You've experienced it firsthand, innovation is slowing down (and yes, it's quite disappointing!).
Do you feel compelled to get a new smartphone, TV, or just about anything else...or do you already basically have the latest and greatest technology, even if it's a couple of years old now?
But imagine, if something great and new did come out...we'd all be dancing in the streets and eager to buy.
That's right, innovation is not what it was...according to the Wall Street Journal, there is "An Innovation Slowdown At The Tech Giants."
The question is why is this happening?
No, the tech companies are not copying Washington politics (sleepy, sleepy...)!
But instead, we may have become our own worst enemies to our ability to innovate anew.
The New York Times today explains that our minds have a toggle switch between being focused on a task and being free to let your mind wonder and innovate.
You can't do both at the same time, no you can't.
And these days, we have so flooded ourselves with information overload with everything from 24/7 work and "big data," email/texting, social media, and thousands of cable stations and billions of YouTube videos, and more that we are forever engaged in the what's now, and are not allowing ourselves to rest, recuperate, and think about the potential for what's new.
If we want more from the future (innovation, creative problem solving, and sound decision making), then we need to allow some space for our minds to restore itself.
Whether that means daily downtimes, weekly walks in the park, monthly mediations, or semiannual vacations...we need to stop the diminishing returns of constant work and information arousal, and take a little mind breather.
Instead of chugging along our insane nonstop routines of endless activities and firehose information engagement, we will do ourselves and our children and grandchildren a great service by pulling the train over for some rest and relaxation...and only then will real innovation begin again. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Why Innovation Is On The Decline