Jeff Stine’s Post

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Championing radical innovation for a flourishing, abundant future.

Perhaps stating the obvious, *innovation* today isn't the same today as it was 100 years ago. There are a whole host of reasons for this, but perhaps the most salient is: 💡 For an innovation to survive, it has to solve a *new* problem satisfactorily, or an old problem *many times better* than the existing solution. Rarely do we stop to think about how this feature changes the ecosystem of innovation itself. Thankfully, though, we can derive insights from another dynamic system that shares these same features: evolution. More inside the latest #TheLongHorizon issue: https://lnkd.in/eUcF4KiJ

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Akshay Sharma

Product Strategy, Monetization and Pricing | Miro | McKinsey | Chicago Booth | IIT Delhi

5mo

Jeff Stine love the posts .. always fun to read and insightful. Tow thoughts that you sparked - 1/ Innovation needs to be radical to solve many big problems ‘in time’ .. like how we manage ecological changes and get survive as a species. 2/ At the same time, AI is disrupting the way of doing things in the knowledge work space for the first time ever - I expect much change and extinction in the roles many of us have been doing… and it happening at a much faster pace than before ! P

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