I to N of Startup Innovation How to Build an Innovation Practice |
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Author:
| Nayani, Umran |
ISBN: | 979-8-7164-1147-0 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2021 |
Publisher: | Independently Published
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $14.77 |
Book Description:
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Innovation in a hyperconnected reality. We look into how businesses of all sizes and sectors may integrate innovation into their systems sustainably and effectively. This book is written to assist you in comprehending how to execute innovation inside the framework of your startup. I feel obligated to warn you that most of what I'm about to share is pretty fundamental and applicable. Think about the mechanisms that lead to new ideas. How does one...
More DescriptionInnovation in a hyperconnected reality. We look into how businesses of all sizes and sectors may integrate innovation into their systems sustainably and effectively.
This book is written to assist you in comprehending how to execute innovation inside the framework of your startup.
I feel obligated to warn you that most of what I'm about to share is pretty fundamental and applicable. Think about the mechanisms that lead to new ideas.
How does one even begin to tackle such a mammoth subject? First, I'd want to ask a simple question: do you think that every truly groundbreaking innovation has already been made? Almost nobody here would agree with that.
To illustrate, let's say I had to summarize how I see our interactions playing out. Our daily actions form the culture of our organizations, which stifles innovation and stops it from becoming a process or a sustainable way of doing business.
Our focus will be there.
What would you say if I asked you to explain the extraordinary growth of this innovation fuel in a single statement?
What would that term be, and what if it held the key to our progress over the next two hundred years?
How do we approach these problems? With climate change, the threat of pandemics, and increasingly intricate supply chains?
There is one overarching idea that links all of these problems together, and that is the idea of "Connections."
Connectivity is something I want to highlight as a source of creativity, and we've built and will continue to make; I'll provide some numbers in a minute.
It inspires many of us to approach innovation with a more scientific and rigorous mindset, making it the fuel that drives innovation.
Over the past sixty years, connectedness has risen rapidly, not just between people and computers or even between devices, as is evident when discussing the Internet of Things and the Internet of everything.
We'll look into why this method of communication fosters such a fertile ground for creativity. Let's put some numbers on the table first.
There are 10 billion user computers, up from just 1,000 in 1960. There have been many iterations of computers and other gadgets since then.
We will soon look at how smartphones, tablets, and even wearables have rethought the concept of a computer.
As a result, the average number of devices per user has climbed by 10.
Because of this, these gadgets will eventually be integrated into our food supply and pharmaceuticals and can even be worn or inhaled.
What does this world of interdependence look like? The 20th century is illustrative. We repeatedly hit this barrier when we tried to move forward into the future. The road from here to there was not a straight one.
Our ability to communicate and collaborate spans several generations of technological advancements.
Your mom and grandma appear out of nowhere, blasting into the future on a tablet or smartphone.
This results from technological advancements that make their usage so simple, cheap, and commonplace that there is no longer any rationale for avoiding it. Adding value is the ultimate goal of innovation.