Paint & Pipette: The Art & Science of Innovation Jeremy Utley
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Stanford Adjunct Professor Jeremy Utley explores the counter-intuitive tactics that world-class innovators and entrepreneurs employ to break through. He's learned that while innovation is part art (paint) – it's also part science (pipette) – and treats the subject with both the rigor and the wonder that it deserves. Season 1 shined a spotlight on female founders; season 2 celebrated black creators; Season 3 guests include WIRED co-founder Kevin Kelly, Harvard Business School Professor Linda Hill, CEO of Google X Astro Teller, start-up coach Liz Tran, Waze founder Uri Levine, Seth Godin, journalist Jennifer Wallace, Pixar co-founder Ed Catmull, and more.
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S3E20: Creating Conscious Leadership with Diana Chapman
To what extent are our inner lives shaped by the stories we tell ourselves? And how can we learn to see the world as it truly is? Today on the podcast we have Diana Chapman, Co-Founder of The Conscious Leadership Group, an organization that helps leaders and their teams build trust and create conscious cultures through coaching, training, and more. She is also a facilitator, CEO coach, speaker, and co-author of The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership, a book that distills decades of accumulated knowledge from working with CEOs and other leaders. In today’s conversation with Diana, we delve into the complexities of what it means to accept our inner emotions, how we can learn to understand our reactivity to other people, and how these skills can help us foster environments that preserve psychological safety without sacrificing candor. Tuning you’ll learn about the profound lessons Diana learned at The Hendricks Institute, the impact they had on her life, and how she and her team help organizations foster conscious leadership and collaboration. We also delve into the importance of play, why the enneagram is such a useful tool for leaders, and what it means to operate in your Zone of Genius. Tune in to hear all of Diana’s insights on life, leadership, and learning how to see the world as it truly is!
Key Points From This Episode:
Get to know today’s guest, Diana Chapman, and how she discovered the Hendricks Institute.The tools Diana acquired there and how they changed her life.Understanding the radical concept that ‘I am the creator of my own suffering’.Reactivity, acceptance, and how to change your behavior (and the outcomes).Unpacking the concept of radical responsibility.Learning to get comfortable with all the emotions and sensations in your body.The intelligence underlying our emotions and what they can teach us.How to preserve psychological safety without sacrificing candor.Diana’s approach to creating an environment where candor can propel innovation.The practices she and her team give organizations to foster these environments.Diana’s insights on the importance of play.How to assess whether there is enough play in your life.Advice on bringing more play into your life.Why the enneagram is such a meaningful tool for leaders.Learning to embrace the gifts and shadow side of your enneagram type.How you can use the enneagram as a parent to deepen your connection with your kids.The Zone of Genius: what it is, why it’s important, and how can discover it.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Diana Chapman on LinkedIn
Diana Chapman on X
The Conscious Leadership Group
The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership
15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership: A New Paradigm for Sustainable Success
The Hendricks Institute
Bernard Roth
Brendan Boyle
Jennifer Brandy Wallace
Jeremy Utley
Jeremy Utley Email
Jeremy Utley on X
Jeremy Utley on LinkedIn -
S3E19: Ideascience with Josh Ruff & Marcus Hollinger
Creativity is not an exact science and ideas often strike when we least expect them. But what if we could curate an environment ideal for sparking creativity? Today we are joined by Josh Ruff and Marcus Hollinger from Stoked to discuss their incredible new workshop, Ideascience. Tuning in, you’ll hear all about how music inspired their Ideascience creation, why they create a space for checking in with their team at the beginning of every meeting, how task switching overcomes cognitive fixation, and how meditation has improved ideas in brainstorms. They then go on to tell us about what Ideascience actually entails before walking us through the process of the workshop. Our guests even delve into some neuroscience facts and how they relate to creativity. Finally, we explore the importance of being goofy and allowing yourself to play in any creative process. You don’t want to miss this one so press play now!
