Tag: innovation (Page 2 of 2)

The “slow hunch” theory of good ideas

Everyone knows the story of Archimedes, the legendary Greek mathematician and scientist. One day, Archimedes was sitting in his bathtub, mulling over a problem given to him by the king: he was tasked with figuring out whether a crown was made completely of pure gold, or if it was partially composed of a cheaper metal. While moving around in the water, Archimedes noticed that the amount of water displaced was proportional to the weight of the object immersed in the fluid — it was this observation that fueled his moment of insight. “Eureka” — I have found it! — he is said to have cried, while he ran naked through the streets of Syracuse, possessed by epiphanic euphoria.

However, is this true? Do good ideas come as brilliant flashes of insight, or do they take another form? Steven Johnson has spent his lifetime researching this problem of idea generation and innovation, and opposes this claim. In his TED talk here (and his book), he explains that good ideas do not come as epiphanies, but rather arrive slowly and through a long process of hypothesis testing.

Continue reading

Sam Hinkie’s approach to the NBA

I recently got the chance to read through Sam Hinkie’s Philadelphia 76ers resignation letter in full. For those of you unfamiliar with Sam Hinkie and his time in the NBA, Sam Hinkie was the former General Manager and President of Basketball Operations of the Philadelphia 76ers, rather infamous for his contrarian approaches to managing a basketball team, an approach that was undoubtedly influenced by his background in management consulting and finance.

After embarking on a multi-year quest of stockpiling young players and orchestrating a variety of other non-traditional basketball moves, Hinkie suddenly resigned from his position. In a leaked resignation letter, he revealed the motivating theories and ideas that drove his decision-making process — I’ve included a few of the more noteworthy quotes and ideas from the letter, and have also added my own thoughts and reactions.

Continue reading

Brilliance

What is brilliance?

If you asked last Tuesday, I might have told you that Roger Federer’s movement on the tennis court and his arc-of-destruction, liquid whip of a forehand is brilliant. If you asked me last Thursday, I might have remarked that Kyrie Irving’s career-high 57 point game against the Spurs was brilliant. I might also argue that Alexander the Great’s tactical acumen in the raging heat of battle was brilliant.

The common thread is that these people make super-human tasks seem easy and fluid. It is in these spontaneous performances that we find “brilliance.” As a society, we worship the brilliant. The brilliant are revered as god-like figures, blessed with power and knowledge and understanding that mere mortals can not comprehend — Beethoven’s compositions, Tesla’s flashes of innovation, Jobs’ visionary creations all epitomize “brilliance.”

It is all too easy to attribute these superhuman efforts and endeavors to innate ability or God-given talent, but know that behind the veil of effortless creation, a story of tireless toil and sacrifice lies obfuscated. As outside observers, we will never see the pain and suffering or the hours of deliberate practice these figures poured into their craft.

Know this the next time you witness “brilliance.” Know that you too can achieve remarkable things, but only if you are willing to sacrifice blood, toil, tears and sweat to scale these heights.

Newer posts »

© 2024

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