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The surprising habits of original thinkers

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    Seven years ago, a student came to me
    and asked me to invest in his company.
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    He said, "I'm working with three friends,
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    and we're going to try to disrupt
    an industry by selling stuff online."
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    And I said, "OK, you guys spent
    the whole summer on this, right?"
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    "No, we all took internships
    just in case it doesn't work out."
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    "All right, but you're going to
    go in full time once you graduate."
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    "Not exactly. We've all
    lined up backup jobs."
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    Six months go by,
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    it's the day before the company launches,
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    and there is still
    not a functioning website.
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    "You guys realize,
    the entire company is a website.
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    That's literally all it is."
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    So I obviously declined to invest.
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    And they ended up
    naming the company Warby Parker.
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    (Laughter)
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    They sell glasses online.
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    They were recently recognized
    as the world's most innovative company
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    and valued at over a billion dollars.
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    And now? My wife handles our investments.
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    Why was I so wrong?
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    To find out, I've been studying people
    that I come to call "originals."
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    Originals are nonconformists,
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    people who not only have new ideas
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    but take action to champion them.
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    They are people
    who stand out and speak up.
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    Originals drive creativity
    and change in the world.
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    They're the people you want to bet on.
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    And they look nothing like I expected.
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    I want to show you today
    three things I've learned
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    about recognizing originals
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    and becoming a little bit more like them.
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    So the first reason
    that I passed on Warby Parker
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    was they were really slow
    getting off the ground.
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    Now, you are all intimately familiar
    with the mind of a procrastinator.
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    Well, I have a confession for you.
    I'm the opposite. I'm a precrastinator.
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    Yes, that's an actual term.
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    You know that panic you feel
    a few hours before a big deadline
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    when you haven't done anything yet.
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    I just feel that
    a few months ahead of time.
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    (Laughter)
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    So this started early: when I was a kid,
    I took Nintendo games very seriously.
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    I would wake up at 5am,
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    start playing and not stop
    until I had mastered them.
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    Eventually it got so out of hand
    that a local newspaper came
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    and did a story on the dark side
    of Nintendo, starring me.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Since then, I have traded hair for teeth.
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    (Laughter)
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    But this served me well in college,
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    because I finished my senior thesis
    four months before the deadline.
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    And I was proud of that,
    until a few years ago.
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    I had a student named Jihae,
    who came to me and said,
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    "I have my most creative ideas
    when I'm procrastinating."
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    And I was like, "That's cute,
    where are the four papers you owe me?"
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    (Laughter)
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    No, she was one
    of our most creative students,
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    and as an organizational psychologist,
    this is the kind of idea that I test.
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    So I challenged her to get some data.
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    She goes into a bunch of companies.
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    She has people fill out surveys
    about how often they procrastinate.
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    Then she gets their bosses to rate
    how creative and innovative they are.
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    And sure enough,
    the precrastinators like me,
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    who rush in and do everything early
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    are rated as less creative
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    than people who procrastinate moderately.
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    So I want to know what happens
    to the chronic procrastinators.
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    She was like, "I don't know.
    They didn't fill out my survey."
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    (Laughter)
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    No, here are our results.
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    You actually do see that the people
    who wait until the last minute
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    are so busy goofing off
    that they don't have any new ideas.
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    And on the flip side,
    the people who race in
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    are in such a frenzy of anxiety that they
    don't have original thoughts either.
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    There's a sweet spot
    where originals seem to live.
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    Why is this?
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    Maybe original people
    just have bad work habits.
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    Maybe procrastinating
    does not cause creativity.
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    To find out, we designed some experiments.
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    We asked people
    to generate new business ideas,
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    and then we get independent readers
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    to evaluate how creative
    and useful they are.
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    And some of them are asked
    to do the task right away.
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    Others we randomly assign
    to procrastinate
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    by dangling Minesweeper in front of them
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    for either five or 10 minutes.
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    And sure enough,
    the moderate procrastinators
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    are 16 percent more creative
    than the other two groups.
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    Now, Minesweeper is awesome,
    but it's not the driver of the effect,
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    because if you play the game first
    before you learn about the task,
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    there's no creativity boost.
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    It's only when you're told that you're
    going to be working on this problem,
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    and then you start procrastinating,
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    but the task is still active
    in the back of your mind,
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    that you start to incubate.
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    Procrastination gives you time
    to consider divergent ideas,
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    to think in nonlinear ways,
    to make unexpected leaps.
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    So just as we were finishing
    these experiments,
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    I was starting to write
    a book about originals,
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    and I thought, "This is the perfect time
    to teach myself to procrastinate,
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    while writing a chapter
    on procrastination."
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    So I metaprocrastinated,
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    and like any self-respecting
