Start-ups and the Indian innovation conundrum

Discussions about innovation and start-ups in India's technology sector often lament the lack of breakthrough products that capture the global market. Where’s the next Google, Facebook, Twitter or Posterous from India?

The dissonance is striking considering many successful Silicon Valley start-ups have atleast one Indian core team member. So clearly we’re not short on ideas that work! And the innovation conundrum pervades far beyond just the technology sector.

So why aren’t Indians equally innovative while working in India?

Besides the usual suspects – lack of funding, weak support structures, absence of mentors, red-tapism, inadequate rewards, etc – who’s the elusive robber that slips in unnoticed, but leaves a decisive impact?

 

Let’s look at it another way:

Have you hired someone whose first attempt at setting up a business didn’t work out?

Do you know a small business owner who had to seek employment with the ‘corporate sector’?

 

And what hurts them most while transitioning?

Was it being made to feel their whole life is a failure, not just that particular business?

Or that the experience of running a business doesn’t really count, because they didn’t succeed

Or a sense of causing deep personal and family embarrassment that pervades social interactions.

We all know people and families who’ve been through this.

 

It’s still very difficult to wipe the slate clean and get a fresh start in India. For instance, the year[s] spent running the business are eyed warily & questioned repeatedly as ‘gaps in employment’. And salaries – should they be computed against last job held or income as a business owner – lower/ higher? Designations become another sticky point. KRA’s a never-ending cycle of obfuscation! The process wearies the heart and drains the mind.

Our ecosystem doesn’t accept failure as a part of success –for people and for businesses – as yet.

When the personal and social risk of failure is so great, isn’t risk-taking and therefore innovation deterred?

 

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Filed under  //  business risk   entrepreneur   facebook   failure   google   India   innovation   posterous   start-ups   success   technology   Twitter  
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Posted 1 month ago

The simplicity factor


Being first doesn’t matter, being the ‘simplifier’ matters

‘A system tends to grow in complexity instead of simplicity, until the resulting unreliability becomes intolerable.’ Paul Dickson, Laws of Life and Nature

The rising unreliability of complex systems forces their breakdown, creating opportunity for simpler systems that are more relevant i.e. yield better services, without the ‘pain’ of dealing with complexity.

Simpler systems don’t imply being less evolved [technologically] or less creative - in fact quite the opposite. 

What a simple system ‘does’ is more effective i.e. easier, faster, relevant, and fun.

The simplicity factor applies across the board. How we live and work. Why some businesses survive and others fail. The instability of over-complex economic systems.

Simplicity favours the brave, often creating new grounds for engagement and opportunity.

Twitter and Friendfeed

Seth Godin and Malcolm Gladwell

Wikipedia and the iPhone

Buddhism and great leaders

Crowdsourcing: A complex underlying system [that strides the dynamics of social engagement/ communication/ technology], but the end result can be triggered by a simple question

A natural, Zen-like way of living that allows us to travel light, simplifying life-choices.

And many more that you observe everyday!

Being first doesn’t matter as much as making it simpler and easier to get amazing things done.

As Henry Thoreau observed, ‘Our life is frittered away by detail... Simplify, simplify’.

What are the biggest barriers to keeping things simple?

How do you [help people] get amazing things done?

How do you simplify?

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Filed under  //  Buddhism   Friendfeed   iPhone   Malcolm Gadwell   Seth Godin   Simplicity   Twitter   Wikipedia   Zen  
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Posted 4 months ago