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Daily Creative with Todd Henry

Daily Creative with Todd Henry

Be brave, focused, + brilliant every day.

Todd Henry

112 episodesEN

Show overview

Daily Creative with Todd Henry has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 112 episodes. That works out to roughly 45 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 18 min and 27 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Business show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 20 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Todd Henry.

Episodes
112
Running
2024–2026 · 2y
Median length
22 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

Formerly The Accidental Creative. Being a creative professional should be the greatest job in the world. You get to solve problems, express yourself, bring something new into the world and you get paid to do it. What's not to love. Yet every day, creative pros face, tremendous pressure and uncertainty. The temptation is just to play it safe, surrender to distraction and settle for less than your best daily creative is about making sure that's not your story. Each episode focuses on a topic relevant to creative pros, like how to come up with ideas under pressure, or how the collaborate when you're overwhelmed, or how to lead your team and help them discover motivation. It's time to fall back in love with your work. Listen to Daily Creative wherever you get your podcasts or subscribe in the Daily Creative app at dailycreative.app.

Latest Episodes

View all 112 episodes

Constraint & Uncertainty: David Epstein and Simone Stolzoff on Thinking Inside The Box

May 12, 202638 min

What's Running The Show? Henry Cloud and Owen O'Kane on Strategy & Anxiety

May 5, 202637 min

Herding Tigers Bonus Episode! Optimizing: You're Probably Playing Different Games at the Same Table

May 2, 202610 min

Ceilings, Frames, & Churn: Breaking Invisible Barriers in Your Work and Relationships

Apr 29, 202632 min

Rules and Play: The Invisible Boundaries That Limit Us, and How To Break Them

Apr 21, 202643 min

Procrastination Proof: Why Jon Acuff Says Procrastination Is a Well-Funded Fear

Apr 15, 202625 min

Made With Love: Why You Need To Design Love In, Not Bolt It On

Apr 8, 202636 min

S1 Ep 102Subtle Maneuvers and Big Outcomes

This week, we explore the myth of sudden breakthroughs in creative and leadership journeys, digging instead into the reality: a meaningful life is built in the margins, not the spotlight. We first connect with Mason Currey, author of Making Art and Making a Living, who shares stories from the lives of celebrated creators—revealing that ideal conditions are a fantasy and resourcefulness is universal. Currey shows us how figures from Petrarch to William Carlos Williams navigated relentless financial and personal obstacles, crafting art in the cracks of busy lives.Next, we speak with Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed podcast and author of How a Little Becomes a Lot, whose personal story exemplifies how transformation isn’t about a single moment, but rather the accumulation of thousands of small, deliberate choices. Zimmer challenges our culture’s obsession with epiphanies and quick fixes, highlighting the power of feeding the “right wolf”—those daily choices that align with our values and ambitions.We investigate how leaders can implement subtle, consistent behaviors that compound into real impact, and why honest feedback, clarity, and persistent incremental actions create lasting change. It's a nuanced reminder: small maneuvers, not grand gestures, drive creative and leadership success.Five Key LearningsBreakthroughs are Overrated: Lasting creative or personal progress depends less on dramatic moments than on the accumulation of small daily decisions.Art Thrives in Constraints: Many renowned creators made their work in imperfect conditions, often juggling day jobs or hustling for resources—scarcity can fuel focus and innovation.Identity and Work Are Entwined: It’s reductive to separate oneself too much from their creative work; acknowledging the link helps navigate inner criticism with nuance.Naming the Inner Critic Creates Distance: Recognizing and naming internal narratives (even humorously) diminishes their power, enabling agency and resilience.Subtle Leadership Yields Big Results: Consistent clarity, regular feedback, and willingness to have hard conversations are small leadership moves that compound into greater outcomes.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:To listen to the full interviews from today's episode, as well as receive bonus content and deep dive insights from the episode, visit DailyCreativePlus.com and join Daily Creative+.Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable Every creative team needs a leader who's brave, focused, and brilliant, but none of us get there alone. The Creative Leader Roundtable is your place to connect with peers, sharpen your leadership craft, and stay inspired for the long haul. We're about to launch with a brand new group of leaders. So, if you're interested, visit CreativeLeader.net to learn more and to apply. Great leadership is a practice, not an accident.

