Most people don’t struggle with ideas. They struggle with the messy middle: turning a good idea into a real outcome while juggling everything else.
The fix isn’t a complicated framework or a 40-page strategy deck. It’s a lightweight process that helps you move from spark → decision → next action—without losing momentum.
Here’s a simple innovation process you can run in a coworking session at Ansir (or anywhere) that works for founders, freelancers, creatives, and teams.
The core problem: ideas feel exciting, execution feels unclear
Ideas usually fail for one of four reasons:
- No clear “why”: You’re not sure what problem it solves.
- No decision: The idea stays “interesting” but never becomes a commitment.
- Too big: The first step feels overwhelming.
- No rhythm: You don’t revisit it consistently.
This process solves those issues by forcing clarity, small steps, and a repeatable cadence.
The Lightweight Innovation Loop (60–90 minutes)
Think of this as a loop you can repeat weekly or monthly:
- Capture (collect ideas without pressure)
- Clarify (define the problem + outcome)
- Choose (pick one idea to commit to)
- Prototype (create the smallest test)
- Review (learn and decide next)
Step 1: Capture (5 minutes)
Get ideas out of your head and into one place. Use a note, doc, or board—just one “idea inbox.”
Prompt: Write 10 ideas in 5 minutes. No filtering.
Step 2: Clarify (10 minutes)
Pick one idea and clarify it with 4 questions:
- Problem: What pain or friction does this solve?
- Who: Who is this for?
- Outcome: What does “success” look like in 30 days?
- Constraint: What’s the simplest version we can try?
If you can’t answer these quickly, the idea isn’t ready yet—and that’s okay.
Step 3: Choose (5 minutes)
Don’t try to execute five ideas at once. Choose one idea for the next sprint.
Use this simple scoring test (1–5 each):
- Impact: If it works, how much does it help?
- Ease: How quickly can you test it?
- Learning: Will it teach you something valuable either way?
Pick the highest score—or the one you can test fastest.
Step 4: Prototype (20–40 minutes)
Your goal is not “build the final thing.” Your goal is run a small test.
Examples of small prototypes
- Offer idea: Write a one-paragraph pitch + post it once
- Product idea: Create a landing page mockup + collect 5 reactions
- Process idea: Run the new workflow for 1 week and measure time saved
- Content idea: Draft one post and share it with 3 people for feedback
Prototype rule: The test must be small enough to finish this week.
Step 5: Review (10 minutes)
Review is what turns activity into progress. Ask:
- What did we learn?
- What surprised us?
- What’s the next smallest step?
- Do we continue, adjust, or drop it?
The best part of coworking: you can do this with other people
Innovation gets easier with light accountability. Try this at Ansir:
- Tell someone your idea in one sentence
- Ask: “What’s the simplest test you’d run?”
- Do a 30-minute sprint and share what you produced
A simple template you can copy
- Idea: ______
- Problem: ______
- Who: ______
- 30-day outcome: ______
- This week’s prototype: ______
- Success metric: ______
- Next action (15–30 min): ______
Final thought: execution is a habit, not a personality trait
You don’t need to be “naturally disciplined.” You just need a process that makes the next step obvious and small enough to start. Run the loop, learn quickly, and repeat.

