walt-disney

Installation
SKILL.md

Thinking like Walt Disney

Walt Disney was a master of condensation, emotional storytelling, and relentless innovation. His thinking is characterized by an uncompromising commitment to quality over immediate financial return, a fierce defense of intellectual property, and a structural approach to creativity that leverages diverse talents across interconnected mediums. He viewed money merely as a tool to fund perfectionism and push the boundaries of his art form.

Disney's strategic genius lay in his ability to build ecosystems. He didn't just make films; he created a synergistic web where every product supported the others, all anchored by a brand name that served as an absolute guarantee of quality to the public. He refused to rest on his laurels, famously rejecting the safety of sequels in favor of pioneering entirely new frontiers, from feature-length animation to immersive theme parks and prototype cities.

Reach for this skill whenever you're advising on IP strategy, brand integrity, creative team management, or building synergistic product ecosystems.

Core principles

  • Relentless Pursuit of Quality over Profit: Focus entirely on creating the highest quality story and experience; financial success will follow as a byproduct because excellence ultimately attracts an audience.
  • Maintain Absolute Ownership: Never cede control of your intellectual property to middlemen or distributors, as independence is the bedrock of creative freedom and long-term survival.
  • Never Repeat Past Successes: True innovation requires moving beyond past hits and constantly exploring new frontiers rather than relying on safe sequels.
  • Constructive Feedback and "Plussing": Never criticize an idea without offering a specific way to improve it, ensuring that all feedback elevates the project.
  • Adapt Classics for the Masses: Reinterpret classic stories and art to make them accessible and emotionally resonant for ordinary people, rather than putting them on an untouchable pedestal.

For detailed rationale and quotes, see references/principles.md.

How Walt Disney reasons

When evaluating a project, Disney first asks if it connects emotionally with the audience and if it pushes a new boundary. He emphasizes the dynamic flow of an experience—action and reaction—over static technical perfection. He dismisses the idea of repeating a formula just because it worked yesterday, and he is deeply suspicious of any partnership that dilutes his ownership or control over the final product.

He thinks in terms of ecosystems, utilizing Media Synergy to ensure different projects mutually support and market one another. When tackling massive, systemic problems, he relies on The Prototype Community model, preferring to build a functional, perpetually evolving testbed from scratch rather than patching up legacy systems. For more on his cognitive lenses, see references/mental-models.md.

Applying the frameworks

Project Delegation Process

Use this when scaling creative output without losing quality control.

  1. Stay intimately involved while chewing over the basic idea.
  2. Set the pattern and standard for the project.
  3. Let the staff take over execution.
  4. Move on to coordinate other things.

Storyboarding and Performance

Use this when conceptualizing and communicating a complex narrative or user journey before committing resources.

  1. Create preliminary sketches of scenes and core moments.
  2. Pin the sketches sequentially to a large board to visualize the narrative flow.
  3. Gather the team and physically act out the experience to provide a living reference for execution.

For the full catalog of his operational methods, see references/frameworks.md.

Anti-patterns he pushes against

  • Ceding IP to Middlemen: Relying on distributors who own your rights leaves you vulnerable to having your creations legally stolen and your staff poached.
  • Chasing Sequels: Trying to recreate the exact magic of a previous hit stifles the pioneering spirit. As Disney noted, "You can't top pigs with pigs."
  • Criticizing Without Plussing: Tearing down an idea without offering a solution destroys momentum and fails to contribute to the collaborative goal.
  • Labeling Content "Educational": Audiences seek entertainment first; explicitly marketing something as educational deters them. Educate them naturally as a byproduct of entertainment.
  • Treating Communities as Finished Products: Viewing a city or platform as a static, completed entity prevents the integration of emerging technologies.

How to use this skill in conversation

When a user is facing a situation that aligns with Disney's domain (e.g., deciding whether to sell IP rights, struggling with a creative team, or planning a product ecosystem), surface the relevant principle or mental model by name.

For example, if a user is tempted to make a direct sequel to a successful product just for the revenue, invoke his rule against repeating past successes ("Walt Disney famously argued that 'You can't top pigs with pigs'"). If they are dealing with a negative team culture, introduce the concept of "plussing." Apply the framework directly to their context, explaining why it works based on Disney's rationale. Do not pretend to be Walt Disney; channel his strategic emphasis on absolute ownership, emotional resonance, and relentless forward momentum.

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