When I graduated college some 20 years ago, “cooking” meant reheating frozen meals or putting a frozen chicken breast from Walmart on a George Foreman grill. A few years after graduating I was making progress, but still clumsy. I wanted to make my wife a pasta with cream sauce, so I cooked pasta, then poured a few pints of half-and-half on top of it, applied heat, and waited for cream sauce to appear. It didn’t. Fast forward to today and I’m significantly better. A gaggle of fifth-graders were at the house this weekend and called my homemade lasagna, “fire.” 🔥 It prompted me to reflect on my journey from George Foreman to now and how those principles apply generally to growth.
All of these apply to whatever you want to grow in, whether it’s leadership generally, or any specific skill or hobby. Over time, with deliberate practice, you can get good at something and have fun doing it. What are you working on getting better at? Have you noticed any of these principles on your own journey? Kevin PS - Props to elementary school teachers! ❤️ I can do an overnight of fifth graders once a year; they’re doing that and more every day! A Quote Three Things1 - 🎵 Every Noise - This site renders all of the 6000+ music genres (using Spotify data) so you can scan through them. Click on any genre to hear an example. Search an artist at the top to see what genres of music they produce. Horror Punk Brasileiro? Yes. Dutch Trap? Sure. Christian Doom Metal? Uh, actually…yes. 2 - 🥾 The GoRuck Boot - I do a lot of rucking/walking and love these boots. They feel like walking on a cloud. I sometimes forget I have feet, even after seven miles, because I have zero pain sensation in my feet. I’ve got over 150 miles on the MACV-1s, but those are now out of stock in service of the next generation MACV-2, which I’ve linked here. Pair these with Darn Tough wool socks and you’re halfway to Elysium. 3 - ❄️ Frostweeds make Frost Flowers - Last year I used the Seek app on my phone to identify every plant I could find around my house, and one of them was something called a Frostweed. I filed that away until a few weeks ago when I mistakenly thought all sorts of paper trash had been blown into the woods outside my window. When I looked closer they were "frost flowers" - something only a few plants can produce, and only on rare occasions. When the air temperature is freezing and the ground is moist but not yet frozen, you get these delicate and beautiful ice formations. Below is an example from my house. Deeper Dive on Innovation Through Idea EvolutionToday’s idea is that innovation comes from ideas having sex. This is important because innovation is needed to solve complex problems. And solving complex issues is how we create impact, demonstrate value, and achieve our visions. Origin of the ideaI first heard this provocative phrase several years ago in Matt Ridley’s book, “How Innovation Works,” and the language stuck with me ever since. Innovation happens, as I put it a decade ago, when ideas have sex. It occurs where people meet and exchange goods, services and thoughts. - Matt Ridley from “How Innovation Works” I’m currently working on a complex problem. I was trying to figure out why the “answer” won’t just pop out of my brain and onto the whiteboard. It feels like the biggest leaps forward come from talking to other people, but people aren’t always around for me to debate with. As I went for a walk to reflect on what might be blocking my brain from letting those ideas come forth on their own, the Matt Ridley quote above resurfaced. Maybe what felt like my problem isn’t my problem, it’s just a fundamental law of how innovation and complexity work. Ideas having sex and evolutionary fitnessWhen two people with two ideas come together, those ideas can form a third idea that’s an evolution of the original two. This is just like in real life where parents produce offspring that’s a combination of their DNA. The offspring then gets pressure from its external environment and tries to survive. If it does, it goes on to produce another generation of offspring. You have to start with your single cell organism, get to fish, and then frogs, before you get a dinosaur. Ideas, like organisms, have to go through multiple generations in order to evolve into sufficient complexity to solve whatever problem is at hand. If your problem requires a “dinosaur” solution, then you better get your idea evolution journey started! This is important because it connects back to my original problem. I felt like I needed to get the solution to a complex problem to pop out of my head, but that was like aiming for divine creation. That’s not how innovation works! You have to evolve your ideas there. The more complex your problem, the more complex of a solution it needs, and the more cycles of evolution your ideas need to go through. Two frogs can’t pop out a T-Rex. Think about Albert Einstein, the classic image (at least in America) of high intelligence. If anyone could pop a solution to a complex problem out of his head, it’s him. But even Albert