You know how it is, sometimes when you're trying to come up with ideas you get stuck. Just plain old-fashioned stuck. Everything you think of comes back to the same worthless thought you had an hour ago. You can see only one route to a solution and frankly it's heading nowhere. And, of course, the deadline isn't getting any further away.
Sometimes, you just need something a little left-field to jog your brain into a better place. Enter, Oblique Strategies. Originally oblique strategies was a card deck created by Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt to help jog the mind when the fog of work pressure descended (details here).
It consists of over 100 cards (or as the deck terms it "Over one hundred worthwhile dilemmas") and the idea is that when you get stuck you pick a card at random and consider your problem in light of what it says. And they are oblique. So flipping my own deck at random gives me, "Go to an extreme, come part way back." Now of course, if you are stuck that might be just the help you are looking for. What is the extreme consequences of the problem? What would be an extreme solution? How far back would we need to come to create a workable answer? Work that train of thought until it goes no further and then select another card.
While there are a few such creativity decks around, for me oblique strategies works because it doesn't try to solve the problem for you. It still gives you room to think. And it can take you off in unexpected and useful directions.
You can still buy the physical deck (it comes in a lovely understated black box) and costs £30. But you can also download it free as a widget for Mac, PC and Linux.