How to Keep Your Most Valuable Ideas from Going Extinct (with a Doomsday Vault)

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How do you keep your most valuable ideas from going extinct?

The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is located 800 miles north of the Arctic Circle on a Norwegian island called Spitsbergen.

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In 2008, it opened its doors to store seed samples from around the world.

Its purpose is to ensure global food security at a time when world events are uncertain

The seed samples include the most vital food sources: wheat, rice, mung beans, chickpeas, and 1,076,977 other seed deposits.

The seed vault, more commonly known as the “Doomsday Vault,” can store up to 4.5 million samples from around the world.

It holds redundant samples of seeds in case a global-scale crop disaster, war, or other natural disaster occurs.

While there hasn’t been a need to use the seed vault yet, it’s good to know it exists.

Storing seeds from around the world in this secure Doomsday Vault is a smart idea.

It’s also a smart idea for B2B business owners and consultants to store their ideas in a “doomsday vault”

That’s because a vault will safeguard fleeting ideas for future writing projects.

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You can store your ideas in a vault like the Evernote app or in a computer folder.

You’ll have peace of mind that your stored ideas are at your fingertips at the precise moment you need them . . .

Protecting you from writer’s block and deadlines.

Writing tipsThomas Clifford