Key Points From This Episode:
Introducing today’s guests, Josh Ruff and Marcus Hollinger. They tell us about the product that they are launching, Ideascience. The inspiration for this incredible program and the goal of Ideascience. How music is linked to Ideascience and the importance of ‘getting real’ with your partners. Why they like to ‘protect’ the first 15 minutes of every meeting to check in with everyone. How our guests continue to make downtime to have space for creativity a priority. Testing the theory that task switching overcomes cognitive fixation. Our guests explain their art walk section of these studies. How meditation improved the quality and quantity of ideas in brainstorms. They tell us about the Ideascience Council.What Ideascience actually is and what the launch experience will entail.How theta brainwave activity contributes to creativity and how that’s part of Ideascience. They walk us through the steps of the Ideascience workshop.The importance of the sequence of events of the workshop. How their nine-by-nine method intersects with Ideascience. Going from concept to habit and the rewards that motivate people.The importance of play in creativity to lighten the load of hard work.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Joshua Ruff on LinkedIn
Joshua Ruff on Instagram
Marcus Hollinger on LinkedIn
Marcus Hollinger on Instagram
Marcus Hollinger on Threads
Ideascience
Stoked
Stoked on LinkedIn
Stoked on Instagram
Jeremy Utley
Jeremy Utley Email
Jeremy Utley on X
Jeremy Utley on LinkedIn -
SPECIAL: Beyond The Prompt with Greg Shove
Today, we join forces with Henrik Werdelin to launch Beyond The Prompt, a podcast that explores how companies leverage AI to streamline operations and better serve their customers. Henrik is a remarkable entrepreneur and one of the visionary founders of Prehype, a community of entrepreneurial individuals dedicated to assisting one another and collaborating with companies to foster innovation and create innovative ventures. In this episode, we sit down with Greg Shove, CEO of next-generation business upskilling platform Section, to discuss his experience of leveraging AI in the context of optimizing, accelerating, and transforming various aspects of Section's operations. Employing its exclusive sprint format, Section collaborates with renowned business school professors to provide top-notch business education that translates into tangible real-world results. In this conversation, Greg unpacks the adoption of AI in the workplace, the challenges and opportunities it presents, and specific use cases within Section. Tuning in, you’ll discover the importance of trust and transparency in AI adoption, the everyday tasks that AI can help with, and a framework for AI integration. You’ll also gain insight into AI’s role in education, the reinvention of education delivery, common misconceptions around AI, and much more! For a valuable look at the pragmatic considerations, hurdles, and possibilities associated with integrating AI into everyday business and educational contexts, listen in now!
Key Points From This Episode:
Greg's role at Section and his motivation for pivoting to online learning and AI.How the pandemic was a catalyst and a false signal for Section.The pivotal moment when Greg realized the power of AI.Aspects of leadership and trust needed for AI adoption.Three modes for approaching AI: optimize, accelerate, and transform.AI’s potential in high-value tasks and decision-making processesChallenges in prompting AI effectively and learning from your mistakes.Examples of tasks that are suitable and not suitable for AI.Strategies for experimenting with and adopting AI into your workflow.Common misconceptions and pitfalls of using AI.The role of AI in education and the potential disruptions it may cause.Why a dynamic AI strategy, experimentation, and knowledge of advancements are critical.Greg’s thoughts on the future trends and potential of AI.Jeremy and Henrik’s main takeaways from the conversation.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Greg Shove
Greg Shove on X
Greg Shove on LinkedIn
Section
Claude
ChatGPT
Bard
Perplexity
Fathom
Superhuman
Whisper
Voice AI
Anthropic
Henrik Werdelin
Henrik Werdelin on X
Prehype
Jeremy Utley
Jeremy Utley Email
Jeremy Utley on X
Jeremy Utley on LinkedIn -
S3E18: Making Your Creative Process a Lifestyle with Billy Oppenheimer
Writing and researching to produce content is a full-time job that demands hours and hours of dedication. Today’s guest is the wonderful Billy Oppenheimer, writer and research assistant for Ryan Holiday, and he is here to share his creative process with us. Tuning in, you will hear all about what it’s been like to see his audience grow, his research process, his notecard system and how he measures them, the time he spends reading, the idea of honing your filter, and why he likes making physical notes instead of digital ones. We then delve into his incredible newsletter and how it has evolved before Billy tells us about how he aims to achieve his ultimate goal; to write books. Finally, we discuss Billy’s definition of ‘creative health’ and why he is basically always working. To hear all this and more, press play now!