Apr 1, 202629 min

S1 Ep 101Human Fracking and the Design of Creative Freedom

There’s a silent war being waged on our creative lives, but it’s not the obvious enemies we expect. In this episode, we dive deep into the invisible threats constraining our creativity—both inside organizations and in the culture at large.First, we speak with Cassie McDaniel, VP of Design at Medium, about the art of protecting creative space in a business world that increasingly values efficiency over deep thinking. She shares how real leadership involves building trust, creating the right constraints, and translating between the language of creativity and the demands of the organization. Cassie’s journey—nonlinear, multifaceted, and deeply intentional—reminds us that creativity thrives on diversity of experience and a strong sense of purpose.Next, we’re joined by Peter Schmidt, Program Director at the Struthers School of Radical Attention and co-editor of Attensity. Peter introduces the provocative metaphor of "human fracking" to describe how our attention is being mined, fragmented, and monetized by the platforms we use daily. He argues that protecting our attention is no longer a personal discipline issue but a societal one, requiring collective action and a movement to reclaim the diverse, nuanced ways of being present in the world.Together, these conversations meet at a critical crossroads: How do we defend and cultivate the inner conditions for creative work amid constant digital distraction and systemic forces designed to keep us fragmented?Five Key Learnings from This EpisodeConstraints Foster Creativity: True creative freedom is built on transparent boundaries, supportive organizational structures, and clearly communicated expectations.Invisible Efficiency Matters: The most valuable creative processes are often “invisibly efficient”—they look messy or inefficient from the outside but are essential to breakthrough results.Leadership is Relational, Not Just Operational: Protecting creative space is less about enforcing rules and more about developing trust, negotiating for time, and translating needs between teams.Our Attention Is Systematically Farmed: The battle for our attention is not simply about willpower; we’re up against trillion-dollar industries engineered to fragment and monetize our focus.Artists and Dreamers Lead the Defense: The recovery of deep, diverse forms of attention—beyond the narrow “attention span” model—depends on the activism of artists, educators, and anyone daring enough to imagine a different future.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.To listen to the full interviews from today's episode, as well as receive bonus content and deep dive insights from the episode, visit DailyCreativePlus.com and join Daily Creative+.

Mar 25, 202637 min

S1 Ep 100Unlocking Everyday Genius: From Memory Palaces to Getting Outside

In this episode of Daily Creative, we explore the often-overlooked link between our environment, memory, and creative potential. We kick off with the story of Cicero and ancient memory techniques, dive deep with 6-time USA Memory Champion Nelson Dellis (author of Everyday Genius) on the method of loci (the "memory palace"), and unpack the science behind our Indoor Epidemic with Dr. John LaPuma. Together, we consider how modern life—filled with screens and boxed-in routines—could be diminishing our ability to think, create, and lead at our best.Nelson shares how anyone can build a powerful memory through intentional practice, breaking the myth that memory champions are simply born, not made. Dr. LaPuma explains how our brains and bodies weren’t designed for today's screen-centered, indoor existence, and offers tactical ways to reclaim our creative clarity and restore focus—many of which involve getting out in nature. Throughout the episode, we connect these ideas back to leadership, reminding ourselves and listeners that great communication, creativity, and strategy start with meaning, not just data.Five Key Learnings from the Episode:Memory is Trainable. Extraordinary recall isn’t just an inborn gift; with techniques like the memory palace, anyone can expand their capacity to remember and connect ideas.The Brain Needs Meaning, Not Just Data. Raw facts aren’t sticky—stories, images, and emotional connections make information memorable and impactful in creative work and leadership.Environment Is Everything. Burnout and creative stagnation aren’t character flaws; they’re often environmental. Our brains thrive on sensory-rich, varied surroundings—not fluorescent lights and screens.Nature as a Creative Reset. Just 17 minutes a day spent intentionally in a green or blue space can boost creativity, clear mental fog, and improve overall well-being.Small Shifts, Huge Gains. Simple steps—like morning light exposure, breaks to look at distant horizons, and screen-free evenings—can restore mental energy and unlock new creative potential.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable Leading creative people is rewarding, but it can also feel isolating. That's why I've started Creative Leader Roundtable, a private community where leaders like you connect monthly to get practical insights, honest feedback, and real encouragement. You'll leave every round table with fresh perspective and tactical ideas. You can apply right away. So if you lead a team of talented people, go check us out at CreativeLeader.net, because creative work deserves brave leadership.

