This is a summary of the podcast “Think Like a Rocket
Scientist” from The Innovation Show, 2021 with Aidan McCullen as host and Ozan
Varol as guest. Mr. Varol is a speaker, author and former rocket scientist, who
brings insights to the episode from his book “Think like a rocket scientist:
Simple strategies for giant leaps in work and life.” He aims for people to
boost their innovation and creativity so
that they can take leaps in their personal life, career or business.
The main take aways from his talk are as follows: stay
curious and take time for play to boost creativity, shed your old skin to
interrupt the power of the status quo, use the first principles thinking to get
back to fundamentals, look out for invisible rules that limit your thinking,
welcome uncertainty despite the fear, and value questions more than answers
The most innovative thinkers hold on to their curiosity as
adults, retaining the ability to think beyond the status. He says just like
both work and play are important, deliberate practice has its place which helps
people refine a skill and become an expert but deliberate play nurtures
creativity and helps people find new ways forward. When we take small breaks
during the day, we allow innovative insights to come. Varol calls this the
“airplane mode” and even budgets time for it during the day.
Taking the example of a snake that sheds its skin, Varol
says that we must let go of what’ no longer serving us to be able to do the
next thing. Chicago restaurant owner Alinea understood that restaurants
struggle to survive their own success. In their most profitable year to date,
they chose to rebuild the restaurant from scratch. The existing skill base and
credentials did not go to waste.
“The first principles” thinking is a way of returning to
fundamentals especially when discovering new way to execute the original
vision. Looking out for invisible rules that limit one’s thinking. These are
the one’s that persist past their usefulness. Questioning why we are doing what
we are doing can yield productive insights. He asks to welcome uncertainty
despite the fear and adds that when certainty ends, progress begins. Insisting
on certainty before we make a move will keep you mired in status quo. The same
goes for companies.
We are often accustomed to spotting the right answer or
solution and spend a lot of energy in trying to refine it from our environment
and sources. Instead, he suggests to ask questions because they have a lot of
value. The simple act of asking a question can change a problem and reveal
previously hidden answers. The development of 2003 Mars Rovers started with
someone asking why not send two rovers instead of one? That transformed the
mission and led to its enormous success.
Ozan Varol is a professor of law at Lewis and Clark Law
school and is the author of “Think like a Rocket scientist: Simple strategies
for Giant Leaps in Work and Life.”
Reference to summarizing software: https://booksonsoftware.com/text
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