Innovation as a Happy Accident

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A little known fact about innovation is that many breakthroughs have not been the result of genius, but “happy accidents” — those surprise moments when an answer revealed itself for no particular reason.

The discovery of penicillin, for example, was the result of Alexander Fleming noting the formation of mold on the side of petri dish left uncleaned overnight.

Vulcanized Rubber was discovered in 1839 when Charles Goodyear accidentally dropped a lump of the polymer substance he was experimenting with onto his wife’s cook stove.

More recently, 3M’s post-it was also the result of an accident in the lab. Breakthroughs aren’t always about invention, but the intervention required, by the aspiring innovator, to notice something new, unexpected, and intriguing.