Where to Start with Tom & David Kelley
David Kelley founded IDEO, one of the most influential design firms in history, and created Stanford University’s d.school, which has trained a generation of design thinkers. His brother Tom Kelley, an IDEO partner, wrote The Art of Innovation, one of the first books to take readers inside a world-class design process. Together, they bring complementary perspectives: David is the institution builder and educator, Tom is the storyteller and observer. Their shared conviction is that creativity is not a rare gift but a capacity that anyone can develop with the right habits and environment.
Start here
Creative Confidence: Unleashing the Creative Potential Within Us All
Tom Kelley & David Kelley · 304 pages · 2013 · Easy
Themes: creativity, innovation mindset, design thinking, overcoming fear, organizational culture
The Kelley brothers’ manifesto on why everyone is creative and how to prove it to yourself. Drawing on decades of work at IDEO and Stanford’s d.school, they show that creative confidence is built through action, not inspiration.
Why Start Here
Creative Confidence is the book that best captures what David and Tom Kelley have spent their careers teaching. While their other work focuses on design methods and innovation processes, this book tackles the deeper question: why do so many people believe they are not creative, and what can be done about it?
Their answer is rooted in practice. Creative confidence comes from doing, not thinking. Small experiments, quick prototypes, and permission to fail are the building blocks. The book is packed with stories from d.school students who went from self-doubt to launching social enterprises, corporate leaders who transformed stagnant teams, and ordinary people who discovered that creativity was always available to them.
David Kelley’s personal story gives the book its emotional weight. After a cancer diagnosis, he reflected on what mattered most in his career and concluded it was not the products he designed but the people he helped believe in their own creative abilities.
What to Expect
A warm, story-driven book that reads more like a conversation than a textbook. Practical exercises throughout. The tone is encouraging without being naive. Ideal for anyone who has ever said “I’m not the creative type” and wants to change that.