Back to blogs
thoughtLeadership

The Cycle of Continuous Innovation

Also the cycle of continuously posting this everywhere

The Cycle of Continuous Innovation

In the November ‘22 edition of Business Brief, we did a thing.

  1. it is not uncommon to perceive innovation as the ’big bang’ introduction of high-tech solutions to hard problems or creating brand new industries

  2. most innovation is actually achieved through the incremental and continuous improvement of existing processes

  3. the big bang commonly occurs when either all opportunities to innovate have been exhausted or external factors, such as advances in technology or some fundamental shift (entropy) is introduced

  4. anyone can be an innovator.

If you haven’t got the actual mag, you can read the whole thingamewotsit online on either the LinkedIns or on Matt’s blog.

Nice.

Comment on the Twitter thread if you so wish.

Matt Thornton

By Matt Thornton

Matt’s biggest (and most irritating) asset is his attention to detail. Whether it’s spotting bugs in code or spotting grammatical errors in other people’s work, Matt will find it and tell you about it.

Usually with an obnoxious smirk on his face.

After a long spell at University honing his analytical skills, gaining a PhD in remote sensing and computer science, Matt has spent the last 15 or so years applying them in Guernsey.

Don’t interrupt him if he’s in the zone - usual signs are air drumming, fixated stare on random object and/or swearing prolifically - unexpected behaviour may will result.