Mar 18, 202630 min

S1 Ep 99Feeling Overwhelmed With Everything? Me too. Here's What to Do Next.

In this episode, we explore what to do when the weight of uncertainty and overwhelm makes it hard to think, create, or move forward. We open with the legendary survival story of Ernest Shackleton’s Endurance expedition, drawing practical lessons about leadership, adaptability, and creative resilience. When everything spins out of control, it’s not about getting back to what we’ve lost—it’s about reframing the mission and determining the next right move.We dig deep into how overwhelm isn’t just a productivity hiccup, but a genuine threat to creativity and motivation. Drawing on personal experiences and years working with creative leaders, we share three actionable moves for anyone feeling stuck, anxious, or creatively compressed. These aren’t quick fixes; they’re mental models and practices to help talented professionals regain clarity and get unstuck, even when the path ahead is anything but clear.Five Key Learnings from This Episode:Redefine Success in the Moment: When circumstances change, don’t cling to old goals. Instead, ask, “What does winning look like now, with what I have?”Shrink the Target: Limit your field of view. Focus on the one thing you can accomplish today that will make everything else easier or less necessary.Name What’s Actually Wrong: Overwhelm is often a symptom of unrecognized fear or unresolved tension. Identify and write down the specific issue that's weighing on you.Protect a Pocket of Presence: Carve out uninterrupted time—just 20 minutes—to be alone with your thoughts. This helps your mind recover, make connections, and surface what really matters.Remember, Overwhelm Means You Care: Feeling overwhelmed isn’t failing; it’s a sign that you’re carrying meaningful responsibility. You don’t need to solve everything at once. Clarity and small wins create the momentum to move forward.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.

Mar 10, 202616 min

S1 Ep 98Why The Best Ideas Come From a Marketplace of Ideas

This week, we kicked things off with a story that’s almost too good to be true—the Great Emu War of 1932—and used it to highlight what happens when we try to solve modern problems with old, top-down thinking. As organizations confront complexity and change, we’re not up against simple, centralized challenges anymore; we're facing adaptive, distributed ones.We sat down with Emily Tedards and Jason Wild, co-authors of Genius at Scale. They challenged the myth of the lone genius and shared how true innovation emerges from activating the collective genius within and beyond organizational boundaries. Drawing from research and real-world experience, they revealed why democratizing creativity isn’t just a buzzword—it’s a leadership imperative. We explored their ABC framework: Architect, Bridger, Catalyst, and discussed how leaders can become wayfinders in uncertain times.Then, we brought in Susan Riley, founder of the Institute for Arts Integration and STEAM, to talk about her book Creativity’s Edge. She reframed human creativity as the unique capacity that AI can’t touch—because real creativity isn’t just about finding the right answer; it’s about seeing what doesn’t exist yet and bringing it to life. Susan shared her Four Branches of Creativity, the “three I’s” that set humans apart, and actionable strategies to foster creativity—especially as friction in the process becomes more important in an AI-driven world.This episode is for leaders and creatives who know that having the “best idea” isn’t enough. Instead, the future belongs to those who can unleash genius in themselves and others, build resilient systems, and lead with adaptability and purpose.Five Key Learnings:The Lone Genius is a Myth: Innovation doesn’t depend on one visionary. It thrives in marketplaces of diverse perspectives and constructive conflict.Leadership is Social Architecture: Effective leaders are architects, bridgers, and catalysts—cultivating culture, building partnerships, and activating large-scale innovation movements.Conflict Fuels Innovation: Too little conflict, not too much, is often what impedes progress. Healthy, respectful disagreement leads to better solutions.Wayfinding Over Pathfinding: In uncertain environments, leaders can’t always provide a clear path. Instead, they must clarify purpose and values, creating space for collective exploration and learning.Creativity is Our Edge: AI can’t replicate the generative, integrative process of true creativity. Mastering integration, intention, and innovation allows us to express what only humans can.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable What if you had a space every month to sharpen your leadership edge without the fluff? The Creative Leader Roundtable is where smart, driven, creative leaders gather to exchange ideas, solve real challenges, and grow together. So if you lead a team of thinkers, makers, or dreamers, this is your lab. We're launching soon with a new group of leaders. So, if you're interested, check it out and apply at CreativeLeader.net.

