How to Be More Creative in an AI World, Because Creativity Remains Your Secret Weapon

Oct 10, 2025

8 minutes
How to Be More Creative in an AI Worl

The paradox of starting a company in an AI-age

When I meet first-time founders, one fear is always lurking underneath: “If AI can write, design, and code, where does my edge come from?”

I get it. The world feels automated. Large language models, image generators, code assistants, they’re raising the bar, not lowering it. But here’s something I believe: AI amplifies good ideas, it doesn’t replace them. What makes a startup meaningful, distinct, desirable isn’t raw output, it’s the creative connections behind it.

So if your creative muscle is weak or undeveloped, AI might overwhelm you. But if you nurture a strong creative brain, AI becomes your amplifier. In this article, I’ll show you how to be more creative in an AI world, how that creativity fuels your business, and a practical 5-step process you can use right now.

Why creativity is still your superpower (especially now)

  1. AI is excellent at pattern, not vision. Current generative models are trained on past data. They interpolate, remix, and recombine. But the spark of a truly new idea, seeing a connection others miss, remains human territory.
  2. Differentiation in a flood of outputs. As more products get commoditized (e.g. templates, plug-and-play tools), what stands out is product vision, narrative, emotional resonance. Creativity is the filter through which everything else passes.
  3. Problem-solving under uncertainty. In early stage startups, you face unknowns: market shifts, technical constraints, new user behaviours. Creativity allows you to pivot, reframe, and adapt, not just execute.
  4. Creative economies scale. The more creative the core, the more opportunity for business models, licensing, spin-offs, brand equity. Apple didn’t win on specs; it won on aesthetic, integration, intuition.

In short: in an AI world, creativity doesn’t get replaced, it becomes more valuable. The challenge is: how do you build it?

The 5-Step Creative Process (James Webb Young’s timeless model)

Nearly every great idea arises through a repeatable process, not by spontaneous genius. One of the cleanest formulations comes from James Webb Young in A Technique for Producing Ideas (1930s). He describes five stages:

  1. Gather raw material
    • Specific material: deeply learn about your domain, users, technology.
    • General material: expose yourself broadly, philosophy, art, nature, science, distant industries.
    • Young suggests using index cards or scrapbooks to store bits of insight.
  2. Digest / mull over it in your mind Play with combinations, force connections, turn facts around, ask counterfactuals, provoke metaphors.
  3. Incubation (step away) After pushing hard, consciously stop. Let your subconscious take over. Do unrelated activities: walk, play, sleep.
  4. Eureka / flash of insight When the time is right, a new combination emerges, unexpectedly.
  5. Shape, test, iterate An idea is raw; you must expose it to critique, apply constraints, polish for real conditions.

Young’s insight: “An idea is nothing more or less than a new combination of old elements.”

Let me show how this works in practice, and how you can apply it in your startup.

A real-life case: Ives and halftone printing

  • Gather: Ives had hands-on printer experience + years in photographic labs. He understood both media.
  • Digest: He experimented, tinkered, mixed optics + halftone logic + printing.
  • Step away / incubation: One night, after letting the problem rest, the whole solution projected on his ceiling.
  • Eureka: He saw the halftone process in his mind’s eye.
  • Iterate: He patented, refined, re-patented. Over time the method improved.

His invention cut cost by ~15x and became standard for 80 years. That’s creative impact.

Why this process works especially well in an AI era

  • Human + AI symbiosis: Use AI to speed up step 1 (raw material gathering), but step 2, your own mind’s digestion, remains uniquely yours.
  • Filter the noise: In the age of infinite data, the limiting factor is not access to information, but creative filtering, selecting, combining, discarding.
  • Scalable ideation: You can run this process repeatedly, across modules of your business (product, marketing, design).
  • Better prompts: When you prompt generative models, ideas coming from your brain (formed via this method) lead to richer, more on-brand results.

How to use this today: Creative Toolkit for First-time Founders

Here is a playbook you can start executing immediately:

1. Gather

What You Do:

Collect both domain and adjacent knowledge.

How to Do It:

  • Use tools like Notion, Roam, Obsidian, or simple browser bookmarks.
  • Keep a “curiosity journal” where you log daily observations or sparks.
  • Subscribe to cross-discipline newsletters or follow creators outside your industry to widen your knowledge base.

