Overcoming Inventoritis: The Silent Killer of Innovation
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.46 (642 Votes) |
Asin | : | B00243FRGI |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 422 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-08-28 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Be wary of taking a lead from the great scientist and inventor Nikola Tesla who unfortunately suffered from inventoritis and died lonely and broke.People with untreated inventoritis have an amazing ability to disrupt sound marketing processes, often impacting their career opportunities and any chance of venture success. It's a must read for any inventor.". Overcoming Inventoritis, a largely psychological disorder, is important to anyone involved in the innovation process interested in obtaining better returns from resources applied to innovation. I've learned over time that getting inventions to the marketplace is at least as important as the product itself. People and companies that effectively deal with inventoritis greatly improve the odds of enjoying a positive financial experience from their efforts. It was much harder to get people to acce
Not much useful here First the guy never really defines Inventoritis. I guess you can kind of figure it out by reading the book, but it's really left up to the reader to define it in their own minds. Second, the examples he gives seem to contradict themselves. In one case an inventor is portrayed as being tenaciousness and in another example an inventor exhibits the same qualities and he's portrayed as having inventoritis. I did learn a bit more than . Bruce Wolff said Will your product succeed? Read this book!. A terrific new insight into why new products / inventions succeed or fail. Roosen and Nakagawa introduce a new measure of product development spending priorities and back it up with several historical and modern examples tying these priorities to the effect on real-life products - and companies."Overcoming Inventoritis" goes beyond Clayton Christensen's concept of Disruptive Technology in "The Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionar. Dont love your Baby Too Much Jim Estill I read a great book by Tatsuya Nakagawa and Peter Paul Roosen called "Overcoming Inventoritis: The Silent Killer of Innovation". When Tatsuya first sent me the book, I instantly thought - SYNNEX - distribution - this must be a book on how to turn your inventory faster. Having the right inventory and turning it fast is key to any well run distributor.But the book is about Inventors or Creativity. The gist of the thesis is all organ