The Jenga Theory of Creativity

I think I actually made yesterday’s post on simplicity too complex. Here’s another try. Earlier this week I edited two different papers for journals. My main contribution was that I cut 2,000 words out of each. I also wrote about 400 words in each, but it was the cutting that helped the papers. This reminds […]

How to Make Things Look Simple

Here’s a story I’ve told a couple of times now: One of the best live shows that I saw during my university days was Beat Happening and Girl Trouble. All of us were a long way from home in Washington when I saw them in New Jersey. While Beat Happening was playing what I thought […]

Ten Tensions in Innovation – Revised

The single most important management skill to develop is a tolerance for ambiguity. Why? Because we often must manage objectives that are contradictory. For example, Firms that are successful at innovation are able to simultaneously come up with ideas that allow them to take advantage of what they’re really good at (exploitation) while also being […]

Life’s What You Make It

Well, we’re all getting older. What do you make of it? I ran across an interesting post by Ben Casnocha, which referenced an article by Benjamin Schwarz which includes this comment on John Updike: Above all, and most poignantly, this collection highlights Updike’s evaluation of the slackening of his own mental and athletic prowess… A […]

Should You Be Out on Your Own, or Part of the Herd?

Hugh MacLeod’s great daily newsletter (which you should subscribe to here) had this cartoon today: Don’t try to stand out from the crowd, avoid crowds altogether. In the commentary, he acknowledges that this might not align with the fantastic work that Mark Earls has been doing over the past few years. The basic point that […]

A Thanksgiving Innovation Reflection

As people in the US get ready for Thanksgiving weekend, I was reminded of the story about Joseph Heller told by Kurt Vonnegut in the New Yorker. Bob Sutton has a terrific post on this, which I encourage you to read. Here is the poem: Joe Heller True story, Word of Honor: Joseph Heller, an […]

The Most Important Innovation of All Time

What is the most important innovation ever? There are plenty of candidates. Fire, the telegraph, electricity, and the internet would all have to be candidates. There’s another one though, that has had an enormous impact on every single one of us. And surprisingly, it’s not a whiz-bang piece of technology. It’s a simple process innovation. […]

How to Steal Like An Innovator

I’ve been obsessed with this video for the past couple of days: The song is Nouvelle Vague covering Dance With Me by Lords of the New Church. It’s a great cover. The video is an even more inspired piece. Youtube user Luakabopper took the song and put it over this amazing dance sequence from Bande […]

Get Your Process Right to Innovate Successfully

What wins in innovation, great ideas or great process? Ideally, you’ll have both. But I suspect that if it’s either/or, process wins. There is an interesting example from the world of chess in Michael Nielsen’s fantastic new book Reinventing Discovery: The New Era of Networked Science. The book discusses how our improved ability to network […]

Innovation Obstacle: Social Habits

For some insight into another common innovation obstacle, consider this quote from John Maynard Keynes: Worldly wisdom teaches that it is better for reputation to fail conventionally then to succeed unconventionally. Because it’s pithy and quotable, it might be easy to dismiss – and just as an aside, why aren’t modern-day economists as good with […]

You Can’t Know Everything About Everything

I had a striking reminder of my ignorance on Sunday. I’m currently in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico to give the keynote at a conference tomorrow. I arrived a few days early to get acclimated, and on Sunday, my hosts took me around town, including a visit to the new Museo de la Revolucion en la Frontera. […]

Learning From Failure

What’s the biggest new product launch failure ever? The biggest I’ve seen was New Coke, but the example that often springs to mind is the Ford Edsel. Ford put a lot of effort into the Edsel. They had lagged behind GM for a few years, and the Edsel was supposed to put them back in […]