"Innovation is driven by questions that are original, bold, counterintuitive, and perceptive... Coming up with the right question, the one that casts a familiar challenge in a new light, is an art and science in itself. It demands that the questioner be able to look at existing reality from multiple viewpoints, including, perhaps most importantly, that of the' naive outsider'"-Warren Burger author of Glimmer
As you know, this blog is all about reading, pausing to think, and asking questions. This quote is very informative on how to ask the right question.
To break it apart: it has to
1 to be original, bold, counterintuitive, and perceptive
2 to cast a new light on a familiar challenge
3 to question existing reality
4 consider multiple viewpoints
5 bring the freshness of an naive outsider
Do you need all of these? Probably not all but most would make it great. I can see at least three out of five criteria.
Today's question is:
"How do you know you are asking the innovative questions?"
As you know, this blog is all about reading, pausing to think, and asking questions. This quote is very informative on how to ask the right question.
To break it apart: it has to
1 to be original, bold, counterintuitive, and perceptive
2 to cast a new light on a familiar challenge
3 to question existing reality
4 consider multiple viewpoints
5 bring the freshness of an naive outsider
Do you need all of these? Probably not all but most would make it great. I can see at least three out of five criteria.
Today's question is:
"How do you know you are asking the innovative questions?"
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