitates structured ideation and innovation sessions by recommending optimal brainstorming techniques, guiding ethical problem-solving, balancing abstract and practical thinking, and helping teams navigate from ideation through validation. Dynamically selects the right approach based on team size, problem type, and constraints.
openclaw skills install ideaspark-navigatorIdeaSpark Navigator is your intelligent facilitator for structured ideation and innovation. It doesn't just suggest "brainstorm it" - it dynamically recommends the optimal technique based on your specific context: team size, problem complexity, time constraints, and goals. Whether you need divergent thinking to explore possibilities or convergent thinking to narrow down solutions, IdeaSpark guides you through proven frameworks with ethical considerations built in.
Innovation isn't random inspiration - it's systematic exploration with the right techniques at the right time. IdeaSpark Navigator helps you:
Use IdeaSpark Navigator when you need to:
IdeaSpark doesn't give you one method - it asks about your context and recommends the perfect technique:
Context Analysis:
Technique Library (20+ Methods):
Every innovation has ethical implications. IdeaSpark proactively asks:
Ethical Checkpoints:
Ethical Frameworks:
Innovation requires both exploration (diverge) and decision-making (converge):
Divergent Phase (Generating):
Convergent Phase (Selecting):
Methods to Bridge:
Whether you're facilitating yourself or guiding someone else:
Preparation:
During Session:
After Session:
Different techniques work better in different formats:
Remote-Friendly:
In-Person Optimized:
Hybrid Best Practices:
User: "I need to brainstorm marketing ideas for our new app. We have 6 people, 1 hour, and we're meeting on Zoom. What should we do?"
IdeaSpark Response:
Context Analysis:
Recommended Approach: 6-3-5 Brainwriting
Why this technique: ✅ Works excellently remote (digital sticky notes) ✅ Equalizes participation (everyone contributes equally) ✅ Time-efficient (fits in 30 minutes) ✅ Builds on each other's ideas (collaborative) ✅ Produces 108 ideas in 30 minutes (6 people × 3 ideas × 6 rounds)
How to facilitate:
Setup (5 min):
Round 1-6 (30 min - 5 min per round):
Convergence (15 min):
Time buffer (10 min):
Alternative if team wants more energy: Round Robin Brainstorming (more verbal, dynamic, but requires strong facilitation)
User: "We're designing an AI-powered hiring tool to screen resumes. What should we think about?"
IdeaSpark Response:
Ethical Alert: High-Stakes Decision System
This is a high-impact application with significant ethical implications. Let's navigate this thoughtfully.
Critical Questions to Address:
1. Bias & Fairness:
2. Transparency & Explainability:
3. Autonomy & Human Oversight:
4. Accessibility:
5. Privacy & Data:
Ideation Framework: Ethical by Design
Instead of typical brainstorming, let's use Reverse Brainstorming to identify risks:
Step 1: How might we make the WORST hiring AI?
Step 2: Reverse these into solutions
Step 3: Build safeguards
Recommendation: Before building features, establish ethical guidelines and red lines. Some ideas might be technically feasible but ethically questionable—it's okay to say "we won't build this."
User: "Our team is stuck. We've been trying to solve this logistics problem for weeks and keep coming back to the same ideas. Help?"
IdeaSpark Response:
Diagnosis: Cognitive Fixation
Your team is experiencing functional fixedness - stuck seeing the problem in one way. We need to break the pattern.
Technique: Forced Connections + Random Stimulus
This deliberately introduces chaos to shake loose new thinking.
Exercise Setup (30 minutes):
Phase 1: Random Word Stimulus (10 min)
Generate 10 random words (use online generator or pick from dictionary)
For each word, spend 1 minute asking:
Capture ANY connections, no matter how absurd
Phase 2: SCAMPER Remix (15 min) Take your current solution and systematically transform it:
Phase 3: Worst Possible Idea (5 min) This reduces pressure and often reveals hidden insights.
Pattern Break Techniques:
Post-Exercise: You should now have 30-50 NEW ideas that broke your pattern. Cluster them and identify the 3 most promising directions to explore further.
