June 19, 2025

Build Your Own Brain Trust

by Our content team
Jeff Heusser / Flickr
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Pixar is one of the most successful creative entities of its generation. Every one of their fourteen films has been a major success, a record no other movie studio in history can compete with. So how did the company that began by selling computers turn into such a fount of creative excellence?

The answer is complex and, as revealed in Pixar founder Ed Catmull’s book Creativity, Inc., relied on having the right people in the right places at the right times. [1] However, one substantial factor in their success, says Catmull, is their ‘Brain Trust’.

Ed Catmull (right) with Pixar co-founder John Lasseter

What Is a Brain Trust?

Essentially, a Brain Trust is a group of people who consult on the creative process. The way it works at Pixar is that a director pitches/shows their work-in-progress movie as it stands, and invites input from the group. They offer praise, critique, suggestions and in-depth discussion about the movie, leaving the director to go away and decide what they do next.

A simple idea, yet highly effective process, the Brain Trust is a form of creative collaboration, feedback and quality assurance all in one. Done right, it brings out the best aspects of good ideas, while identifying and diagnosing any problems.

There are two major reasons this process works, according to Catmull.

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