Tye Glover

Chief Ideation Officer at Creative Juices LLC

Motivational/Self Development

Education: Temple University - Temple University
Philadelphia, PA, USA

Biography

Tye Glover is the creator of Neuro Creative Programming (NCP), a transformative method for teaching people how to think differently by rewiring how they perceive, process, and create ideas. With an MBA from Temple University and over 30 years in management consulting—including more than two decades working with Fortune 100 companies—Tye brings a global perspective shaped by living and working in cities around the world. He blends ancient philosophy, modern logic, and practical strategy to help individuals and organizations unlock their creative intelligence and solve complex challenges through structured thinking.

Labeled as learning disabled in the 4th grade and tracked accordingly in public school, Tye was also once tested and told he had a below-average IQ. These early experiences dealt a heavy blow to his self-esteem and shaped his beliefs about what was possible, giving rise to a persistent sense of imposter syndrome. It wasn’t until he encountered Howard Gardner’s theory of multiple intelligences that he began to reframe his identity. Recognizing that intelligence takes many forms, Tye leaned into his innate strengths and reclaimed control over his life. This journey of transformation laid the foundation for NCP, empowering others to rewire their thinking and rediscover the power they’ve always had.

Passion

Tye Glover is passionate about ideation as the starting point of all innovation—the space where perception shifts, patterns emerge, and new ideas take shape. He sees ideation not just as a creative act, but as a structured process of thinking that begins with deeper awareness and observation.

Throughout his journey studying logic, philosophy, and systems thinking, Tye also teaches how cannabis can be intentionally used to support ideation—not as an escape, but as a catalyst for deeper reflection, expanded perception, and the disruption of rigid thought loops. He guides others in understanding how different cannabinoid and terpene combinations can enhance focus, creativity, or divergent thinking, depending on the desired outcome.

While cannabis is not the centerpiece of his work, Tye believes that when used consciously and with purpose, it can play a valuable secondary role in helping individuals access new perspectives and unlock powerful ideas that may otherwise remain out of reach.

Best Story

Title: 94% Blind – The Night I Met Flavia

At 25, I was in Costa Rica—low confidence, acne, hiding in a corner of a dance bar, hoping not to be seen.
Then she walked in.

Not glowing, not floating—just magnetic. My brain panicked:
"Not for you."
"Out of your league."
"She probably doesn’t even speak English."

And then, she walked over.
Smiled. Said something in a calm, confident voice.

But my fear-filtered brain heard Spanish.
I replied, awkwardly:
“Lo siento… no hablo español.”

She smiled again and said,
“That’s okay. I’m speaking English.”

Wait—what?

She had been speaking English the entire time.
But I didn’t hear it—because I believed I wouldn’t.

That’s when I realized:
The brain doesn’t process reality.
It processes what it believes is possible.

We register only 6% of our environment—
Which means we’re 94% blind.
And that hidden 94%? That’s where the magic is.

The shift?
Once you know your mind filters reality to save energy—not to deceive—you can interrupt it.

Ask:
“What if I’m missing something right now?”
“What if what I need is in the part I’ve filtered out?”

That night didn’t change my life because of what Flavia said—
It changed because of what I didn’t hear.

I learned that most limits are imagined.
And when we challenge the filter, we don’t just see more.
We become more.
So can you.

Origin Story

How did I get to where I am today? Honestly, I’ve always been a creator. I was developing business ideas since I was 11, riding my bike through the neighborhood delivering newspapers—already dreaming up better ways to connect with customers and improve my route. But back then, I didn’t know what to call it. I just knew I was always observing, always piecing things together in my mind.

My ah-ha moment came years later, when I started looking back at all the ideas I’d had over the course of my life—business concepts, insights, moments of clarity—and I realized something: none of them came out of nowhere.

Every single idea I had ever come up with had a pattern. It always started with an observation—what Steve Jobs called “collecting dots.” I’d have experience A, where I picked up a piece of knowledge. Then experience B, totally unrelated, where I picked up another. Later, sometimes years later, those dots would connect. Then came C. Then D. And eventually—boom—an idea would form.

