Spark Of Innovation
January 6, 2026
Process makes you efficient. It helps you repeat what already works.
Innovation is different. It’s spontaneous.
New ideas don’t show up according to some plan. They appear late at night, in a hallway chat, or mid-conversation when something suddenly feels off. Someone realises the problem has been framed the wrong way. That moment carries energy. Curiosity. A quiet excitement that says, this could be better.
Process helps you execute. It rarely helps you create.
Innovation begins with a spark. A sudden connection. A “what if.” The real skill is noticing it and responding fast enough. Not next quarter. Not after a workshop. Right then.
Most ideas don’t fail because they were bad. They fade because no one acted while the excitement was alive.
Process can scale a good idea. It can keep the fire burning. But it cannot light the match.
That requires people willing to wake up, make the call, and chase the idea.




