Innovation Quotes
Discover the best quotes about Innovation. This collection showcases wisdom and insights on Innovation from various authors and personalities.
Employment deprives you of innovations
The same styles you used earlier may become monotonous over time. You want to remain relevant, so you got to change that style. Reinvent yourself always: You must create a new you
Keep to active learning. You must learn, research and be so passionate about new ways and methods of doing things to be and remain relevant.
The same styles you used earlier may become monotonous over time. You want to remain relevant, so you got to change that style.
Innovation is finding the door of opportunity and revealing its beauty.
Use your passion to create a job.
If you must walk in someone's shadow make sure it's your own
The rude beginnings of every art acquire a greater celebrity than the art in perfection; he who first played the fiddle was looked upon as a demigod.
The vitality of a new movement in art or letters can be pretty accurately gauged by the fury it arouses.
We have entered, almost without noticing, an age of exploration and discovery unparalleled since the Renaissance.
Let no one say that I have said nothing new; the arrangement of the subject is new.
Discovery follows discovery, each both raising and answering questions, each ending a long search, and each providing the new instruments for a new search.
The new always carries with it the sense of violation, of sacrilege. What is dead is sacred; what is new, that is, different, is evil, dangerous, or subversive.
Great scientific discoveries have been made by men seeking to verify quite erroneous theories about the nature of things.
We are more ready to try the untried when what we do is inconsequential. Hence the remarkable fact that many inventions had their birth as toys.
One doesn't discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.
Inventors and men of genius have almost always been regarded as fools at the beginning (and very often at the end) of their careers.
We ought not to be over-anxious to encourage innovation in cases of doubtful improvement, for an old system must ever have two advantages over a new one; it is established, and it is understood.
Who in Europe could have thought of the disappearing bed, a bed during the night, a handsome wardrobe during the day? Where else [than in the United States] could the rocking chair have been invented, in which a man could move and sit still at the same time?
Time is the greatest innovator.