Named after Janus, the Roman god with two faces, this technique (Janusian Thinking) involves holding two completely opposite ideas as “true” at the same time. Instead of choosing between A or B, you force your mind to find a hidden “C” that integrates both. This is how breakthrough products like “high-quality, low-cost” items or “complex, yet simple” software are born.
The Power of Paradox
Logic says you can’t have your cake and eat it too. Janusian Thinking asks: “How can I design a cake that regenerates as I eat it?” By refusing to settle for a compromise, you force a creative leap.
Identify the Core Contradiction
Find the “either/or” choice that is currently limiting your project.
Example: “How can we create a product that is both high-quality and low-cost?”
Explore the Extremes
List the attributes of both sides as if they were the only truth.
- Side A (High Quality): Premium materials, hand-crafted, exclusive features, high price.
- Side B (Low Cost): Mass-produced, basic materials, wide market appeal, low price.
Force the Synthesis
Ask: “How can both be true at the same time?” Don’t compromise; integrate.
- Modular Design: Create a high-quality core product (Side A) but offer various low-cost, mass-produced modules for customization (Side B).
- Direct-to-Consumer: Maintain premium materials (Side A) but eliminate all middlemen to keep the price low (Side B).
Practice
Problem: “A gym that is both ‘Personal/Private’ and ‘Social/Community-driven’.” How can both be true?