Here's an uncomfortable truth that will make you realize the importance of adapting to new innovations.
Life doesn't wait for you to catch up.
It's like a relentless river constantly flowing and carving new paths through the stones of yesterday.
Here's the truth:
If you don't start to swim with the flow, you'll end up drowning...
Just take a look around you...
The pace is brutal:
- Computers update overnight with new applications.
- Industries vanish like smoke with new inventions.
- Mindsets switch with new content.
The one's who profit from this are the ones who innovate, adapt and vow their lives to solve problems before anyone else sees them coming.
Are you ready to capture tomorrow?

Ever heard of Kodak?
Back in 1888 they released their first film camera.
The hook that sold it? you press the button, we do the rest.
70 years later they managed to become the biggest player and became the industry standard for every movie, vacation and birthday.
Everyone owned their own little Kodak.
So what changed?
Nowadays most people own a Canon, Sony, Nikon,...
What happened?
Back in 1975 Kodak's engineers came upon a new technology called the 'digital camera'.
No more film rolls, no more dark rooms...
The ultimate convenience, just the click of a button and you have instant results. But the suits upstairs at Kodak's desk scoffed and laughed at it...
They buried the invention and kept on believing old-school film was king.
Meanwhile their biggest competitor Sony saw an opportunity.
They implemented the new tech. and in 1981 produced the first prototype of a kind of digital still video camera.
Long story short
Sony flooded the market and became one of the biggest players on the market. Literally turning pixels into profit.
Kodak slowly tried to adapt as well, but it was too late...
In 2012 Kodak filled for bankruptcy...
The titan who stood as the golden standard of camera's fell by its own refusal to move with the market demand...
The past is a museum, not a blueprint.
Same goes for everyone.
If you don't evolve, you stagnate.
If you stagnate, you lose...
So how do we break free?
Use the past as a teacher, not a master.
Learn from history and see how it can be done better today!
Is your industry shifting? Go, search, look, study and implement.
Innovation = survival
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