Mar 3, 202627 min

S1 Ep 97The End Of History Illusion

In this episode, we explore a new dimension of intelligence for navigating our rapidly-changing world. We start with the story of Hiroo Onoda, a soldier whose unwavering commitment to a mission long after its context had vanished becomes a powerful metaphor for how rigidity can keep us stuck. We dive deep into "AQ"—Agility Quotient—with Liz Tran, founder of AQ Learning Lab and author of AQ: A New Kind of Intelligence for a World That's Always Changing.Liz breaks down why AQ matters now more than ever, as change, disappointment, and uncertainty become the hallmarks of modern life, exceeding the rates of just decades ago. We unpack the origins and limitations of IQ and EQ, and highlight how AQ is the urgent intelligence we all need to cultivate. Liz shares the four archetypes for handling change—Astronaut, Neurosurgeon, Novelist, and Firefighter—each representing different strengths and pitfalls. We discuss practical strategies for creative leaders to grow their AQ, especially those ahead of the curve who struggle to bring others with them.This episode is a must-listen for anyone committed to staying agile, relevant, and creative as the world evolves beneath our feet.Key Learnings:AQ – Agility Quotient: AQ is our capacity to handle change, disappointment, and uncertainty. It's the essential intelligence for today’s world, complementing IQ and EQ.Rigidity vs. Agility: Sticking to obsolete missions or skillsets—like Hiroo Onoda—illustrates how lack of agility can prevent us from recalibrating when reality shifts. Agility is a mindset, not just a skill.Four Change Archetypes: We all respond to change as either Astronauts, Neurosurgeons, Novelists, or Firefighters, each with unique strengths and blindspots. Awareness of your archetype can help you adapt more skillfully.Durable vs. Technical Skills: Technical skills lose value quickly; it's our durable, transferrable skills—like communication, problem-solving, and reflection—that build true agility and staying power.Bringing Others Along: Especially for creative “astronauts,” practical tools like “giving turn signals” in communication and learning to value the insights of other archetypes are essential for inspiring and leading change.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable Leading creative people is rewarding, but it can also feel isolating. That's why I've started Creative Leader Roundtable, a private community where leaders like you connect monthly to get practical insights, honest feedback, and real encouragement. You'll leave every round table with fresh perspective and tactical ideas. You can apply right away. So if you lead a team of talented people, go check us out at CreativeLeader.net, because creative work deserves brave leadership. The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.

Feb 24, 202621 min

S1 Ep 96Seeing The Here and Now

In this episode, we explore the rarely recognized power of “seeing the here and now.” Using a memorable scene from Spielberg’s Lincoln as a launchpad, we dig into what it really means to rise to those unique, decisive moments that have the potential to alter the trajectory of our organizations, teams, and lives. While it’s easy (and comfortable) to stick to established plans and long-term strategies, the real challenge—and opportunity—lies in perceiving the pressing realities and fleeting openings right in front of us.We break down why leaders often miss out: from the tendency to seek only confirming data, to deferring action until it's "more convenient," or sticking with yesterday's plan at the expense of today's opportunities. We discuss how recognizing and responding to converging tensions, personal convictions, and unexpected resources can set you apart as a brave leader who changes the game. Because, as we remind ourselves, the hardest thing isn't to plan, but to see what’s possible now—and act on it while the window is open.Five Key Learnings:Not all moments are equal. Some situations are true inflection points that demand we notice and act, not simply follow the plan.Comfort can be a blindfold. We naturally avoid disconfirming evidence and delay hard choices, risking missed opportunities.Look for signs. Tensions you’re wrestling with, persistent convictions of conscience, and aligning resources are often signals that something important is at stake.Success can lead to failure. Achieving the wrong goals—because we’re ignoring reality—means we can “succeed our way into failure.”Bravery is seeing and contending with reality. The leaders who change things aren’t always the ones with the best laid plans; they’re the ones who respond bravely to what’s real and present.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.

Feb 17, 20267 min

S1 Ep 95What Do You Do When You're (Actually) Working?

