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Tyler Durden’s 8 Rules of Innovation

We all want to do remarkable things, and lead remarkable lives.

No one wants to spend the day engaged in mundane productivity in pursuit of a meaningless consumer existence. Certainly not you, right?

So why do we find it so hard to break out of our rut and do truly innovative things?

Because it’s hard. Because it often requires us to significantly alter our perspectives and step outside our comfort zones.

It’s almost like becoming another person.

I Know This Because Tyler Knows This…

If you haven’t seen the movie Fight Club (or read Chuck Palahniuk’s excellent novel), I won’t spoil the fantastic plot twist where we come to understand who Tyler Durden really is. The story isn’t for everyone, but if you think it’s about fighting, you’re on the wrong track.

At its core, Fight Club is about living the life you truly want to live, and the hard path to getting there. Tyler helps the story’s nameless hero (usually referred to as Jack) down that path to enlightenment, so maybe what Tyler says can help the rest of us as well.

Luckily, Tyler says a lot of things that apply directly to innovative action. Here are his 8 rules for creative people to live by.

Tyler’s First Rule of Innovation:

“No fear. No distractions. The ability to let that which does not matter truly slide.”

This is the most important lesson, and it’s the one people struggle with and resist. Tim Ferriss advocates the 80/20 rule of productivity, where you focus relentlessly on the 20% of the actions that lead to 80% of the return. People see this as nice in theory, but not practical.

But believe it or not, this is how I’ve been running my businesses for the last 10 years. I used to actually feel guilty because I wasn’t constantly “getting things done” at a maniacal pace, even though I was enjoying increasingly significant success each year. It’s only been in the last few years I’ve realized that this approach is essential for entrepreneurs and creative professionals of all stripes.

The 80/20 rule of productivity requires radical elimination, or letting that which does not matter to creative moves truly slide. Use that newfound time for creative thinking that leads to innovative action, and you will succeed, guaranteed.

Tyler’s Second Rule of Innovation:

“No fear! No distractions! The ability to let that which does not matter truly slide!”

Seriously. Don’t break the first two rules.

Tyler’s Third Rule of Innovation:

“I say never be complete, I say stop being perfect, I say let’s evolve, let the chips fall where they may.”

Let’s face it, when we break Tyler’s first two rules of innovation and distract ourselves with foolish productivity, it’s often because we’re afraid (which also violates Tyler’s first two rules). We’re afraid of failure, ridicule, risk, mediocrity, and perhaps even success itself.

If you’re going to evolve and grow as a creative person, you’re going to make mistakes. In fact, you should start making twice as many mistakes as soon as possible if you want to have an innovative breakthrough.

Make mistakes and let the chips fall where they may. You might like the landing.

Tyler’s Fourth Rule of Innovation:

“It’s only after we’ve lost everything that we’re free to do anything.”

Oh, yeah… don’t be afraid to make big mistakes. More importantly, don’t worry about everything going according to plan. In fact, if everything’s going according to plan, there’s a good chance nothing remarkable is getting done.

They say life is what happens while you’re making other plans. Innovation is what happens when you recognize when to change the plan and perhaps the entire game. Maybe your initial plan falls apart, or maybe you simply need to throw the current plan away.

Don’t let the plan restrict the freedom to have a game-changing idea, and act on it, at any time. Losing everything may be the best thing that ever happens to you.

Tyler’s Fifth Rule of Innovation:

“You’re not your job. You’re not how much money you have in the bank. You’re not the car you drive. You’re not the contents of your wallet. You’re not your fucking khakis.”

When we talk about fear, risk, mistakes, and losing it all, what are we really afraid of? Are we defined by the stuff we own, or would we prefer to be defined by what we accomplish and create for the world?

I’m not saying give all your stuff away or take foolish risks that harm your family or yourself. I’m saying don’t let the stuff you own start to own you to the point that you can’t live the life you want to live and do the things you want to do.

Tyler’s Sixth Rule of Innovation:

“People do it everyday, they talk to themselves… they see themselves as they’d like to be, they don’t have the courage you have, to just run with it.”

I bet you’ve got a great idea right now, bouncing around in your head. What are you going to do with it?

Be what you’d like to be, and do what you’d like to do… it really is that simple. Having the courage to just run with it is the difference between a fulfilling life and a life full of regret.

Tyler’s Seventh Rule of Innovation:

“Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken.”

