Idea Bank: How to Organize and Use Your Creative Ideas
An idea bank is a place where you store all your creative thoughts so you don't lose them.
First, ideas disappear. You think of something brilliant, don't write it down because "I'll never forget this," and half an hour later, nothing remains but a vague feeling that something important was there.
Second, it saves you during creative crises. You open it, look at old notes, and suddenly one of them sparks and turns into a full piece of writing.
Third, it teaches you to trust yourself. When you see how many ideas you've already collected, you realize that your brain is a meaning-generating machine — you just didn't notice it before.
An idea bank doesn't have to be complicated. You just need a place to write things down when they come.
Paper: a notebook that's always with you. If your thoughts don't form neat lines, paper lets you write crookedly, draw diagrams, scribble in margins.
Digital: phone notes (Google Keep, Evernote, Apple Notes). Your phone is always nearby. You can dictate ideas or photograph something that inspired you.
Specialized apps: Notion has templates for idea banks. You can create databases with statuses (new, in progress, done), categories, priorities.
Spreadsheet: Google Sheets or Excel. One author says: "I was drowning in sticky notes. I made a giant spreadsheet with topic sections and now I can sort ideas by any column."
The main thing is not the tool — it's the habit of writing things down.
Everything. Absolutely everything.
— Plot twists — scenes, dialogue, endings
— Images and atmosphere — "the smell of ozone before a storm"
— Names and titles — beautiful words you hear
— Quotes from dreams — dreams give us surreal images
— Observations of people — a phrase, a gesture, an intonation
— Emotional states — physical sensations that will later help your characters
— Other people's ideas you want to reinterpret
Simple system: one document, ideas as a list separated by lines. When you have many, add tags: #plot, #dialogue, #character.
System with statuses: in Notion or spreadsheets, add a status column: Inbox → Ripening → In progress → Implemented → Archive.
System by categories: folders like "Characters," "Locations," "Conflicts," "Dialogues."
Spreadsheet by project: separate files for each book with plot ideas, research notes, contact lists.
How to Generate Ideas When the Bank Is Empty
Forced connections: take a random word and forcibly connect it to your topic. Your brain steps out of its usual path and starts looking for new routes.
SCAMPER: Substitute, Combine, Adapt, Modify, Put to another use, Eliminate, Reverse. Seven angles to attack any problem.
Mind maps: write the topic in the center, draw branches with associations. Visualizing chaos helps you see hidden connections.
Brainstorming with yourself: set a 15-minute timer and write everything that comes to mind, without criticism, even nonsense. Quantity turns into quality.
How to Use Your Bank in Practice
When you don't know what to write — open your bank, find three weak ideas, and write one paragraph for each. Usually one will grab you.
When a scene isn't working — check your "dialogues" or "conflicts" section. Sometimes an old phrase fits perfectly and brings the scene to life.
When writing a character — look for your old notes about emotions, especially if the character is going through something you've experienced.
And come back to old ideas. What seemed stupid a month ago might seem brilliant today. Your brain processes tasks in the background.