In this episode, we dive deep into the real value of creative work—what we truly get paid for, beyond our time and output. We bring together two insightful thinkers, Rebecca Hinds and Jen Fisher, whose perspectives on meetings and hope transform how we structure our work days and support our teams.We explore why most meetings sabotage productivity and how “visibility bias” tricks us into equating a full calendar with actual progress. Rebecca Hinds (author of Your Best Meeting Ever) challenges us to rethink meetings as products: expensive, important, yet often poorly optimized. She shares actionable strategies like "meeting doomsday" and the "rule of halves" to declutter calendars and refocus collaboration.Shifting gears, we unpack the often-overlooked topic of hope in organizational culture. Jen Fisher (author of Hope Is The Strategy) reframes hope as a strategic, action-oriented process, not just a feel-good slogan. We discuss Gallup’s finding that hope ranks higher than trust as what people want most from leaders, and how misaligned incentives erode both hope and well-being, leading to disengagement and burnout.Throughout, we challenge creative pros to rethink their real value—insight, intuition, and emotional logic—and encourage leaders to create environments where these qualities flourish.Five Key Learnings:Insight is Indispensable: Our unique perspectives, intuition, and courage—not just our time or output—are what make us valuable in creative roles.Meetings Need a Reset: Meetings often serve as a status symbol rather than a tool for progress. Treating meetings as products and regularly auditing their purpose and effectiveness can dramatically improve collaboration.Subtract to Add Value: Applying the “rule of halves”—cutting meeting length, attendees, agenda items, or frequency—forces us to focus on what’s truly essential and breaks the cycle of addition sickness.Hope Is Strategic, Not Sentimental: Hope is a cognitive, actionable process that drives teams forward. Organizations must foster strategic hope to encourage risk-taking and innovation.Alignment Drives Well-being: Stated values must match incentives and systems. Misalignment between what leaders say and reward creates dissonance, burnout, and disengagement.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.

Feb 11, 202628 min

S1 Ep 94Ecosystems Of Brilliance

On this episode of Daily Creative, we explore the myth of the lone genius and make the case for why sustainable creative brilliance happens when we grow and nurture real relationships. We’re joined by Daniel Coyle, bestselling author and researcher, whose new book Flourish examines how true growth emerges not through competition, but through intentional connection and community.We discuss why relationships sit at the heart of creativity, what it means to build a meaningful circle, and how to design environments where both individuals and groups can grow. Daniel shares practical insights on “making meaning” and “group flow,” illustrating how small acts—like telling stories or organizing joyful gatherings—can catalyze shared energy and transformation. We reflect on why the most profound creative work, and indeed the solutions to our most complex problems, are more likely to be found at the neighborhood level than through grand top-down initiatives.This conversation isn’t just about feeling less alone; it’s a blueprint for intentional action in your creative life. We leave you with a challenge: take one step this week to strengthen your creative community, whether that’s reaching out to a peer, convening a group, or simply asking deeper questions.Five Key Learnings from the Episode:Community Is Creative Infrastructure: Creativity doesn’t thrive in isolation. The most resilient, sustainable creative work is built on relationships that provide stability, challenge, and honest feedback.Cultivate, Don’t Compete: Flourishing is about shared, meaningful growth—think gardens, not games. Real creative communities are spaces for nurturing, not just winning or accumulating.Design for ‘Beautiful Messes’: Innovation and group flow emerge when we intentionally create environments where people can experiment, collaborate, and bring out new facets in each other—even if things get a little messy.Deep Questions Build Trust: Asking ambiguous, personal “deep questions” unlocks vulnerability, connection, and trust far more quickly than waiting for trust to appear before opening up.Power With, Not Power Over: Leaders unleash real growth when they support, ask great questions, and give power away—moving from controlling outcomes to facilitating collective brilliance.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable What if you had a space every month to sharpen your leadership edge without the fluff? The Creative Leader Roundtable is where smart, driven, creative leaders gather to exchange ideas, solve real challenges, and grow together. So if you lead a team of thinkers, makers, or dreamers, this is your lab. We're launching soon with a new group of leaders. So, if you're interested, check it out and apply at CreativeLeader.net.