On the other hand, wearing black hipster clothing and hanging in cafes smoking Gaulloises cigarettes does not make you creative. Buying a MacBook Pro and an iPhone doesn’t get it done either.

Creativity and innovation are mainly about hard work. It’s about constantly coming up with ideas and thinking through problems instead of vegging out. And it’s about taking action, plain and simple.

Tyler’s Eighth Rule of Innovation:

“This is your life, and it’s ending one minute at a time.”

First, you have to know, not fear, know that someday you are going to die. Until you know that, you have no sense of urgency. You think you have all the time in the world to do amazing things, but you may not live to see that particular someday.

So quit reading articles for a bit and go do what really needs to be done today.

About the Author: Brian Clark is a new media entrepreneur and co-founder of Lateral Action. Subscribe today to get free updates by email or RSS.

Brian:

View Comments (136)

  • Brilliantly done! I think people often forget how important rule # 8 is and focus on being perfect when they should just jump back to rules 1 & 2.

    I think I'm in the mood to watch Tyler take over the world again.

    Chris Swain

  • Fight Club works on so many levels and is different things to many people. It's also ideally timed in the context of current trends in society, the rise of pop-philosophy, getting back to basics, discovering unbranded spirituality, less is more, and lifestyle design (Tim Ferriss).

    I think you're confusing the power of nothingness (anti-matierialism) in your fourth rule with the self-definition idea in your fifth rule. "You are not your Khakis" isn't about having less stuff (your fourth rule is), it's about not confusing what you have or what you do with who you are.

    'Who you are' is not fixed, which is why Tyler exists (it's hard to explain without giving away too much, but hopefully those who've seen the movie understand what I'm saying). Essentially, that's why the unnamed hero has the realisation at the end of the film - because he can 'be' either.

  • Thanks for all the kind comments... I had a lot of fun writing this article.

    Joel, it depends on how you define "necessary." So many things we think we have to do are actually optional.

    I think you’re confusing the power of nothingness (anti-matierialism) in your fourth rule with the self-definition idea in your fifth rule.

    Lee, I see the two as intricately related. So many people define their identities by money, social position, and the stuff they buy to "express" themselves. So they illogically avoid risk because they think it will destroy them if they lose all the stuff that defines them. In reality, you find out who you really are at those bottoming-out moments.

  • What a great list of advice. Plus some good placements of links.

    This information is in alignment with a report I am writing called, "Shatter The Success Myth". Its free and can be obtained soon at http://www.transilient.net

    Very encouraging message.

    Thanks for sharing.

    Liking this Lateral Action site more and more.

  • Great post Brian! I think a lot of people are frozen by the fear of making a mistake. What they are forgetting is that life is a journey! You live, you learn, you do better next time. Sometimes, not acting is actually much worse than acting and making that mistake you fear!

    I recently wrote an article relating to Tyler's Fifth Rule. My biggest pet peeve is when people ask, "So, what do you do?" I know it's an ice breaker question, but still, we are not our jobs.

    Thanks again for the inspiring writing. If you are interested in checking out the post I mention above, you can read that here. http://livewell360.com/2008/09/so-what-do-you-do/

    Sheila

  • I absolutely love it! Very well said. Sending this around to people who get it and others just on the cusp.

  • Great use of Tylerism's, Brian. Fear of making mistakes will kill creativity in the studio. Leads to stagnation. A friend and I were talking about just that on the phone today, then she emailed me this post LOL. Love it.

  • Thank you for taking the time to point out the philosophical significance of "Fight Club". I've not seen that movie for years. I'll likely be watching it again soon, but through another pair of lenses, thanks to your post. :)

    These are definitely 8 rules to live by, both in our professional and personal lives. Whether it's a person or a circumstance stealing your motivation or paralyzing you with fear, each of the above rules bring with it an inherent power to help you find motivation and conquer those fears. Very well-conceived and well-written...kudos!

  • Your fourth innovation is dead-on!

    I've had the following quote taped up in my cube for almost three years now:

    "Live on the edge. Take chances. Strike out. Risk everything. Live."

    I think people forget that life is about living, not about worrying or complaining, etc., but about living.

    And by living, I mean having the life you've always dreamed of having and doing all the things you've always dreamed of doing.

    I'm working hard at building my business and taking action on every innovative idea that comes my way so in another year or so, I can work full-time for myself and live the life I've been dreaming of.

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