
Paul Rand: The Design Legend Who Still Shapes Branding in 2025
June 10, 2025The Lost Art of Thinking (And How I Got It Back)
For anyone who’s tired of confusing busyness with progress, especially in the age of AI.
There’s a quiet crime playing out across our working lives. We’ve glorified doing at the expense of thinking.
If you’re anything like me, your day is a blur of meetings, pings, decks, deadlines, and random “just checking in” messages. We’re switched on 24/7, reacting, replying, executing. Stuck in the loop of survival mode. It leaves barely any space for creative drift, free association, or actual problem solving.
This isn’t just about the creative industry. It’s relevant to anyone in strategy, product, branding, innovation. Anyone who cares about quality ideas, not just faster output. And yes, it’s relevant to anyone who wants to protect their team’s mental health and sanity while we’re at it.
Now add AI into the mix. Instant decks. Auto-generated copy. Brainstorming shortcuts. It’s brilliant. But here’s the trap. In our rush to automate the doing, we’ve started bypassing the thinking. And that’s a problem.
AI is a powerful assistant, but it’s not a substitute for insight. It can remix. It can pattern-match. But it still needs your brain to set the intention. Tools don’t build strategy. People do.
So a while ago, I made a shift. I started blocking time not to do, but to think.
I Started Running Thinking Sprints
Instead of dragging half the company into another presentation-heavy “brainstorm,” I began inviting small, focused groups into what I now call thinking sprints. One to two-hour sessions with no slides, no performance pressure, and no real agenda beyond cracking a specific problem.
No decks. No AI prompts. Just humans thinking like humans.
These sprints aren’t about chasing deliverables. They’re about clarity. Insight. Energy. The kind you only get when you finally make room for it.
I run them when a brief feels stale, when an idea’s circling the drain, or when I need fresh thinking that doesn’t sound like it was ripped from a trend report. I’ve found the best results come when you strip away the structure and invite only the people who are comfortable being uncomfortable. Those who can wade through ambiguity and actually enjoy the mess.
Because the truth is, good thinking doesn’t always feel productive at first. It’s unstructured, nonlinear, sometimes even a bit awkward. But that’s usually where the gold is hiding.
Step 1: Give Yourself (and Others) Permission to Think
Not every minute has to be billable. Not every session needs to end with a slide. If you want better outcomes, start by removing outcome pressure.
I’ve used AI tools to kickstart research, find data gaps, or warm up ideas. But when it’s time to make a leap into real insight or concept, I switch it off. I’ve learned to separate exploration from execution. AI can help with the latter. But the former? That’s still on us.
Step 2: Less Motion, More Meaning
We often confuse activity for progress. Especially now that AI makes it so easy to look productive. A slide here, a campaign draft there… all spit out in minutes.
But here’s the thing. Speed without direction just leads to wasted motion. I’ve seen teams roll out “solutions” that solve nothing, simply because no one took the time to define the actual problem. That’s not progress. That’s noise.
You want to move faster? Great. Think first. Then prompt your tools with purpose.
Step 3: Make Insight Part of the Culture
Once I made space to think like really think, I realised how rare that was. Everyone’s rushing. Everyone’s distracted. But deep insight? That comes from silence, curiosity, and a bit of slow-burning frustration.
So I started rewarding better questions. Celebrating strategic doubt. Giving airtime to “unfinished” thoughts because that’s where originality begins.
And yes, I still use AI. But only after I’ve taken the time to form my own opinion. Think first. Generate second. That simple rule has saved me from sounding like everyone else.
Thinking Is Not a Luxury. It’s a Leadership Skill.
In 2025, thinking is both a rebellious act and a practical one. It saves time, avoids waste, and leads to sharper work. Don’t confuse action with traction. Don’t outsource insight to the algorithm.
Creativity isn’t dead. Strategy isn’t obsolete. But both need room to breathe.
AI might help us build faster, but only if we’re clear on what we’re building and why.
So take the time. Ask better questions. Think before you prompt.
We don’t need more hustle.
We need better thought.