Skip to content

The Experimenter Mindset

Phil McKinney
Phil McKinney
1 min read
Experimenter Mindset

Why do some innovators bounce back stronger from every setback?

In this episode, we dive into the fascinating story of a product demo that literally burst into flames in front of a potential investor - and how that spectacular failure led to three groundbreaking patents.

The key? Something called the experimenter mindset. It's a powerful approach used by leading innovators that completely transforms how we view outcomes. Instead of seeing things as successes or failures, experimenters view every result as valuable data pointing toward their next breakthrough.

This episode breaks down the five core characteristics that make up the experimenter's DNA and shows exactly how to develop each one. You'll see how real teams use simple tools like the three-column technique to extract powerful insights from every outcome, and how keeping a "friction log" can turn your most contentious meetings into breakthrough sessions.

Some key takeaways from the episode:

  • Why emotional detachment is crucial for innovation (and how to develop it)
  • The power of hypothesis-driven thinking in everyday situations
  • A simple documentation method that compounds learning over time
  • How pattern recognition transforms random data points into breakthrough insights
  • The iterative mindset that keeps you moving forward

The most valuable insight might be the distinction between experimental results and personal worth. As one engineer in our story discovered, separating these two can be the difference between quitting and breakthrough innovation.

Whether you're leading a team, building a product, or working on personal projects, this episode offers practical tools for transforming setbacks into stepping stones toward your next innovation.

Want to start applying these concepts right away? Grab a piece of paper and try the three-column technique we demonstrate in the episode. It's surprisingly simple but remarkably powerful at extracting valuable insights from any situation.

Check out the full episode to get the complete framework and see real examples of how teams are using these tools to drive innovation.

#Innovation #ExperimenterMindset #Leadership #ProductDevelopment #CreativeProblemSolving

To learn about the experimenter mindset, listen to this week's show: The Experimenter Mindset: How to Learn From Every Failure.

[irp posts="4392" name="Subscribe to Podcast"]

Studio SessionsPast ShowsExperimenter Mindset

Phil McKinney Twitter

Phil McKinney is an innovator, podcaster, author, and speaker. He is the retired CTO of HP. Phil's book, Beyond The Obvious, shares his expertise and lessons learned on innovation and creativity.


Related Posts

How to Tell a Good Decision From a Lucky One

An excellent decision and a lucky one leave the same evidence: a win. Tell them apart and you stop crediting luck as judgment. That's counterfactual thinking

It your decision good ... or just lucky,

How to Improve Your Weak Signal Judgment

Noticing a trend is easy and almost worthless. Predicting which one reshapes a market, and acting early, is where innovation pays.

How to improve your judgement on which weak signal to act on

How to Improve Your Second-Order Thinking Skills

The most expensive failures don't announce themselves. They start as weak signals somebody noticed once and explained away. Second-order thinking is how you stop being that somebody.

Second-order thinking