2. Digest

What You Do:

Explore relationships, sketch, mindmap, and force combinations between ideas.

How to Do It:

  • Use index cards (digital or physical) to shuffle and link concepts.
  • Sketch or whiteboard ideas to visualize overlaps.
  • Try metaphor prompts like, “If this were a film…” or “If this were a recipe…” to reframe your thinking.

3. Incubate

What You Do:

Deliberately step away from the problem to allow subconscious processing.

How to Do It:

  • Go for a walk, exercise, or travel.
  • Listen to music, cook, or nap, anything non-linear that frees your mind.

4. Capture Eureka

What You Do:

Always be ready to capture insights when they appear.

How to Do It:

  • Carry a notebook, use your phone’s notes app, or record a voice memo.
  • When insight hits, stop what you’re doing, record it immediately — no editing or filtering.

5. Test & Iterate

What You Do:

Build MVPs, mockups, or prototypes and gather quick feedback.

How to Do It:

  • Use paper prototypes, landing pages, or lightweight A/B tests.
  • Talk directly to users or peers to refine and validate ideas fast.
StepWhat You DoTools / Techniques
1. GatherCollect both domain and adjacent knowledgeUse tools like Notion / Roam / Obsidian / bookmarks; keep a “curiosity journal”; subscribe to cross-discipline newsletters
2. DigestExplore relationships, sketch, mindmap, force combinationsUse index cards (digital or physical), whiteboards, metaphor prompts (“If this were a film…”)
3. IncubateDeliberately shift your brain awayWalking, exercise, travel, music, cooking, naps — anything non-linear
4. Capture EurekaAlways carry a notebook or voice memoWhen insight hits, stop, record it, no editing
5. Test & IterateBuild MVP / mockups / prototypes and get feedback fastUse paper prototypes, landing pages, A/B, conversations with users

A few bonus tips:

  • Mix domains intentionally: pair two unrelated ideas and force a hybrid.
  • Create a “repository of weird”: clip odd facts, visuals, stories. Over time you’ll see patterns.
  • Peer critique sessions: hold internal “ideation reviews” where people combine feedback, challenge each other’s assumptions.
  • Track your creative cycle: notice when your mind works best (morning, evening, post-walk). Build rituals around them.

Common traps to avoid

  • Skipping to step 4 or 5 too early. Many attempt to jump into “come up with an idea” but lack raw material or digestion.
  • Holding your idea too close. Don’t be overly secretive; feedback improves ideas.
  • Underestimating incubation. If you don’t rest the problem, creative breakthroughs don’t happen.
  • Overvaluing novelty over viability. An idea without execution kills.

A 3-question test to vet your creative signal

After you reach stage 4 (the flash), before full commitment ask:

  1. Does it combine elements in a way I haven’t seen before?
  2. Does it solve a real problem or create new value?
  3. Can I prototype / test a slice of it fast and cheaply?

If yes ? go build. If no ? circle back to digest or gather more.

Creativity isn’t some mystical gift reserved for artists or “creative people.” It’s a process. And that process becomes your advantage in an AI-powered world.

Your mission as a founder: build your internal creative engine, then use tools (AI, data, execution) to scale it.

Here’s your immediate assignment: pick one problem inside your startup (e.g. onboarding flow, brand positioning, feature idea). Run it through this 5-step process over 3 days. Document each step. See what emerges. I’d love to hear what you come up with, let’s test this in real time.

If you want, I can also turn this into a downloadable worksheet or guided creativity prompt list for your community. Do you want me to build that next?


Whenever you’re ready, here are 3 ways I & Nomad Foundr can help you:

1. Join The Newbie Founder Newsletter: A weekly 5-minute read to help you break through mental blocks, blind spots, and skill gaps. Plus every month you’ll also get a new hands-on email mini-course to grow your business and audience, delivered straight to your inbox.

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3. Join the First-Time Founders Program: Our 90-day flagship course with 3,000+ founders. Get the frameworks, skills, and hands-on guidance to turn your knowledge into a real business. Step by step, you’ll ideate, validate, build, launch, and land your first 1,000 customers. By the end, you’ll have launched your business and started growing your audience.


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