Earlier this week, Ken Mueller took to his porch, par usual, only to find a surprise. His porch was suddenly overshadowed by the revamped porch next door. Check the pic below – the bright, shiny, new white porch may just be taking the cake from Ken’s old, brown steady.

Invoking the ‘Keeping Up with the Joneses’ line, he says, “While we shouldn’t become obsessed with everything our competitor does, we do need to be aware.”
This inspired us here at Thoora. We agree that it’s bad form to ignore the Joneses, but we know our readers, and you’re a group of knowledge-hungry social media enthusiasts who work very hard to stay in-the-know (with a little help from Thoora too, we imagine!). So, we’d like to up the ante.
What if the Joneses slabbed a new coat of paint on their porch? So what if they rebuild an entirely new porch? What if instead of trying to keep up, you trust yourself to do your own thing? What if you beat the Joneses at YOUR own game?
One of the best things about playing in the social media space is that there’s something new every day. Maybe it’s a porch made from a different material, maybe it’s an entirely new way to enter a home.
The point is, play! Forget borrowing, copying, one-upping. Think about what’s right for your company, your brand, for your product. Think about what social channels suit your business objectives. Head into brainstorms with your own informed ideas, instead of a series of examples of what others are doing.
Here are some au-THOORA-tative tips on getting the most from brainstorms:
▸ Tap the right brains and consider group dynamics. If having the boss in the room means the savvy intern with killer ideas won’t let out a peep, decide out who will bring more value to your brainstorm.
▸ Prepare. Send a small task to the group to prep. A little individual brainstorming in advance can up the quality of the group session significantly.
▸ Quantity over quality. Determine in advance how many ideas you want to generate and push participants to meet that number.
▸ Goofy can be very good. The most offbeat, bizarre and ridiculous ideas often seed the top-notch, original ideas.
▸ No no’s. Simply put, there are no bad ideas in a brainstorm.
▸ Hand out scratch pads. Ask participants to stay focused and if they have off-task ideas, scratch them down to discuss later.
How do you beat the Joneses? How do you get the most from brainstorming sessions? Let us know in the comments below, on Facebook, or on Twitter.