    precrastinator,
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    I woke up early the next morning
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    and I made a to-do list
    with steps on how to procrastinate.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then I worked diligently
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    toward my goal of not making
    progress toward my goal.
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    I started writing
    the procrastination chapter,
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    and one day -- I was halfway through --
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    I literally put it away in mid-sentence
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    for months.
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    It was agony.
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    But when I came back to it,
    I had all sorts of new ideas.
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    As Aaron Sorkin put it,
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    "You call it procrastinating.
    I call it thinking."
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    And along the way I discovered
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    that a lot of great originals
    in history were procrastinators.
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    Take Leonardo da Vinci.
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    He toiled on and off for 16 years
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    on the Mona Lisa.
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    He felt like a failure.
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    He wrote as much in his journal.
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    But some of the diversions
    he took in optics
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    transformed the way that he modeled light
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    and made him into a much better painter.
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    What about Martin Luther King, Jr.?
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    The night before
    the biggest speech of his life,
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    the March on Washington,
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    he was up past 3am, rewriting it.
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    He's sitting in the audience
    waiting for his turn to go onstage,
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    and he is still scribbling notes
    and crossing out lines.
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    When he gets onstage, 11 minutes in,
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    he leaves his prepared remarks
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    to utter four words
    that changed the course of history:
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    "I have a dream."
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    That was not in the script.
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    By delaying the task of finalizing
    the speech until the very last minute,
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    he left himself open
    to the widest range of possible ideas.
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    And because the text wasn't set in stone,
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    he had freedom to improvise.
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    Procrastinating is a vice
    when it comes to productivity,
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    but it can be a virtue for creativity.
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    What you see with a lot of great originals
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    is that they are quick to start
    but they're slow to finish.
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    And this is what I missed
    with Warby Parker.
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    When they were dragging
    their heels for six months,
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    I looked at them and said,
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    "You know, a lot of other companies
    are starting to sell glasses online."
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    They missed the first-mover advantage.
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    But what I didn't realize was
    they were spending all that time
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    trying to figure out how to get people
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    to be comfortable ordering glasses online.
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    And it turns out the first-mover
    advantage is mostly a myth.
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    Look at a classic study
    of over 50 product categories,
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    comparing the first movers
    who created the market
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    with the improvers who introduced
    something different and better.
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    What you see is that the first movers
    had a failure rate of 47 percent,
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    compared with only 8 percent
    for the improvers.
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    Look at Facebook,
    waiting to build a social network
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    until after Myspace and Friendster.
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    Look at Google, waiting for years
    after Altavista and Yahoo.
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    It's much easier to improve
    on somebody else's idea
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    than it is to create
    something new from scratch.
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    So the lesson I learned is that
    to be original you don't have to be first.
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    You just have to be different and better.
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    But that wasn't the only reason
    I passed on Warby Parker.
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    They were also full of doubts.
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    They had backup plans lined up,
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    and that made me doubt
    that they had the courage to be original,
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    because I expected that originals
    would look something like this.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, on the surface,
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    a lot of original people look confident,
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    but behind the scenes,
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    they feel the same fear and doubt
    that the rest of us do.
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    They just manage it differently.
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    Let me show you: this is a depiction
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    of how the creative process
    works for most of us.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, in my research, I discovered
    there are two different kinds of doubt.
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    There's self-doubt and idea doubt.
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    Self-doubt is paralyzing.
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    It leads you to freeze.
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    But idea doubt is energizing.
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    It motivates you to test,
    to experiment, to refine,
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    just like MLK did.
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    And so the key to being original
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    is just a simple thing
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    of avoiding the leap
    from step three to step four.
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    Instead of saying, "I'm crap,"
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    you say, "The first few drafts
    are always crap,
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    and I'm just not there yet."
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    So how do you get there?
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    Well, there's a clue, it turns out,
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    in the Internet browser that you use.
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    We can predict your job performance
    and your commitment
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    just by knowing what web browser you use.
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    Now, some of you are not
    going to like the results of this study --
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    (Laughter)
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    But there is good evidence
    that Firefox and Chrome users
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    significantly outperform
    Internet Explorer and Safari users.
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    Yes.
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    (Applause)
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    They also stay in their jobs
    15 percent longer, by the way.
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    Why? It's not a technical advantage.
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    The four browser groups
    on average have similar typing speed
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    and they also have similar levels
    of computer knowledge.
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    It's about how you got the browser.
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    Because if you use
    Internet Explorer or Safari,
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    those came preinstalled on your computer,
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    and you accepted the default option
    that was handed to you.
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    If you wanted Firefox or Chrome,
