“It is amazing how much people can get done if they do not worry about who gets the credit.”

—Sandra Swinney


Our Store features many innovation tools.

Our Video Programs teach the proven techniques of intentional innovation.

Our Workshop Trainings help organizations weave innovation into their everyday activities and consistently inspire the best from everyone on their team.

Our Strategy Sessions are immersive, entertaining, no-holds-barred experiences that deliver surprising new solutions.

We Speak at Events conferences, trade shows, and other keynote gatherings.

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About: “Free Radicals of Innovation DVD”

“The video series makes you look at your own business practices and reassess how you could introduce some of the creative tools to break out and be true creative innovators.”
—Stan Chudzik, Senior Industrial designer
Goody Products, Inc. -- A Newell Rubbermaid Company, Atlanta, GA

Music

Anything Goes
from Nonesuch

Anything Goes

Pianist Brad Mehldau's so-so excursion into atmospheric pop production, Largo, may be proving to be a worthwhile experiment after all. Having gotten that out of his system, at least for the moment, he sounds looser in the pocket than he has in a long time in returning to the ruminative piano trio format with which he made his reputation. In applying some of his quirkiest personal touches to jazz and pop standards, he also sounds--no offense intended--more awake. Hooking up with his longstanding rhythm mates, bassist Larry Grenadier, and drummer Jorge Rossy, Mehldau offsets his patented lyrical touches with antic minimalist strokes, bold vamps, and high-stepping two-hand strategies. Alternately spiky and seductive, his unaccompanied playing on an initially languid “Get Happy“ is a winning case of the left hand pretending not to know what the right hand is doing. Reharmonizing Charles Chaplin's “Smile“ with dense harmonic clouds, he properly obliterates that hoary melody. There's another sighing Radiohead treatment, “Everything in its Right Place,“ and an attempt at enlivening Paul Simon's “Still Crazy (After All These Years),“ but it's his happy time with Thelonious Monk's “Skippy“ that tells us his best may be yet to come.

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