Creativity is the DNA of innovation, the virus of evolution, the antidote to automation
Creativity is the DNA of innovation, the virus of evolution, the antidote to automation

Similar Natasha Tsakos quotes:
Other Innovation Quotes :
- If you must walk in someone’s shadow make sure it’s your own
- I’ve long subscribed to the notion that technology is advancing much faster than our ability to understand its implications.
- Any conversation I have about innovation starts with the ultimate goal.
- Healthy debating enforces critical thinking principles – looking at things from the different angles, with increased perspective and less prejudgment.
- Innovation is born out of imagination and ambition
- The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, but expecting different results.
- Success doesn’t teach as many lessons as failure
- innovative ideas will be profitable only if they are linked to what buyers are willing to pay for.
- When a competitor starts copying your features, you can pretty much write them off completely, as it means they ran out of innovative ideas.
- You can’t solve a problem on the same level that it was created. You have to rise above it to the next level.
- The best way to predict the future is to create it.
- If you’re not failing every now and again, it’s a sign you’re not doing anything very innovative.
- Purpose driven technology will continue to flourish, whereas profit driven technology will either perish or destroy the world.
- I believe you have to be willing to be misunderstood if you’re going to innovate.
- Be bold in pursuing what others believe is unrealistic because this will achieve more than being bland and unimaginative.
- What is now proved was once only imagined.
- Most innovation involves doing the things we do every day a little bit better rather than creating something completely new and different.
- Employment deprives you of innovations
- 99 percent of success is built on failure.
- Throughout history, people with new ideas—who think differently and try to change things—have always been called troublemakers.