Success: the hallowed anomaly
Published 20080320 by Olivier Blanchard | E-mail this post
Excellent little opinion about success (among other things) over at
Seen Creative:
"You don't have the skeleton key. There are no rules, there are no templates, there are no secret ingredients. Everything is unique and everything is dependent on its own circumstance. You can write all the books, magazine articles, or blog posts you want, but someone will always be able to prove the exception. Something will always contradict.
One reason these businesses are successful is probably because their founders didn't take advice from stupid articles in Wired, or try to ride the latest meme sweeping the blogosphere. They understood that every situation is unique, and they needed to approach it as such. What's right is what works, not what previously worked."
Right. In case you didn't already know it, cookie-cutter solutions don't generate true success. Companies that stifle innovation, rule-breaking, and re-imagining doom themselves to being indistinguishable from their competitors... or worse yet, barely relevant in increasingly competitive markets.
Don't ever underestimate the role that visionary leadership plays in a company's propensity to be a game changer (and by default a culture changer). If a company's leadership doesn't have a healthy mix of ambitious, obsessive and a clear vision, what is driving it, exactly? Where is it going? How will it get there?
If you haven't already added
Seen to yout blogroll, now might be a good time to correct that frightening oversight.
Have a great Thursday, everyone. :)
photo by Christopher Wray-McCann
Labels: apple, innovation, rant, solutions, success
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