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Too Many Great Ideas Is a Systems Problem

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The obstacle is rarely a lack of ideas. It is the absence of a system that knows which ones to pursue and is honest enough to discard the rest.

For some people, ideas are the problem. The blank page, the empty brief, the silence where a solution should be these are the things that cost them most. But there is another category of person for whom ideas are never the constraint. They arrive constantly, often simultaneously, sometimes faster than they can be written down. New angles on existing problems. Better versions of things already in motion. Entirely new directions that seem, in the moment, undeniably worth pursuing.

This is a genuine gift. It is also, without a system to manage it, one of the most reliable ways to build nothing at all.

The Abundance Trap

The abundance trap looks like productivity. It feels like creativity. From the outside it can even appear to be momentum new things constantly in motion, new directions constantly being explored, new possibilities constantly on the table.

What it actually produces is a specific kind of paralysis. Not the paralysis of having nothing to do, but the paralysis of having too many consequential things to do and no clear basis for choosing between them. Every new idea is genuinely good. Every alternative direction is genuinely worth considering. And because everything seems worth pursuing, nothing gets pursued with the sustained focus that produces real results.

The trap tightens further when open-mindedness which is a real creative virtue becomes the default response to every new possibility. When saying yes to new ideas feels like intellectual generosity and saying no feels like closing off potential, the direction never consolidates. The work never accumulates momentum. And the ideas, however good they are individually, collectively prevent the one thing that turns ideas into outcomes: focus.

What this looks like in practice

A creator builds something that starts gaining traction. Three new ideas arrive each one a legitimate extension of what is working. They pursue all three simultaneously. Each one dilutes the attention available for the original. Six months later, the original has stalled and none of the three new directions has had enough focused effort to prove itself.

The ideas were not the problem. The absence of a system for evaluating and sequencing them was.

Two Pathways Through Creative Abundance

When you have too many great ideas genuinely great ones, not noise there are two honest paths forward. Both require the same thing: a criterion. A clear enough sense of what you are building and where you are going that you can measure a new idea against it rather than against other ideas.

Both pathways share a prerequisite: you have to know what you are building well enough to have a direction that can be protected. Without that, the pathways collapse because there is no fixed point against which to measure the fit or the consequence of a new idea. This is why the workspace you build matters beyond organisation. It is where the direction lives where it is visible, named, and consistently present rather than something you reconstruct from memory each time a new idea arrives.

Try to Fail. Never Fail to Try.

None of this is an argument against experimentation. Ideas should be tested. The lessons from experiments that do not work are not wasted they become guardrails. Structural knowledge that tells you where the boundaries are, which directions do not serve the goal, which changes destabilise rather than compound. A lesson earned from a tested idea is worth more than a theoretical decision made in its absence.

But experimentation without structure is not experimentation. It is drift. The difference lies in two things: a clear hypothesis before the experiment begins, and a genuine commitment to reverting if the result does not support moving forward. Most people manage the first. Very few manage the second because reverting feels like retreat, and so failed experiments get layered on top of the original system rather than removed from it. Over time, the accumulated weight of unreverted experiments is precisely what buries the direction that was working.

Focus Is a Systems Decision

The most important thing to understand about creative abundance is that the solution is not less creativity. It is a better system for handling what the creativity produces.

The context of that quote matters. Jobs was not describing bad ideas being rejected. He was describing genuinely good ideas proposed by genuinely talented engineers being declined because pursuing them simultaneously was preventing any single direction from accumulating the momentum needed to matter. The engineers had no shortage of creative ability. What Apple built around them was a system that protected focus against their own creativity.

This is the reframe that changes how the problem is approached: too many great ideas is not a creativity problem. It is a systems problem. The creativity is working correctly. What is missing is the architecture that decides which output of that creativity gets pursued, in what sequence, and for how long before the result determines whether it continues.

The Three Questions Every New Idea Has to Answer

A system for managing creative abundance does not need to be complicated. It needs to be consistent. Three questions, applied honestly to every new idea before it enters the active work queue, are enough to protect direction without suppressing the creativity that generates the ideas in the first place.

Ideas that cannot answer all three questions clearly do not get discarded permanently. They go into a capture layer a dedicated space in the workspace where they are held without acting on them. Acknowledged but not pursued. Present but not competing for attention. The capture layer is not a graveyard. It is a waiting room and occasionally, when the direction has advanced far enough and the conditions have shifted, something from the waiting room earns its way into the active system.

The workspace architecture

A well-designed Notion workspace for a creative person has an explicit capture layer a place where every new idea lands without entering the active work queue. The three questions are applied when there is space and clarity to apply them honestly, not in the moment the idea arrives when the excitement of it makes everything feel urgent.

The active system holds only what has passed the test. The project management layer moves those ideas forward with the focused attention they need to produce real results. The separation between capture and active is not bureaucracy it is the structural expression of the decision to protect direction against the thing most likely to undermine it: your own creativity arriving faster than you can execute it.

The most productive creative people are not the ones with the fewest ideas. They are the ones who built a system that knows which ideas to pursue, in what order, and with enough focus for each one to actually become real. The ideas keep arriving. The system decides what happens next.

And the workspace that holds that system is not a filing cabinet. It is the physical architecture of a decision you made about what matters and what, however brilliant, does not get to compete with it right now.

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FAQs

What should I do when I have too many ideas and can’t decide which to pursue?

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Is it bad to be open-minded as a creative person?

References

Chernev, A., Böckenholt, U. and Goodman, J. (2015) ‘Choice overload: a conceptual review and meta-analysis’, Journal of Consumer Psychology, 25(2), pp. 333–358. Available at: https://myscp.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1016/j.jcps.2014.08.002 (Accessed: 26 May 2026).

Schwartz, B. (2006) ‘The paradox of choice’, TED Talk, February. Available at: https://www.ted.com/talks/barry_schwartz_the_paradox_of_choice (Accessed: 26 May 2026).

Harrison, S., Rouse, E., Fisher, C. and Amabile, T. (2022) ‘The turn toward creative work’, Academy of Management Collections, 1(1). Available at: https://doi.org/10.5465/amc.2021.0003 (Accessed: 26 May 2026).

Clifford, C. (2018) ‘Steve Jobs: here’s what most people get wrong about focus’, CNBC, 2 October. Available at: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/02/steve-jobs-heres-what-most-people-get-wrong-about-focus.html (Accessed: 26 May 2026).

Notion AI and Automation By Kyle Caudle.


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