And that’s when it hit me:
Ideas don’t just appear. They follow a law.

It’s the Law of Correspondence—one of the fundamental Laws of Reality. It says nothing comes from nothing. Before you can create “X,” you must have collected “A,” “B,” and “C.” There is no shortcut. You cannot skip steps. Just like AI couldn’t exist without computing logic, an idea can’t exist unless you’ve gathered the raw materials for it through observation and experience.

That realization changed everything for me.

It made me understand that ideation is not a mystery—it’s a process. A repeatable, teachable process. That’s what led me to found Think Different Nation—to coach others on how to become conscious creators by learning how to see, collect, and connect the dots that form their own original ideas.

Because once you understand how ideas are born, you can stop waiting for inspiration—and start creating it.

My Podcast

I am willing to travel

More than 100 miles

When it comes to payments

Everything is negotiable

Topics

creativethinking neurodivergentthinking innovation improving innovation and creativity ideation mindset creativity human capital business strategy design thinking open innovation neuro linguistic programming nlp

Best Story

Title: 94% Blind – The Night I Met Flavia

At 25, I was in Costa Rica—low confidence, acne, hiding in a corner of a dance bar, hoping not to be seen.
Then she walked in.

Not glowing, not floating—just magnetic. My brain panicked:
"Not for you."
"Out of your league."
"She probably doesn’t even speak English."

And then, she walked over.
Smiled. Said something in a calm, confident voice.

But my fear-filtered brain heard Spanish.
I replied, awkwardly:
“Lo siento… no hablo español.”

She smiled again and said,
“That’s okay. I’m speaking English.”

Wait—what?

She had been speaking English the entire time.
But I didn’t hear it—because I believed I wouldn’t.

That’s when I realized:
The brain doesn’t process reality.
It processes what it believes is possible.

We register only 6% of our environment—
Which means we’re 94% blind.
And that hidden 94%? That’s where the magic is.

The shift?
Once you know your mind filters reality to save energy—not to deceive—you can interrupt it.

Ask:
“What if I’m missing something right now?”
“What if what I need is in the part I’ve filtered out?”

That night didn’t change my life because of what Flavia said—
It changed because of what I didn’t hear.

I learned that most limits are imagined.
And when we challenge the filter, we don’t just see more.
We become more.
So can you.

Origin Story

How did I get to where I am today? Honestly, I’ve always been a creator. I was developing business ideas since I was 11, riding my bike through the neighborhood delivering newspapers—already dreaming up better ways to connect with customers and improve my route. But back then, I didn’t know what to call it. I just knew I was always observing, always piecing things together in my mind.

My ah-ha moment came years later, when I started looking back at all the ideas I’d had over the course of my life—business concepts, insights, moments of clarity—and I realized something: none of them came out of nowhere.

Every single idea I had ever come up with had a pattern. It always started with an observation—what Steve Jobs called “collecting dots.” I’d have experience A, where I picked up a piece of knowledge. Then experience B, totally unrelated, where I picked up another. Later, sometimes years later, those dots would connect. Then came C. Then D. And eventually—boom—an idea would form.

And that’s when it hit me:
Ideas don’t just appear. They follow a law.

It’s the Law of Correspondence—one of the fundamental Laws of Reality. It says nothing comes from nothing. Before you can create “X,” you must have collected “A,” “B,” and “C.” There is no shortcut. You cannot skip steps. Just like AI couldn’t exist without computing logic, an idea can’t exist unless you’ve gathered the raw materials for it through observation and experience.

That realization changed everything for me.

It made me understand that ideation is not a mystery—it’s a process. A repeatable, teachable process. That’s what led me to found Think Different Nation—to coach others on how to become conscious creators by learning how to see, collect, and connect the dots that form their own original ideas.

Because once you understand how ideas are born, you can stop waiting for inspiration—and start creating it.