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Here are some tips on building the right 'box' for an effective brainstorming session.
1. Don't brainstorm as a committee. Keep the brainstorming groups small (ideally four people or less). For larger groups, try to break them into smaller brainstorming pods.
2. Seek Diversity. Gather people from different backgrounds, experiences, and interests. The best ideas happen when unique opinions, on an equal playing ground, are allowed to 'spar' a bit.
3. Ask the right questions to build context, a brief, and core values. The group should all be on board before venturing into the unknown. Sometimes, certain questions that "frame" the discussion are helpful. For example, an upscale, well designed, environmentally friendly hotel chain might ask, “if GOOD Magazine and Apple created a hotel, what would it look like?”
4. For multiple decisions, hold multiple brainstorming sessions with a specific goal stated for each one. Cramming too many deliverables into a single brainstorming session is bound for mediocrity.
5. Leave the meeting with Action Steps. Hold each person accountable for always moving the ball forward.
Boxes aren't bad, as long as it's a box that your team has built on its own. And who's to say it is a box? Maybe you’ll go for something hexagonal?
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This tip was co-written by Scott Belsky and Michael Karnjanaprakorn, members of the Behance team. Check out Behance's guest postings for small businesses trying to make ideas happen, hosted at American Express' OpenForum.






http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2007/05/sunstein_on_inf.html
He talks about studies done on deliberating groups about 25 minutes in.
I would agree and add
Dont accept the box in which the problem came in.... by redrawing the boundaries one can create more room for certain ideas, and at the same time restrict other non-related ideas.