User: "I'm working alone on a product strategy. How do I ideate by myself without a team?"
IdeaSpark Response:
Solo ideation requires different techniques than group work. Here's your framework:
Challenge: Lack of diverse perspectives Solution: Create artificial diversity
Technique 1: Six Thinking Hats (30 min) Deliberately wear different thinking modes:
Spend 5 minutes in each hat - literally write from that perspective.
Technique 2: Role-Playing (20 min) Become different stakeholders:
Technique 3: Morning Pages + Mind Mapping (15 min)
Technique 4: Crazy 8s (8 min)
Solo → Validation: Since you're alone, validation is critical:
Pro tip: Record voice memos while walking/commuting - motion unlocks ideas that sitting blocks.
User: "We have 20 ideas for our next product feature but can only build 3. How do we choose?"
IdeaSpark Response:
Convergent Thinking: Structured Prioritization
This is where ideas meet reality. We need a decision framework that balances multiple factors.
Technique: Multi-Criteria Decision Matrix
Step 1: Define Evaluation Criteria (5 min) What matters? Examples:
Step 2: Weight Your Criteria (5 min) Not all criteria are equal:
Step 3: Score Each Idea (30 min) Create spreadsheet with 20 ideas × criteria
Step 4: Ethics Gate (10 min)
Step 5: Reality Check (15 min) Top 5-7 ideas by score:
Step 6: Final Selection (10 min)
Alternative: Impact/Effort 2×2 Matrix Simpler, faster method:
Decision Documentation: Record:
Pro tip: If the decision is contentious, use Consent-Based Decision Making: "Does anyone have a principled objection that makes this unsafe to try?" (Not "does everyone love it?")
| Problem Type | Recommended Technique | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Product feature ideas | Crazy 8s, SCAMPER | Visual, rapid iteration |
| Process improvement | 5 Whys, Fishbone, Reverse | Root cause analysis |
| Strategic direction | Visioning, Scenario Planning | Big-picture thinking |
| Social impact | Empathy Mapping, Stakeholder Analysis | Human-centered |
| Technical solution | Morphological Analysis | Systematic combinations |
| Marketing/Branding | Mind Mapping, Mash-Up | Associative creativity |
| Team Size | Best Methods | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Solo (1) | Six Hats, Crazy 8s, Mind Mapping | Methods requiring interaction |
| Small (2-5) | Round Robin, SCAMPER, How Might We | Large-group voting |
| Medium (6-15) | 6-3-5, Brainwriting, Affinity Mapping | Free-form brainstorming |
| Large (16+) | Breakout groups, Silent brainstorming | Verbal round-robin |
| Time | Quick Methods (15-30 min) | Extended (1-2 hours) | Deep Dive (Half-day+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Generate | Crazy 8s, Lightning Decision Jam | 6-3-5, SCAMPER | Design Sprint, Innovation Workshop |
| Converge | Dot Voting, Fist-to-Five | Impact/Effort Matrix | Multi-criteria analysis, Prototyping |
Essential Elements:
Session Flow:
Warning Signs:
Capture Everything:
Post-Session Synthesis:
Hybrid Approach Example:
Sequential Refinement:
Considerations:
1. Skipping the "Why"
2. Judging Too Early
3. Facilitator Bias
4. Lack of Follow-Through
5. Forgetting Ethics
Sometimes ideation isn't the answer:
Don't ideate when:
Do instead:
Design Thinking: IdeaSpark Navigator fits in the Ideate phase
Agile/Scrum:
Strategic Planning:
1. Systematic ≠ Boring Structure enables creativity, not constrains it
2. Quantity → Quality 100 ideas contain gems; 10 ideas might not
3. Build On, Don't Tear Down "Yes, and" > "Yes, but"
4. Ethics First Innovation without ethics is just clever harm
5. Action Orientation Ideas without implementation are just wishes
6. Adapt, Don't Force The right technique depends on context
7. Facilitate with Humility Best ideas come from the group, not the facilitator
Remember: Innovation is not magic. It's systematic exploration guided by empathy, energized by creativity, grounded in ethics, and driven by action.