Two timing innovation

Multiple  independent invention is surprisingly common — there have been many  research studies highlighting the pattern. Examples include the blast  furnace (invented independently in China, Europe and Africa) and the  crossbow (invented independently in China, Greece, Africa, northern  Canada, and the Baltic countries). And they reveal an important home  truth about how innovation actually happens. It’s not the Archimedes  moment, a flash of inspiration given by the Gods at bath time.  Instead it’s a process of hunting, of being open and aware of opportunities as  needs and means converge.The  idea of ‘closeness’ is key here — as things mature, knowledge  accumulates so we get to a tipping point where something is bound to happen somewhere. Like crystallisation the supersaturated liquid is  ready, it just needs the seed — a speck of dust or some other impurity  and the crystal starts to form.As this podcast explores...You can find a transcript hereIf you'd like to explore more innovation stories, or access a wide range of resources to help work with innovation, then please visit my website here.You can find a rich variety of cases, tools, videos, activities and other resources - as well as my innovation blog.Or subscribe to my YouTube channel here

Om Podcasten

Innovation doesn't just happen. It's not like the cartoons - a lightbulb flashes on above someone's head and that's it. No - it's a journey and we need to understand how best to prepare for that journey, whatever kind of value we are trying to create. This podcast is about some useful lessons we might take on board to help develop our capabilities.For more, see my website:https://johnbessant.org