Book Read Free

What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20

Page 18

by Tina Seelig


  2.Margaret Anne Neale, “Win More by Solving Other People’s Problems,” Stanford Innovation Lab, January 11, 2017, podcast interview, 25:56, ecorner.stanford.edu/podcast/win-more-by-solving-other-peoples-problems/.

  3.Heidi Roizen, on making yourself easy to help: “Networking Expert Heidi Roizen on Making Business Connections That Matter,” Adobe Blog, posted by Adobe Communications Team, November 1, 2017, theblog.adobe.com/heidi-roizen/.

  Chapter 11: Will This Be on the Exam?

  1.Video clips of Steve Garrity can be found at ecorner.stanford.edu.

  2.Video clips of Kevin Weil can be found at ecorner.stanford.edu.

  3.Chip Heath, “A Well-Designed First Day,” Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders, May 7, 2018, video, 4:24, ecorner.stanford.edu/in-brief/a-well-designed-first-day/.

  4.A short video summarizing the puzzle exercise: Tina Seelig, “The Puzzle Project: Entrepreneurship Simulation,” eCorner, September 21, 2006, video, 5:45, ecorner.stanford.edu/video/the-puzzle-project-entrepreneurship-simulation/.

  Chapter 12: Experimental Artifacts

  1.For more information, visit www.embraceinnovations.com/#home; also visit ecorner.stanford.edu/video/embrace-the-entrepreneurial-journey/.

  2.Video clips of David Kelley can be found at ecorner.stanford.edu.

  3.For more information about this program, visit chipconley.com/modern-elder-academy.

  4.For more information, visit www.positiveintelligence.com/assessments/.

  Index

  The pagination of this digital edition does not match the print edition from which the Index was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.

