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Innovation

These essays on innovation cover a wide range of topics, from the basics of innovation to detailed case studies and examples. Each essay is designed to give readers an understanding of the principles that drive innovation while providing practical advice on creating successful innovations. Through these essays, I aim to help readers better understand the process of innovation and use it more effectively in their own lives.

How To Think for Yourself When Everyone Disagrees With You

When neuroscientists scanned the brains of people going along with a group, they expected to find lying. What they found instead was something far stranger. The group wasn't changing people's answers. It was changing what they actually saw. We'll get to that study in

Protect Your Independent Thinking When Everyone Disagrees

How to Beat Decision Fatigue

A nurse in Pennsylvania had been on her feet for twelve hours. She was supposed to go home, but the unit was short-staffed, so she stayed. During that overtime, a patient was diagnosed with cancer and needed two chemotherapy doses. She administered the first, placed the second in a drawer,

How to Beat Decision Fatigue

How to Stop Overthinking Your Decisions

You've got a decision you've been putting off. Maybe it's a career move. An investment. A difficult conversation you keep rehearsing in your head but never starting. You tell yourself you need more information. More data. More time to think. But you're

How to Stop Overthinking Your Decisions

Mindjacking: When Your Opinions Aren't Yours

You've built a toolkit over the last several episodes. Logical reasoning. Causal thinking. Mental models. Serious intellectual firepower. Now the uncomfortable question: When's the last time you actually used it to make a decision? Not a decision you think you made. One where you evaluated the

Mindjacking When your Opinions are Not Yours

CES 2026: Battle of the AI Robots

This week, I'm in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the annual Consumer Electronics Show 2026. If you've been following me for long, you know I do this every year. This is 20-plus years I've been coming to the Consumer Electronics Show. Normally, I don'

CES 2026 - Battle of the AI Robots

5 Questions That Spot Breakthroughs Before They Happen

In October 1903, The New York Times published an editorial mocking the idea of human flight, stating that a successful flying machine might take "from one to ten million years" to develop through the efforts of mathematicians and engineers. Eight weeks later, on December 17, 1903, the Wright

5 Questions That Can Spot Breakthrough Innovations Before They Happen

I Evaluated Over 30,000 Innovation Ideas at HP: Here's Why Most Failed

Your best innovation ideas aren't losing to bad ideas – they're losing to exhaustion. I know that sounds counterintuitive. After 30 years of making billion-dollar innovation decisions at HP and CableLabs, I thought I understood why good ideas failed. Market timing. Technical challenges. Resource constraints. Sometimes that

I Evaluated over 30000 Innovation Ideas at HP

How To Master Lateral Thinking Skills

A software engineer grabbed a random word from a dictionary – "beehive" – and within hours designed an algorithm that saved his company millions. While his colleagues were working harder, he was thinking differently. This breakthrough didn't come from luck. It came from lateral thinking – a systematic approach

How To Master Lateral Thinking Skills

The Thinking Hack That Built Billion-Dollar Companies

While competitors think harder, start thinking laterally—the systematic method for finding breakthrough innovations hiding in plain sight.

The Thinking Hack That Built Billion-Dollar Companies

Why 'Fail Fast' Innovation Advice Is Wrong

The most popular piece of innovation advice in Silicon Valley is wrong—and it's killing great ideas before they have a chance to succeed. I can prove it with a story about a glass of water that sat perfectly still while a car bounced beneath it. My name

Why Fail Fast Innovation Advice is Wrong