Innovation & Industry Disruption - Mavericks challenge established norms and rewrite industry rules, exemplified by Tesla's impact on the automotive industry [2] - Companies prioritizing efficiency over innovation risk irrelevance, as demonstrated by Kodak's failure to embrace digital cameras [11][12] - Fear of judgment prevents employees from sharing innovative ideas; 73% of employees withhold ideas due to fear [10] - Rule-breaking is correlated with breakthrough innovation; 18% of professionals who regularly broke rules were five times more likely to achieve breakthrough innovation [8] Maverick Traits - Vision is the ability to foresee future trends and technologies, like Nicola Tesla's early concepts of wireless communication [4] - Courage involves standing out from the crowd and challenging conventional wisdom, as Galileo did when he proposed the Earth revolved around the sun [5] - Initiative is taking bold steps and pushing boundaries, similar to Steve Jobs' introduction of the iPhone [5][6] - Commitment is persisting despite setbacks, illustrated by Elon Musk's perseverance with SpaceX despite multiple rocket launch failures [6][7] Practical Application - Maverick thinking is essential in today's rapidly changing world [15][16] - Encouraging maverick behavior involves asking questions and embracing discomfort [16][17] - There is no perfect timing for ideas; it's best to start discussing them when they are still imperfect [17][18]
Are you a Maverick? Why the Future Belongs to the Bold! | Aravind Krishna | TEDxDSATM