Einstein went through years and years of chewing through the problem before eventually proposing his theory of general relativity. He published papers. He went to conferences. He wrote letters to other scientists. All of this was Einstein letting his ideas have sex so they could evolve into his final theory. “Few ideas work on the first try. Iteration is key to innovation.” - Sebastian Thrun, quoted in “Cracking Complexity” by David Komlos As a more tangible example, look at this video (and this longer one) showing three decades of evolution of Boston Dynamics robots. The robots of today aren’t here because one person wrote on a whiteboard for thirty years before ultimately “figuring out” their current robot, Atlas. Instead, many people over many years iterated and tested their ideas in order to get Atlas created. If rocks is your preferred analogySteve Jobs has a semi-famous analogy about polishing rocks that speaks to this concept (video below). Here he’s saying that your ideas are rocks, and you put them in a tumbler with other rocks to tumble and grate on one another. What you get at the end are beautiful polished stones that started as common yard rocks. It’s the same central idea that exposing your ideas to other ideas forms even better ideas. Analogs to times in historyThis concept of innovation coming from ideas having sex has shown up throughout world history, too. Two main examples would be the Renaissance period in 1500s Florence, and Silicon Valley in the early 2000s, although there are many others we could choose from. Here you’ve got lots of really smart people having a lot of interactions in a concentrated geographic area. They try things and fail. So they try new things. They’re drawing, they’re sharing, they’re writing. Companies go under and those people inter-mix in new companies. Ideas are having sex left and right. They’re evolving into highly productive and impactful results in art, science, and business. So fun! While none of us can re-create things on this scale, we can certainly set the tone for a little “Florence in the 1500s” at work. How to “set the mood” for uh…you knowSo how might we go about creating a little of this magic for ourselves and our teams? I’ll share four ideas below: Hiring, Psychological Safety, Frequent Interactions, and Writing. Hiring Many books have been written on this topic, and I’ll share more in this newsletter over time. Psychological Safety Whether your team innovates and how fast your team innovates is up to you. You regulate the speed of discovery and the velocity of information. You accelerate problem-solving. You create a climate of discipline and agility. You engender the patterns and prevailing norms that allow the team to manage itself. - “The 4 Stages of Psychological Safety” by Timothy R. Clark You need to decrease social friction and increase intellectual friction. You need your team comfortable talking without fear of reprisal or punishment. Frequent Interactions So you need to set up high frequency interactions of high quality. You need focus. If everyone is working on 10 things, the rate of evolution will be very slow. Be intentional about the goal of these interactions. A status meeting is not an idea evolution meeting. If you’re meeting with your team and you only talk about the progress of the metrics or the schedule, that’s not idea evolution. You need to be debating. You need to be sparring on the problem at hand. This type of meeting, done well, is super fun and engaging. Make sure you’re having those types of meetings frequently! Writing First, it forces you to clarify your own thoughts. Writing is where you realize your own inconsistencies or discover the important kernel of the idea. Second, it travels well. Writing is easily transmitted and retains all of it’s context. People can refer back to your writing and read it multiple times. Get your ideas on paper (or a digital equivalent) to clarify your own thoughts and ensure the ideas is transmissible. Bringing it all togetherToday’s idea is that innovation comes from ideas having sex. We need this to solve complex problems. Solving complex issues is how we create impact, demonstrate value, and achieve our visions. The mechanism for how this works is that ideas merge together to form even better ideas. Going through this cycle many times is how to evolve your ideas into something that’s fit to solve the problem you’re facing. You can set up your environment to do this well if you hire the right people, operate in a psychologically safe environment, with high frequency interactions, where ideas are written down. Doing all of this sets up a really creative environment, like Renaissance Italy or Silicon Valley. Call to action this weekShare! What’s bubbling in the back of your mind? Leaving an idea in your brain won’t evolve it very quickly. Expose that idea to others. Let their ideas similarly influence you. We’re not trying to be right, we’re trying to get it right - and we’ll do that by letting our ideas evolve. Get out there and let your ideas procreate! Kevin |