  23andMe, 28–29

  A-B testing, 91–92

  Adams, Jim, 142–43

  Airbnb, 48

  Alda, Alan, 31

  Antarctica, 43

  Apple Computer, 77, 87–88

  Apple Newton, 18

  appreciation, 20, 24, 84, 137–39

  Art of Innovation, The (Kelley), 46

  assumptions, 26–31, 36, 48, 52, 155, 180

  automatic teller machines (ATMs), 24

  baby incubator, 180–82

  balloon angioplasty, 23, 27

  banking regulations, 39

  bankruptcy laws, 72–73

  Barlow, James, 32

  Barry, Michael, 24–25

  Bartz, Carol, 86

  being fabulous, 163–68, 171, 177

  Beleza Natural, 38

  best alternative to a negotiated agreement (BATNA), 158

  best ideas exercise, 41, 43

  bikinis, 43

  Biodesign Fellows, 22–23

  Bio-X, 56

  BookBrowser, 54

  book publishing industry, 54–55, 75–76

  BookScan, 75

  Booz Allen Hamilton (Booz Allen), 57

  Braden, Rich, 27

  bra-fitting service, 33

  brainstorming, 33, 45–47

  Briggs, Teresa, 108–9

  Brown, Pat, 29

  Burbn, 17

  Burke, Peggy, 189–90

  Byers, Tom, 74

  Calderwood, Dana, 133–35

  car purchase, 155–56

  Carter, Jimmy, 63

  cell phones, 24

  challenging assumptions exercise, 30–31

  Chamine, Shirzad, 186–87

  Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose, 102

  Chile, 38–40

  Christensen, Stan, 157–58

  Circus, At the (Marx Brothers), 26

  circus exercise, 26–27

  Cirque du Soleil, 26–27

  Claris, 77–78

  college admissions application, 43–45

  competition, 172–75

  Conley, Chip, 184

  construction toys, 83–84

  Crazy Is a Compliment (Rottenberg), 38

  creative writing class assignment, 182–84

  Cumplo, 38–39

  customer satisfaction, 175–77

  DARPA Grand Challenge, 95

  “da Vinci Rule, The,” 76

  Dearing, Michael, 58–59

  decision-making, 94–95, 105

  Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), 95

  Deloitte, 108–9

  diaper sales, 25

  Dirty Jobs (television show), 100

  dishwashing, 28

  Do Bands bracelets, 20

  Doshi, Ashwini, 164–166

  Dweck, Carol, 65

  Eberhart, Bob, 73

  education, 10–12

  Einstein, Albert, 22

  Embrace (baby incubator), 180–82

  Empire Strikes Back, The (film), 169

  Endeavor, 37, 49, 180

  Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders series, 29

  entrepreneurship, 7–8, 32–33, 57, 74–75, 172–75

  “Entropy” (Seelig), 193

  excuses, 169

  expectations, 51–52, 164, 166–68

  Experimental Artifacts (Seelig), 193

  failure, 12, 69–80, 87–91

  failure résumé assignment, 69–72

  family obligations, 110–12

  fear, 32, 33–34

  fifty British pounds challenge, 32–33

  Five-Dollar Challenge, 1–8, 31

  Furr, Nathan, 100–101

  Garrity, Steve, 167

  Garten, Jeffrey, 63–64

  genetic testing, 28–29

  Glick, Forrest, 161

  Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), 72

  GoldieBlox, 83

  Google, 36, 91

  gratitude, 137

  Greatest Show on Earth, 27

  Haig, Alexander, 63

  hair product, 38

  Handspring, 18

  Haushofer, Johannes, 72

  Hawkins, Jeff, 17–19, 96

  Heath, Chip, 170

  Heath, Dan, 170

  housekeeping, 28

  Huggies diapers, 24–25

  HyperCard, 54

  idea generation, 41–48, 57–58, 129–35

  IDEO design firm, 46

  Imagine It! (documentary film), 7

  Impossible Foods, 29

  Improv Wisdom (Madson), 46

  Imran, Mir, 76

  Innovation Tournament, 15, 20, 22, 77, 196

  Institut Européen d’Administration des Affaires (INSEAD), 100

  International Media Partners, 62–63

  iPod Nano, 163

  Janah, Leila, 29

  Japan, 73

  JetBlue, 89

  jigsaw puzzles exercise, 172–74

  Jobs, Steve, 87–90, 128–29

  John Deere (tractor manufacturer), 170–71

  Jones, Quincy, III, 114–16

  Kahwajy, Jeannie, 143–44

  Kawasaki, Guy, 31, 144–45

  Kelley, David, 46, 182

  Kelley, Tom, 46

  Kimberly-Clark, 24–25

  Kisenwether, Liz, 69

  Kissinger, Henry, 62–64

  Kissinger Associates, Inc., 64

  Klebahn, Perry, 98, 131–33

  Komisar, Randy, 31, 73, 77–78, 146

  Krieger, Mike, 17

  Laliberté, Guy, 26

  Lao-tzu, 99

  leadership roles, 53, 61–62

  Lewis, Michael, 116–17

  Liar’s Poker (Lewis), 116–17

  Lindzon, Jared, 33–34

  lottery, 64

  luck, 113–29, 135, 144

  Lyft, 48

  MacDonald, Kyle, 5

  Macintosh, 87

  Madson, Patricia Ryan, 46

  Mandelbaum, Fern, 150–51

  Marshall, Morgan, 28

  Marx Brothers, 26

  Mayfield Fellows Program, 74–75

  McFarland, Josh, 86–87

  McKeown, Greg, 148

  medical devices, 55–56, 105

  Modern Elder Academy, 184–85