Feb 3, 202620 min

S1 Ep 93The Compounding Advantage: Leveraging AI for Smarter Creative Work

In this episode, we dive deep into the evolving relationship between human creativity and artificial intelligence. Inspired by Ada Lovelace's early vision of creative machines, we explore how the boundaries between expertise and common sense have been reshaped by modern AI, from expert systems to today's generative models. We sit down with pioneers and practitioners—Vasant Dhar, a longtime AI researcher and author of Thinking With Machines; Christopher Mims, technology journalist and author of How To AI; and the creators of Tachi AI, Aden Bahadori and Brett Granstaff—to discover how AI is shifting not only what we make but how we make it.We unpack the promise and the pitfalls of treating AI as a true thinking partner, not just a tool for automation. Our guests share practical strategies for using AI to augment creative work, streamline tedious tasks, and enhance idea generation—while emphasizing the necessity of human framing, expertise, and judgment. Whether you're a leader, designer, marketer, or filmmaker, we reveal why using AI thoughtfully is the real competitive edge in creative fields and business.Five Key Learnings:AI’s Compounding Edge: Utilizing AI consistently and benchmarking progress gives creatives and teams a multiplying advantage—not by replacing human originality, but by amplifying it through incremental improvements.Framing Questions Matter: The ability to ask the right, nuanced questions remains fundamentally human, and is essential when using AI as a partner in ideation, research, and strategy.Context and Expertise Are Critical: Experts benefit most from AI—leveraging their knowledge to dig deeper, validate outputs, and push beyond generic solutions, while ensuring originality in their work.AI as Scaffolding, Not a Substitute: The greatest value of AI today is in reducing friction and clearing time for creativity—whether it’s summarizing information, managing knowledge, or prepping film edits—so humans can focus on what matters.Human-Centric, Supportive AI: Tools like Tachi AI demonstrate that supporting creativity is more transformative than automating it; AI as infrastructure enables faster iteration and more creative decision-making, not just higher productivity.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:To listen to the full interviews from today's episode, as well as receive bonus content and deep dive insights from the episode, visit DailyCreativePlus.com and join Daily Creative+.The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.

Jan 27, 202638 min

S1 Ep 92Stop Renting Your Creative Process

Episode 92: OwnershipDaily CreativeIn this episode, we dive into the nuanced meaning of ownership in creative work and leadership. As the landscape is rapidly transformed by AI and powerful new tools, we explore the temptation to offload not just labor but also the very thinking that gives our work its unique signature. We unpack what it means to retain genuine ownership of process, relationships, and output—moving beyond merely curating machine-generated results and instead staying empathetically engaged in the creative process.Our guest, Greg Hawks, joins us to challenge the difference between “owners”, “renters”, and “vandals” in organizations. He brings fresh perspective on why many disengage, how environments subtly encourage or discourage ownership, and what teams and leaders can do to foster a climate where true creative engagement thrives.Some of the themes we touch on include:The fine balance between leveraging technology for efficiency and maintaining our emotional logic in creative decisionsWhy struggle and friction are the crucibles of meaningful, resonant workHow organizations inadvertently suppress ownership—and how to change that dynamicConcrete strategies for shifting from a renter to an owner mindsetThe powerful impact of reducing toxic “vandal” behavior on overall team engagementFive Key Learnings:Offloading too much of the creative process—especially decision-making—can hollow out our unique voice and intuition.Emotional logic, shaped by lived experience and intuition, is irreplaceable and differentiates meaningful work from mere output.Vandals—self-centered, divisive team members—can demotivate large segments of an organization, and removing them often unlocks higher engagement.True ownership requires us to understand the personal “returns” we seek (emotional, financial, relational, opportunity, growth) and articulate them courageously.Struggle and friction aren’t just obstacles—they’re where creative insight emerges and individual judgment is strengthened.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.

