Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
TV & Film
Technology
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts122/v4/fa/e8/58/fae85863-3f60-d7be-6a9e-53ea62b01528/mza_18426944711335547714.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation
Phil McKinney
225 episodes
1 week ago
Step into the world of relentless creativity with the Killer Innovations Podcast, hosted by Phil McKinney. Since 2005, it has carved its niche in history as the longest-running podcast.

Join the community of innovators, designers, creatives, entrepreneurs, and visionaries who are constantly pushing boundaries and challenging the status quo.

Discover the power of thinking differently and taking risks to achieve success. The podcast covers a wide range of topics, including innovation, technology, business, leadership, creativity, design, and more. Every episode is not just talk; it's about taking action and implementing strategies to help you become a successful innovator. Each episode provides practical tips, real-life examples, and thought-provoking insights to challenge your thinking and inspire you to unleash your creativity.

The podcast archive: KillerInnovations.com

About Phil McKinney:

Phil McKinney, CTO of HP (ret) and CEO of CableLabs, has been credited with forming and leading multiple teams that FastCompany and BusinessWeek list as one of the “50 Most Innovative”.

His recognition includes Vanity Fair naming him “The Innovation Guru,” MSNBC and Fox Business calling him "The Gadget Guy," and the San Jose Mercury News dubbing him the "chief seer."
Show more...
Management
Technology,
Business
RSS
All content for Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation is the property of Phil McKinney and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Step into the world of relentless creativity with the Killer Innovations Podcast, hosted by Phil McKinney. Since 2005, it has carved its niche in history as the longest-running podcast.

Join the community of innovators, designers, creatives, entrepreneurs, and visionaries who are constantly pushing boundaries and challenging the status quo.

Discover the power of thinking differently and taking risks to achieve success. The podcast covers a wide range of topics, including innovation, technology, business, leadership, creativity, design, and more. Every episode is not just talk; it's about taking action and implementing strategies to help you become a successful innovator. Each episode provides practical tips, real-life examples, and thought-provoking insights to challenge your thinking and inspire you to unleash your creativity.

The podcast archive: KillerInnovations.com

About Phil McKinney:

Phil McKinney, CTO of HP (ret) and CEO of CableLabs, has been credited with forming and leading multiple teams that FastCompany and BusinessWeek list as one of the “50 Most Innovative”.

His recognition includes Vanity Fair naming him “The Innovation Guru,” MSNBC and Fox Business calling him "The Gadget Guy," and the San Jose Mercury News dubbing him the "chief seer."
Show more...
Management
Technology,
Business
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts122/v4/fa/e8/58/fae85863-3f60-d7be-6a9e-53ea62b01528/mza_18426944711335547714.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
5 Questions That Spot Breakthroughs Before They Happen
Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation
30 minutes 12 seconds
2 months ago
5 Questions That Spot Breakthroughs Before They Happen
In October 1903, The New York Times published an editorial mocking the idea of human flight, stating that a successful flying machine might take “from one to ten million years” to develop through the efforts of mathematicians and engineers. 

Eight weeks later, on December 17, 1903, the Wright brothers achieved the first powered, controlled flight over the beaches of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, proving the skeptics wrong.
The smartest people in the world got this catastrophically wrong. What does that tell us about impossibility itself?
Every industry has billion-dollar opportunities hiding behind a single word: impossible. And most executives never see them coming because they've been trained to accept limitations that don't actually exist.
The Innovation Reality Check
If the smartest experts can be so wrong about something as fundamental as human flight, then we need to completely rethink how we evaluate impossibility. The problem isn't that impossible things become possible. The problem is that we're terrible at recognizing what's actually impossible versus what just looks impossible.
What Innovation Actually Means
Innovation is simply an idea made real. Not brilliant concepts sitting in notebooks. Actual stuff you can touch. Use. Buy. Experience.
Leonardo da Vinci invented flying machines in the 15th century. The Wright brothers innovated flight in 1903.
What's the difference? Da Vinci had amazing ideas that stayed ideas. The Wright brothers made the idea real.
This distinction changes everything about impossible innovation. Has someone successfully transformed an “impossible” idea into a tangible reality? Then logically, it was never truly impossible. We just lacked the knowledge, tools, or perspective to make it happen.
Those dismissed breakthroughs floating around your industry right now? They aren't abstract fantasies. They're concrete challenges waiting for someone to develop the right knowledge, tools, and perspective.
The Three Types of Impossibility
Not all impossibilities are created equal. Three distinct categories:
Logical Impossibility: Things that contradict themselves by definition. Married bachelors. Square circles.
But even these sometimes dissolve when we reframe the question. Negative numbers? Logically impossible for centuries. Until merchants needed to describe debt, scientists needed to measure temperatures below freezing. Suddenly, those “impossible” numbers became essential tools.
Physical Impossibility: Things that appear to violate natural laws. Quantum mechanics would've been physically impossible under 19th-century physics. Today, we're building quantum computers using those “impossible” principles.
Practical Impossibility: Ideas that don't violate logic or physics—they're just beyond our current capabilities. Commercial fusion power. Artificial general intelligence. Reversing human aging.
Most breakthrough innovations emerge from this third category. They represent temporary constraints. Not permanent barriers.
Here's what nobody talks about: the companies that get blindsided by “impossible” innovations aren't stupid. They're victims of expertise. The more you know about an industry, the harder it becomes to see past its false limitations.
Everyone says innovation requires thinking outside the box. That's backwards.
The biggest breakthroughs come from questioning the box itself. Not thinking outside your industry's limitations—questioning whether th...
Killer Innovations with Phil McKinney - A Show About Ideas Creativity And Innovation
Step into the world of relentless creativity with the Killer Innovations Podcast, hosted by Phil McKinney. Since 2005, it has carved its niche in history as the longest-running podcast.

Join the community of innovators, designers, creatives, entrepreneurs, and visionaries who are constantly pushing boundaries and challenging the status quo.

Discover the power of thinking differently and taking risks to achieve success. The podcast covers a wide range of topics, including innovation, technology, business, leadership, creativity, design, and more. Every episode is not just talk; it's about taking action and implementing strategies to help you become a successful innovator. Each episode provides practical tips, real-life examples, and thought-provoking insights to challenge your thinking and inspire you to unleash your creativity.

The podcast archive: KillerInnovations.com

About Phil McKinney:

Phil McKinney, CTO of HP (ret) and CEO of CableLabs, has been credited with forming and leading multiple teams that FastCompany and BusinessWeek list as one of the “50 Most Innovative”.

His recognition includes Vanity Fair naming him “The Innovation Guru,” MSNBC and Fox Business calling him "The Gadget Guy," and the San Jose Mercury News dubbing him the "chief seer."