
Watch How A Little Bit Of Ingenuity Can Work Wonders In Life
NDTV
"Not all innovation needs big budgets," wrote Anthony James, the CEO of Innovation and Growth at the Sydney-based Trinity Consulting Services
In business, maintaining status quo is death. In life, it is boredom. Disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, for example, a number of businesses adapted to what we are now calling the "new normal" and changed their work culture to let employees work from home, in the process allowing themselves a breathing space to co-opt to the rapidly changing dynamics. Innovating, when faced with challenges, is intrinsic to humankind: We always strive to make ourselves comfortable with the new or what was previously unknown to us. Sorting lemons by size. Grassroot innovation #jugaad#innovation#simpleideas@briansolis@rwang0@gssahni@sanjaykalrapic.twitter.com/FtHOBmyyaN Innovative furniture transforms between bench and table with two benches. Perfect for small backyard garden. #Innovation (Interesting Engineering) pic.twitter.com/IWh8b7QBEO Someone started somewhere,Steam : 10rs for 3 minutes. #jugaad#talent#ideas#WhatsApppic.twitter.com/hV9Iw6WZXO Groundnut farming by Indian farmers #jugaadGreat news for Honda, Bajaj stock prices! pic.twitter.com/Gsloj5CYC5 Frugal innovation at its best! Sometimes complex problems can have such simple solutions. #Jugaad#ICYMI#Viral#DesiJugaad#innovation#Engineering#sundayvibespic.twitter.com/kRSsSHByge Business leaders sit in meetings and brainstorm to find the next "big idea" that will make their work enterprising and assist them in easing lives. However, not all innovation requires brainstorming sessions, big budgets or extensive market research. A little amount of ingenuity and open-mindedness is enough to fire up imagination. The Internet is filled with videos of people using their creative geniuses to ease their work and life. This video shared by Anthony James, the CEO of Innovation and Growth at the Sydney-based Trinity Consulting Services and one of LinkedIn's most awarded influencers, showed an Indian man putting a creative spin to how he would sort fruits based on their size. He put two iron rods on carton boxes and slightly spread out the rods towards one end to let the fruits drop into the boxes based on their size.More Related News