True Innovation Seldom Happens according to founder of TED
True Innovation Seldom Happens according to founder of TED
At least that is what Richard Saul Wurman, author of The Information Anxiety, published over 10 years ago has recently said. Read after my following response to his claims and see what Mike Brown published on January 17, 2012 about RSW's speech and Mike's own response
At least that is what Richard Saul Wurman, author of The Information Anxiety, published over 10 years ago has recently said. Read after my following response to his claims and see what Mike Brown published on January 17, 2012 about RSW's speech and Mike's own response
Though I was greatly impressed by Richard Saul Wurman's (ex-architec also) The Information Anxiety when I read it several years ago and mildly liked one of his most recent books I see he has done what he is bitching about.
He needs to read...
Rolf Smith wrote his book The Seven Levels of Change
among many others that have written about creative ideas or innovative ideas over the past few decades.
or watch
James Burke's two original BBC series shows
Connections (what Wurman is NOW talking about 30 years later)
followed by his second series
The Day the Earth Stood Still or Stopped (or something like that) where he discussed that NEW ORIGINAL IDEAS still do happen.
Here are the contents of MIKE BROWN's BRAINZOOMING ezine about RSW's speech
Here are the contents of MIKE BROWN's BRAINZOOMING ezine about RSW's speech
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Posted: 17 Jan 2012 02:50 AM PST
I saw Richard Saul Wurman, author of Information Anxiety and founder of TED, speak at the PCMA conference last week in San Diego. Among various topics, Richard Saul Wurman talked about how there is very little real innovation, defined as completely new ideas that have not existed previously. In fact, Wurman characterized most things that pass for innovation as simple improvements over what is already available. He pointed out that even the automobile wasn’t invented; it was aggregated from multiple other inventions, including the steam engine and a horse-drawn carriage.
Richard Saul Wurman identified five strategic thinking perspectives (and examples) typically underpinning new ideas:
Even though I don’t buy his relatively narrow definition of “innovation,” Wurman’s construct and examples reminded me of a very familiar exercise learned from Chuck Dymer: Trait Transformation.
One twist?
While we typically use Trait Transformation and multiple transforming attributes to increase randomness in new ideas, Wurman’s approach gets me thinking about using only one transformer to really push a single concept (i.e. subtracting things) for very focused, extreme creativity.
There’s plenty more to report from the conference, including probably another whole post of Richard Saul Wurman one liners. But we’ll save all that for another day - Mike Brown
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