Hall of Fame
Linear Thinking 45 min read

Hall of Fame

Borrow the minds of history's greatest innovators to solve your modern challenges.

💡 What is the Hall of Fame?

The ‘Hall of Fame’ technique involves borrowing the perspectives, strategies, and philosophies of world-renowned icons—innovators, artists, or even successful companies. By asking, “How would Steve Jobs solve this?” you force your brain out of its usual patterns and into the mindset of a master.

Standing on the Shoulders of Giants

You don’t need to be a genius; you just need to think like one. Each ‘Hall of Famer’ has a distinct “lens” through which they see the world.

Define Your Problem

Clearly state the challenge you want to address.

Example: “How can we make our online learning platform more engaging for students?”

Select Your 'Hall of Famers'

Choose 3-5 icons who excel at something related to your goal (e.g., design, storytelling, efficiency).

📌 The Icons
  • Steve Jobs: Master of simplicity and user experience.
  • Walt Disney: Master of storytelling and immersion.
  • Netflix: Master of personalization and “binge-worthiness.”

Analyze Their 'Secret Sauce'

What is the core principle that makes them successful?

📌 Core Principles
  • Jobs: “Less is more.” Elegant, intuitive design.
  • Disney: “The magic is in the details.” Emotional storytelling.
  • Netflix: “Know the user better than they know themselves.” Data-driven.

Force the Connection

Apply those principles to your specific problem.

📌 Borrowed Ideas
  • Jobs + Learning: Remove 50% of the buttons on the platform. Make it feel like a “unboxing” experience.
  • Disney + Learning: Turn each course into a “quest” with a narrative and milestones.
  • Netflix + Learning: Create a “Continue Learning” section that auto-plays the next micro-lesson.

Practice

Problem: “Our grocery store has long checkout lines.” Borrow the mind of Amazon. How would Amazon (focus on “one-click” and “frictionless”) solve a physical checkout line?