    you had to doubt the default
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    and ask, is there
    a different option out there,
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    and then be a little resourceful
    and download a new browser.
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    So people hear about this study
    and they're like,
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    "Great, if I want to get better at my job,
    I just need to upgrade my browser?"
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    (Laughter)
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    No, it's about being the kind of person
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    who takes the initiative
    to doubt the default
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    and look for a better option.
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    And if you do that well,
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    you will open yourself up
    to the opposite of déjà vu.
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    There's a name for it.
    It's called vuja de.
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    (Laughter)
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    Vuja de is when you look at something
    you've seen many times before
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    and all of a sudden
    see it with fresh eyes.
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    It's a screenwriter
    who looks at a movie script
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    that can't get the green light
    for more than half a century.
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    In every past version,
    the main character has been an evil queen.
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    But Jennifer Lee starts to question
    whether that makes sense.
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    She rewrites the first act,
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    reinvents the villain as a tortured hero
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    and Frozen becomes
    the most successful animated movie ever.
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    So there's a simple message
    from this story.
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    When you feel doubt, don't let it go.
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    (Laughter)
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    What about fear?
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    Originals feel fear, too.
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    They're afraid of failing,
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    but what sets them apart
    from the rest of us
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    is that they're even more
    afraid of failing to try.
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    They know you can fail
    by starting a business that goes bankrupt
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    or by failing to start a business at all.
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    They know that in the long run,
    our biggest regrets are not our actions
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    but our inactions.
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    The things we wish we could redo,
    if you look at the science,
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    are the chances not taken.
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    Elon Musk told me recently,
    he didn't expect Tesla to succeed.
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    He was sure the first few SpaceX launches
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    would fail to make it to orbit,
    let alone get back,
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    but it was too important not to try.
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    And for so many of us,
    when we have an important idea,
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    we don't bother to try.
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    But I have some good news for you.
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    You are not going to get judged
    on your bad ideas.
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    A lot of people think they will.
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    If you look across industries
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    and ask people about their biggest idea,
    their most important suggestion,
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    85 percent of them stayed silent
    instead of speaking up.
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    They were afraid of embarrassing
    themselves, of looking stupid.
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    But guess what? Originals
    have lots and lots of bad ideas,
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    tons of them, in fact.
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    Take the guy who invented this.
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    Do you care that he came up
    with a talking doll so creepy
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    that it scared not only kids
    but adults, too?
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    No. You celebrate Thomas Edison
    for pioneering the light bulb.
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    (Laughter)
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    If you look across fields,
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    the greatest originals
    are the ones who fail the most,
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    because they're the ones who try the most.
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    Take classical composers,
    the best of the best.
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    Why do some of them get more pages
    in encyclopedias than others
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    and also have their compositions
    rerecorded more times?
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    One of the best predictors
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    is the sheer volume
    of compositions that they generate.
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    The more output you churn out,
    the more variety you get
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    and the better your chances
    of stumbling on something truly original.
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    Even the three icons of classical music --
    Bach, Beethoven, Mozart --
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    had to generate hundreds
    and hundreds of compositions
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    to come up with a much smaller
    number of masterpieces.
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    Now, you may be wondering,
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    how did this guy become great
    without doing a whole lot?
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    I don't know how Wagner pulled that off.
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    But for most of us,
    if we want to be more original,
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    we have to generate more ideas.
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    The Warby Parker founders, when they
    were trying to name their company,
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    they needed something sophisticated,
    unique, with no negative associations
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    to build a retail brand,
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    and they tested over 2,000 possibilities
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    before they finally put together
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    Warby and Parker.
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    So if you put all this together,
    what you see is that originals
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    are not that different
    from the rest of us.
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    They feel fear and doubt.
    They procrastinate.
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    They have bad ideas.
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    And sometimes, it's not in spite
    of those qualities but because of them
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    that they succeed.
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    So when you see those things,
    don't make the same mistake I did.
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    Don't write them off.
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    And when that's you,
    don't count yourself out either.
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    Know that being quick to start
    but slow to finish
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    can boost your creativity,
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    that you can motivate yourself
    by doubting your ideas
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    and embracing the fear of failing to try,
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    and that you need a lot of bad ideas
    in order to get a few good ones.
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    Look, being original is not easy,
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    but I have no doubt about this:
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    it's the best way
    to improve the world around us.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The surprising habits of original thinkers
Speaker:
Adam Grant
Description:

How do creative people come up with great ideas? Organizational psychologist Adam Grant studies "originals": thinkers who dream up new ideas and take action to put them into the world. In this talk, learn three unexpected habits of originals -- including embracing failure. "The greatest originals are the ones who fail the most, because they’re the ones who try the most," Grant says. "You need a lot of bad ideas in order to get a few good ones."

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:25

English subtitles

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