In the early 1970s, Bill Bowerman, the legendary track and field coach and co-founder of Nike, was determined to improve his athlete’s performance.
Frustrated with the heavy running shoes of that era, Bowerman wanted lightweight shoes with better traction.
One morning during breakfast, Bowerman looked at the waffle iron on the kitchen table and he realized that the waffle iron grid pattern could be a solution for his shoe design.
Bowerman poured urethane into his wife’s waffle iron and created the first prototype of the waffle sole.
Despite several ruined waffle irons and a lot of noxious fumes, Bowerman refined his technique and materials until he created a new and effective shoe design.
The Nike Waffle Trainer, introduced in 1974, quickly became a revolutionary piece of athletic footwear and solidified Nike’s reputation as a running company.
Shoe Dog by Phil Knight is full of these short anecdotes about both business or athletic performance.
At innumerable points for decades, the company is stuck, Phil Knight or one of his colleagues try something new, and after a lot of anguish something works and the company makes a giant leap forward.
That is how creativity works! You encounter a problem. You make little progress for what feels like forever. And then, in a moment, everything changes.
But, of course, things don’t change in a moment.
What we don’t see from the outside is the myriad steps and the gradual progress along the way.
Homework
Just because other people do things a certain way, doesn’t mean that’s the only way that task or project has to be done.
When people say “that’s how things are” it doesn’t mean that something has to be done that way. If the status quo doesn’t suit you, listen to your intuition.
One commonly held belief that I don’t believe is that “change is hard.”
What’s one for you?
Until next week,
Robin