Clay showed the effect in all sorts of industries, not just tech And yes, the innovation has no innate right to come into full bloom. The ironic part is when the innovation starts in-house, gets stymied and breaks out somewhere else (startup or competitor) and proceeds to kill the company that foste
It makes a great case -backed by data - for the argument that industry leaders are slow to adopt innovations even when they arise from within. Short form: the margins from cash cows get all the attention and investment to the detriment of the next gen It’s an oft-repeated story in high tech That sai
Daniel Roth was producing beautiful Breguets Jean-Claude Biver was directing the same at Blancpain ….and George Daniels was perfecting his co-axial escapement and working hard to get Omega to take it Probably more Does it suggest that a period of bloom followed a period of stress? Or just that those