  Monk and the Riddle, The (Komisar), 31

  Morris Air, 89

  Moto Restauran
t, 50

  Musk, Elon, 32

  My Dinner with Andre (movie), 36

  Neale, Maggie, 155

  “need finding,” 22–25

  Neeleman, David, 88

  negotiations, 81, 154–59

  Netflix, 48

  new employees, 170–71

  New York Times, 33

  NeXT, 88

  No Asshole Rule, The (Sutton), 76

  Nordstrom, Blake, 175–77

  Nordstrom, Erik, 175–77

  Nordstrom Inc., 175–77

  Noyce, Bob, 87

  Numenta, 19

  O’Connor, Sandra Day, 111

  Olympic Games, 66–67

  On Intelligence (Hawkins), 19

  opportunity cost, 137–38

  Or, Tyranny of the, 150

  Packard, David, 87

  Page, Larry, 36

  “Paint the target around the arrow,” 161

  Palm Computing, 17–18

  Pampers, 25

  paper clips exercise, 5–6, 31

  Parsons, Estelle, 134

  Pasteur, Louis, 117

  Paté-Cornell, Elisabeth, 94

  peer-to-peer lending platform, 38–39

  Penchina, Gil, 80

  photo service, 58

  Pixar, 87–88

  Plummer, Jim, 91

  political parties platform, 39–40

  Post-it notes exercise, 6–7

  Powell Jobs, Laurene, 88

  Power of Moments, The (Heath and Heath), 170

  preconceptions, 102–4

  “pretotyping,” 85

  Princeton University, 72, 116–17

  “problem blindness,” 24

  Procter & Gamble, 25

  product design, 22, 59–61

  Professional Happiness Design (PHD) exercise, 65–67

  Pugh, Lewis, 21

  Pull-Ups, 25

  quitting, 76–77, 81–83

  RCA Corporation, 191

  Reagan, Ronald W., 63

  recommendation letter, 44–45, 157

  Red Hot Chili Peppers, 159

  Right It, The (Savoia), 85

  right thing, 146–48

  Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, 26–27

  risk management, 94

  Risk-o-Meter, 92–94

  risks, 29, 65–67, 72–73, 91–94

  Roche, Ben, 50

  Roizen, Heidi, 161

  Roth, Bernie, 168–69

  Rothkopf, David, 61–64

  Rothkopf Group, The, 62

  Rottenberg, Linda, 37, 49

  Rowe, Mike, 100

  rubber bands exercise, 78–79

  Rubesch, Ed, 156

  rule breaking, 48–52

  rules/norms, 35–36, 48–52

  Salomon Brothers, 116–17

  Samasource, 29

  “Sand” (Seelig), 185

  Savoia, Alberto, 85

  Scientific American, 54

  “Secret of Luck, The” (video), 125

  self-assessment, 109–10

  Shea, Nicolas, 38–40

  shoeshine stand, 33

  Silicon Valley, 73

  Simi, Bonny, 66–67

  Simpson, John, 23

  Skinner, B. F., 35

  Slack, 17

  smart thing, 146–48

  snowshoes, 98, 131–33

  social rules/norms, 35–36

  Southwest Airlines, 89

  SpaceX, 48

  Spain, 73

  speed-dating station, 33

  Stanford Magazine, 111

  Stanford University

  Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, 95

  Biodesign program, 22, 55

  commencement address, 87–88, 128–29

  Design for Extreme Affordability class, 180

  d.school, 9–10, 59, 61, 91, 168, 181–82

  Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders lecture series, 170

  medical device testing, 105

  psychology department, 65

  School of Engineering, 8, 91, 125

  Stanford Sierra Camp, 28

  Stanford Technology Ventures Program, 8–10, 29

  “Stanley,” 95–96

  Start-Up Chile, 38–39

  Sterling, Debbie, 83

  Stiggelbout, John, 43–45

  Superclass (Rothkopf), 62

  Sutton, Bob, 76–77, 90

  Sweden, 72–73

  Systrom, Kevin, 17

  team players, 160–61, 172–74

  Tech Museum of Innovation, The, 142

  Thailand, 72

  to-do list, 149

  Todos (“everyone”), 39–40

  Toy Story (film), 88

  “umbrella walkers,” 32–33

  uncertainty, 108, 193–94

  University of California at Santa Cruz, 104–5

  value, 5–6, 31

  vegetarian meat substitute, 29

  Velez, Leila, 37–38

  Vignolo, Carlos, 11

  Visor, 18–19

  Volkswagen Electronics Research Laboratory, 95

  wallet exercise, 59–61

  Wall Street Journal, 73, 145

  water bottle exercise, 168

  Web of Secrets, 79

  Weil, Kevin, 168

  Weird Ideas That Work (Sutton), 90

  Wiseman, Richard, 123, 133

  Wishing Tree, 78–79

  Wojcicki, Anne, 28–29

  World Economic Forum, 62

  worst ideas exercise, 41–43

  Yock, Paul, 22–23, 55–56

  Zoomer, 18

  About the Author

  TINA SEELIG is a faculty director of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program and on the faculty of Stanford’s Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (d.school), where she teaches courses on creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship. She earned her PhD in neuroscience at Stanford School of Medicine and has been a management consultant, entrepreneur, and the author of 17 books and games. She is the recipient of the Silicon Valley Visionary Award, the Olympus Innovation Award, and the Gordon Prize from the National Academy of Engineering recognizing her as a national leader in engineering education.

  Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

  Letters from Readers of What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20

  “Your book left a huge impression on me. . . . Never have I read a book so intently from start to finish in one sitting.”

  —Windsor

  “I must thank you for showing that nearly everything is attainable, as long as you trust yourself and use your brain and heart to deliver.”

  —Misha

  “By the third page, I was hooked and wishing that I was a student in one of your classes at Stanford. . . . I feel more empowered and inspired than ever.”

  —Starry

  “What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 was the most wonderful book I have ever read about self-improvements, motivations, and life lessons . . . a crash course that changed my life and the way I think.”

  —Angely

  “This is simply a thank-you note. . . . What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 was figuratively a resuscitation to the right hemisphere of my brain.”

  —Amer

  “Thank you for inspiring me to look beyond my screen of assumptions and recognize the world as being full of opportunity and promise merely waiting to be discovered.”

  —Sophia

  “I loved the book . . . it made my weekend and now my life. It’s a real inspiration.”

  —Soujanya

  “Today, on my twentieth birthday, I happened upon your What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 book at the Stanford bookstore. I’ve already read half of it and am emailing to thank you. . . . Finding your book today was the best birthday gift I could have asked for. It was inspiring to read concrete examples of the concepts I’ve been trying to piece together.”

  —Nadia

  “I have just finished reading What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 and just had to thank you so much. . . . You should also know it really made me think differ
ently, it was so inspiring. Well, I hope you get the message just so you know you have a really huge fan down here in Argentina.”

  —Agustina

  “I stumbled across your book just at the perfect time and it has had a great impact on the way I feel about the uncertainty of the next year ahead of me.”

  —Nisha

  “This book provided the extra jolt I needed to keep moving forward.”

  —Cesar

  “I took some of your lessons about innovation and applied them in a truly old-school firm. The results were nothing short of amazing! In one session, with similar tools to what you described in the first chapter of your book, we identified over $150 million in new opportunities!”

  —Francisco

  “I won’t be twenty again and it’s been a long time since I was, but after finishing your book, I felt the buzz of possibility that I wish I’d had at that age.”

  —Ben

  “I picked up your book yesterday and could not put it down. I was hooked immediately. I recognized that the wisdom you shared in this book is crucial for the next steps I need to take in my own journey.”

  —Laurie

  “I admit to being a confused college student lacking direction in life and harboring plenty of fear about graduating. Reading this book today was exactly what I needed. I think tomorrow I will read it again, this time armed with a highlighter and a pack of Post-Its.”

  —Catherine

  “After reading it cover to cover, I felt at once reassured and inspired. I can’t imagine a better book to have read right before heading off to college.”

  —Haley

  “I finished your book What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 and have since bought up all the copies I could lay my hands on at bookstores. The copies have now been distributed to all my friends hoping to make an entrepreneurial move in life.”

  —Jennifer

  Also by Tina Seelig

  inGenius: A Crash Course on Creativity

  Creativity Rules: Get Ideas Out of Your Head and Into the World

  Copyright

  WHAT I WISH I KNEW WHEN I WAS 20. Copyright © 2019 by Tina Seelig. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  First HarperOne hardcover published in 2009

  First HarperOne paperback published in 2010

  Cover design: © Harpercollins

  Cover art: Attitude | Shutterstock

 

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