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Posted: 2025-05-07 16:59:30 UTC

This article contains some claims that remain unverified. While much of the content may be accurate, exercise care when relying on this information.
This article contains some claims that remain unverified. While much of the content may be accurate, exercise care when relying on this information.
Status
Last Updated
2025-05-07 17:00:01 UTC
Verified By
Rollup News
A Wharton professor's analysis of over 100 years of breakthrough ideas reveals that successful innovation involves managing risks, strategic procrastination, and learning from others' mistakes, rather than being the first mover or a big risk-taker.
Risk-takers rarely succeed.
First movers usually fail.
Strategic procrastination can refine ideas.
Successful innovators manage risks.
Learning from others' mistakes is advantageous.
Belief in the "eureka moment" myth.
Thinking instincts are correct about which ideas will succeed.
Being too fast and bad instead of good.
Trusting your gut instead of researching.