Creative Confidence, Made Practical
How do you build creative confidence and overcome the fear of being uncreative?
Creative confidence, as defined by Tom and David Kelley of IDEO, is the belief that you can generate good ideas and act on them — and research on self-efficacy shows it is learnable, not fixed. The core method is accumulating small creative wins through guided practice, which rebuilds confidence that was typically damaged by early criticism or comparison.
Most adults stop calling themselves creative sometime in childhood — a teacher marked something wrong, a comparison went badly, and the label "not creative" stuck. Tom and David Kelley’s Creative Confidence framework argues this is a solvable problem: creativity is a skill practiced into confidence, not a trait distributed at birth. The practices below are how IDEO rebuilds it — each with the mechanism and an honest read on the evidence.
Practices
- Accumulate small creative wins to rebuild confidence
- Reframe constraints as creative inputs, not blockers
- Bias toward action over deliberation
- Reframe failure as information, not verdict
- Lead ideation with deep user empathy
- Defer all judgment during ideation
- Build on others’ ideas with "Yes, and…"
Accumulate small creative wins to rebuild confidence
Do deliberately small creative acts every day until the identity "I am creative" begins to feel true.
Reframe constraints as creative inputs, not blockers
Treat every limitation as a design parameter that focuses rather than restricts creative output.
Bias toward action over deliberation
Ship a rough version fast to learn what the problem actually is rather than theorizing indefinitely.
Reframe failure as information, not verdict
Build a personal rule: "I got data" replaces "I failed" after every attempt that didn’t land.
Lead ideation with deep user empathy
Understand the person you are designing for before generating a single solution.
Defer all judgment during ideation
Separate the generating phase from the evaluating phase — they cannot run simultaneously without killing output.
Build on others’ ideas with "Yes, and…"
Make every idea in a group session a platform to build from, not a proposal to assess.
Practice this with IX Coach
Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.
IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).