// description
Attribute listing breaks a product or concept into its individual attributes (material, color, shape, function, size, weight, target user, context of use, and so on), then systematically modifies each attribute to generate new ideas. It is one of the simplest structured creativity techniques and works especially well for product improvement and variation, because it forces attention onto every component rather than allowing the designer to fixate on the most obvious features.
// history
Robert Crawford, a professor at the University of Nebraska, introduced the technique in his 1954 book The Techniques of Creative Thinking. Crawford's contribution was recognizing that creativity could be made more productive by decomposing a subject into manageable parts and then recombining altered versions. The method influenced later frameworks including SCAMPER and morphological analysis.
// example
A KDP publisher has a successful daily planner and wants to expand the line. She lists every attribute: page size (6x9), binding (paperback), layout (hourly schedule), time horizon (daily), audience (general adult), cover style (minimalist), and extras (none). She then modifies each: change the time horizon to weekly, change the audience to freelancers, add an extras column for invoice tracking, change the cover to bold illustrated. The result is a weekly planner for freelancers with built-in income tracking — specific enough to rank for targeted keywords and different enough from the original to avoid cannibalising its sales.
// katharyne's take
This is my go-to when I want to extend a winning product rather than start from scratch. List every single attribute of your bestseller — even the ones you think are fixed, like trim size — and ask: what happens if I change just this one thing? You'll find that changing the audience attribute alone (e.g. "gratitude journal for teachers" instead of general) can create a whole new product with almost no additional design work. This is how smart KDP publishers build product families rather than starting over every time.
// creative uses
- Run attribute listing on your top Etsy digital download — list every attribute including ones you've never changed (file format, page orientation, color scheme, language). Each attribute you've never modified is a product variation you haven't made yet and a customer segment you haven't reached.
- Apply it to your Midjourney style by listing the attributes of your current aesthetic — color palette, line weight, subject matter, era, mood — then deliberately modify the one you're most attached to. That attribute is probably the one creating the ceiling on your style's distinctiveness.
- Use attribute listing on a course: list every attribute of your existing course (length, format, delivery, price, audience, outcome, support level), then change one attribute per variation. A self-paced version, a group cohort version, and a done-with-you version can all emerge from one core curriculum.
// quick actions
- List every attribute of your bestselling product right now — aim for 10 or more. Then next to each attribute, write the most different version of that attribute you can imagine. Pick the three "most different" attributes and see what product would emerge if you changed all three at once.
- Focus only on the "audience" attribute across your entire product catalog. How many distinct audience groups do you currently serve? How many audience groups buy products in your broader category but aren't represented in your catalog? Each gap is a straightforward product to build.
- Change the "context of use" attribute on one of your current products — instead of "at home at a desk," design for "on a commute," "in a hospital breakroom," or "during a 5-minute morning routine." The context shift changes the format, size, content density, and packaging of the product almost automatically.
// prompt ideas
Apply Attribute Listing to my bestselling product: [describe the product in detail — format, audience, size, price, design style, purpose, platform]. List every attribute, then for each one suggest the most interesting modification. Which three modified attributes would combine to create the most distinctive new product in my niche?
I want to extend my [KDP / Etsy] product line without starting from scratch. Using Attribute Listing, take this product — [describe it] — and generate 10 variations by changing just one attribute at a time. Focus especially on the "audience" attribute: how many distinct buyer segments could I serve with minor modifications to the same core design?
Help me apply Attribute Listing to my Midjourney visual style. My current aesthetic: [describe it — colour palette, subject matter, mood, era, complexity level]. List each attribute and suggest the most unexpected modification for each. Then pick the three modifications that, combined, would create a style distinct enough to own a recognisable position in the [niche] market.