Key Points From This Episode:
An introduction to today’s guest, Billy Oppenheimer. How Billy has grown his audience and what it’s been like to watch it grow. Why Billy relies on his research to create content and he shares his notecard system. How often he spends reading and how he knows when to give up on a book. What honing your filter means and how Billy does that. Billy walks us through his entire process when reading and making notes on a book. The pros and cons of physical notes as opposed to digital ones and why he prefers physical. Billy’s newsletter, the process, its evolution, and how it helps him consume information. Why Billy considers social media after he’s written his newsletter. He tells us about his ultimate goal to write books. What his mentor, Ryan Holiday has taught him about writing. How Billy divides his time between working on his newsletter and working for Ryan. The (very small) role ChatGPT plays in Billy’s work. Why Billy measures the number of notecards he makes every single day. Billy’s definition of ‘creative health’.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Billy Oppenheimer
Billy Oppenheimer Newsletter
Billy Oppenheimer on LinkedIn
Billy Oppenheimer on X
Billy Oppenheimer on Instagram
Ryan Holiday
Super Communicators
Jeremy Utley
Jeremy Utley Email
Jeremy Utley on X
Jeremy Utley on LinkedIn -
S3E17: Redefining Genius with David McRaney
From psychology to neuroscience and beyond, concepts of intelligence, genius, and hyperfixation are key to our understanding of human potential. During this episode, David McRaney joins us to discuss a topic of great import to our course on transformative design; the complexity of the concept of genius. David is a famed journalist, author, podcaster, and expert on belief, currently researching his next book. Join us as we explore the origin story of genius, the role of obsessively pursuing one’s interest, and the inevitability of genius and the implications of labels. In closing, David answers two key questions on the autism spectrum and varying cultural contexts behind the concept of genius. Thanks for tuning in!
Key Points From This Episode:
Introducing David McRaney, journalist, author, and podcaster. Why the topic of genius is important enough to him to research. Different ways to approach the topic of genius, from psychology to neuroscience and beyond. The origin story behind genius, and the concept of a birthday party. David’s findings from spending time interviewing individuals with extraordinarily high IQs.Jeremy’s current thesis that giving people the opportunity to pursue their interests until the point of saturation. Accounting for bias in the realm of genius and the danger of labelling. The relationship between hyperfixation, genius, and the autism spectrum.How works of genius usually come into existence. Cultural context for the concept of genius.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
David McRaney
David McRaney on X
How Minds Change
David McRaney on Instagram
David Krakauer
So Good They Can’t Ignore You
The Collins Institute
James Alcock
Jeremy Utley
Jeremy Utley Email
Jeremy Utley on X
Jeremy Utley on LinkedIn -
S3E16: The Science of Failing Well with Amy Edmondson
In today’s world, we’re caught between two failure cultures. One tells us that it must be avoided at all costs, while the other tells us to "fail fast” and often. The issue is that both approaches lack the necessary distinctions to help us separate good failure from bad. Today, we’re joined by author, scholar, Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at Harvard Business School, and champion of psychological safety, Amy Edmondson, who believes that we need to reframe our understanding of failure and discover what it means to “fail well.” In this episode, we discuss her latest book, The Right Kind of Wrong, and gain some insight into the inherent relationships between organizational learning and change management, psychological safety and innovation, and failure and the creative process. Tuning in, you’ll learn when to quit, when to experiment, and how to measure your failure performance, plus you’ll also hear some remarkable stories that illustrate what it means to be a hero of failure! Believe it or not, there is a science to failing well, and Amy Edmundson is here to provide us with a practical framework to think, discuss, and practice failure wisely.
Key Points From This Episode:
Amy’s roots in organizational learning and the journey her career has taken since.The NYT article that put her studies of psychological safety on the global map.A look at the relationship between psychological safety and idea generation.Cultivating the idea of failure as input rather than outcome: it’s part of the process!What we can learn from “failure heroes” like Thomas Edison and Buckminster Fuller.How to know when you should quit and when you should persist.The playfulness and willingness to experiment that comes with being a hero of failure. Failure diagnostics: practical ways to measure your failure performance.What it takes to be excruciatingly present, why context is shaped by the level of uncertainty, and more from our lightning round with Amy!Insight into Amy’s creative process, which starts with a whole lot of conceptualizing.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Amy Edmondson
Right Kind of Wrong
Teaming
The Fearless Organization
Amy Edmondson on LinkedIn
Amy Edmondson on X
Thinkers50
Richard Hackman
'What Google Learned in Its Quest to Build the Perfect Team'
Quit
IDEO
Only the Paranoid Survive
American Icon
The Widow Clicquot
Jeremy Utley
Jeremy Utley Email
Jeremy Utley on X
Jeremy Utley on LinkedIn
Customer Reviews
Uri Levine
The episode today with Uri Levine was Fantastic! Highly recommend it!
Breakthrough - inspiration- innovation
Really enjoyed the story of bossy cosmetics, so many lessons in leadership, resilience, tenacity and grit! Jeremy this podcast is a gift to many!
Hope you continue to champion the cause innovation, design thinking and leadership with dignity for many more ages to come.
Cheers,
Rose H.
Wow, wow, WOW!!
So appreciate this discussion and insight. You can hear the deeply thought out questions and learn from these convos. Do yourself a favor, listen and be inspired.