By Michael Stodola Special to OnMilwaukee.com Published Jul 08, 2008 at 8:37 AM

Last week, my kids' school (shout out to Highland Community School) held a fundraising event marking its 40th anniversary; it featured live music, an auction and tray upon tray of fabulous food.

My best friend, Chef Antonio Evans, was executive chef and I got to play the role of his sous-chef. I've never worked in a kitchen before so this experience was both a treat and a horrific nightmare. I started slowly by cubing cheese and worked my way up to working the oven and dressing main courses.

It was a large event with hundreds in attendance. Once the appetizers began flowing, we were flying back there in 100-degree heat. Huge pans of ravioli, meatballs and tortellini were going in and out of the oven in a blur. Servers were calling out orders for more this and more that (the "that" was quite tasty, by the way), and it became an unconscious act of movement and coordination that seemed second nature.

I remember from time to time drinking small glasses filled with scotch.

It was an exhilarating experience and the lack of thought and contemplation about the food (since we were moving so quickly) actually added value to what we were serving. The less I thought about how to build the perfect canapé, the more perfect they became. At our busiest hour, we were creating the best eats.

This haphazard opera of creativity got me thinking about my own job.

In the ad biz, we attempt to work smartly. Generally, we develop a strategy, hatch tactics and produce appropriate, fresh, targeted work. Much thought is put into each word, color and visual. Everything is there for a reason and its form eloquently follows its function. But sometimes this process is anything but "thoughtful."

Sometimes it's more like working a kitchen. Sometimes, especially in the concept stage, throwing out ideas, designs or taglines without any real thought can lead to the best work. Tom Monahan, a nationally recognized creative guru, calls this sloppy approach "100 mph" thinking.

It's no surprise that your subconscious is always hard at work, and if you just get out of its way, it will knock some creative dingers out of the park.

In a kitchen, the secret to speed with quality is preparation. Once you've put all the elements in their place and prepped pans for "the show," you can roll and not miss a beat. Similarly, once you've digested the strategy and prepped your brain for a TV spot or an outdoor board, the brainstorm can rage with a million ideas an hour.

Suddenly, you're spinning gold without over-thinking the process or caring much for the outcome. And once you've plastered the walls with idea after idea, you can then step back, with a cooler head, and analyze the damage. Is there anything here we like? Love? Hate? A few of each, hopefully, and then it's time to flesh them out. Dress the dish as it were and serve the client some tasty work. Bon appétit!

Michael Stodola Special to OnMilwaukee.com
Michael Stodola is the Creative Director at Boelter + Lincoln – a Milwaukee advertising agency. He loves his job, but not as much as he loves scuba diving, crab cakes or playing with his kids. His favorite thing is sneaking off for dates with his hottie wife. Born and raised in Nebraska, he’s been calling Milwaukee home for well over 10 years. After Michael’s impending death, he’d like to return to this world as your next American Idol®.