Jan 20, 202626 min

S1 Ep 91The Drive To Create

In this episode, we dive deep into the human urge to create—what fuels it, why it feels so essential, and how we can harness it more intelligently in our work. We are joined by psychologist George Newman (author of How Great Ideas Happen) and philosopher Rebecca Newberger Goldstein (author of The Mattering Instinct), who guide us through both the mechanics and meaning of creativity.We explore why creativity is not just a talent or an act, but a fundamental human response that pushes back against chaos and entropy. George Newman unpacks the myths of the "lone genius," showing us that real creative breakthroughs emerge from collaboration, exploration, and persistent engagement—not isolation. He introduces smart frameworks for idea development, including gridding, transplanting, and overcoming the “originality ostrich effect” and the “creative cliff illusion.”Rebecca Newberger Goldstein takes us a level deeper, exploring why our drive to create is intimately tied to our need for meaning and validation. She discusses the “mattering instinct”—the pursuit of significance—and explains why conflict, resistance, and friction in organizations are often expressions of this core human need. Together, these conversations reveal how creativity is both an existential response and a practical tool for leadership and team health.Five Key Learnings:Great ideas aren’t conjured in isolation. Creative breakthroughs come from ongoing engagement, trial and error, and exposure to new perspectives—not from waiting for inspiration alone.Originality is often misunderstood. Striving to be radically original can backfire; the most resonant ideas have personal freshness but build on approachable, recognizable foundations.Guiding questions and iterative refinement matter. Defining and regularly reframing your creative questions ensures you’re solving the right problems and making meaningful progress.Discomfort signals opportunity, not failure. The “creative cliff illusion” means our best ideas may arrive late in the process, and discomfort is often a sign that transformation is near.Creativity is deeply connected to our need to matter. According to Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, our drive to create stems from our longing for meaning and significance—making every act of creation a resistance to insignificance and entropy.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.

Jan 13, 202626 min

S1 Ep 90Seeing The Invisible: How Beats By Dre Became Iconic, and How Pioneers Build Businesses That Last

In today’s episode, we explore what it means to create work that lasts not just for the next trend cycle, but for generations. We dive deep into the interplay of intuition, identity, and intentionality that underpins creative longevity, and how these often-invisible forces guide great design, resilient businesses, and enduring cultural impact.We sit down with two very different thinkers whose experiences mirror this theme. First, we hear from Robert Brunner, renowned industrial designer and founder of Ammunition Design Group, whose work includes designing Beats by Dre headphones and pioneering shifts at Apple. He shares stories of working with some of the world’s most creative—and opinionated—collaborators, and how intuition fused with empathy leads to breakthrough products.Next, we talk with Neri Karra Sillaman, a scholar and author of Pioneers: Eight Principles of Business Longevity from Immigrant Entrepreneurs. Her research unpacks why immigrant-founded companies tend to outlast their peers—not simply due to external market factors, but because of internal clarity, community orientation, and the reframing of adversity.We broaden the lens from iconic objects to enduring enterprises, discovering through-lines that shape both remarkable products and resilient organizations.Five Key Learnings from the Episode:Intuition is Earned, Not Mystical: We learn that intuition isn’t some innate gift—it’s the result of deep attention, lived experience, and empathy, brought to bear at critical moments of creation.Identity Drives Longevity: Durable work starts internally, rooted in a clear understanding of who we are and what matters to us. This self-knowledge—tempered by adversity or migration—shapes everything from product design to business models.Collaboration Requires Respect and Empathy: Great breakthroughs often emerge from teams with diverse perspectives. Navigating strong personalities and creative differences means honoring others’ ideas and creating environments where bold work can thrive.Community and Shared Value Matter: We see how leaders build enterprises to last by weaving strong communities and ecosystems, deliberately involving employees and stakeholders, and focusing on shared value over short-term profit.Resilience is Built Through Reframing Rejection: Successful creators and entrepreneurs don’t see setbacks as verdicts on their worth—instead, rejection is information and an invitation to try again, often with even more clarity and resolve.Get full interviews and bonus content for free! Just join the list at DailyCreativePlus.com.Mentioned in this episode:The Brave Habit is available nowMy new book will help you make bravery a habit in your life, your leadership, and your work. Discover how to develop the two qualities that lead to brave action: Optimistic Vision and Agency. Buy The Brave Habit wherever books are sold, or learn more at TheBraveHabit.com.Apply for Creative Leader Roundtable Leading creative people is rewarding, but it can also feel isolating. That's why I've started Creative Leader Roundtable, a private community where leaders like you connect monthly to get practical insights, honest feedback, and real encouragement. You'll leave every round table with fresh perspective and tactical ideas. You can apply right away. So if you lead a team of talented people, go check us out at CreativeLeader.net, because creative work deserves brave leadership.

Jan 6, 202638 min
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