Seven years ago, a student came to me and asked me to invest in his company.
He said, "I'm working with three friends,
and we're going to try to disrupt an industry by selling stuff online."
And I said, "OK, you guys spent the whole summer on this, right?"
"No, we all took internships just in case it doesn't work out."
"All right, but you're going to go in full time once you graduate."
"Not exactly. We've all lined up backup jobs."
it's the day before the company launches,
and there is still not a functioning website.
"You guys realize, the entire company is a website.
So I obviously declined to invest.
And they ended up naming the company Warby Parker.
(Laughter)
They were recently recognized as the world's most innovative company
and valued at over a billion dollars.
And now? My wife handles our investments.
To find out, I've been studying people that I come to call "originals."
people who not only have new ideas
but take action to champion them.
They are people who stand out and speak up.
Originals drive creativity and change in the world.
They're the people you want to bet on.
And they look nothing like I expected.
I want to show you today three things I've learned
and becoming a little bit more like them.
So the first reason that I passed on Warby Parker
was they were really slow getting off the ground.
Now, you are all intimately familiar with the mind of a procrastinator.
Well, I have a confession for you. I'm the opposite. I'm a precrastinator.
You know that panic you feel a few hours before a big deadline
when you haven't done anything yet.
I just feel that a few months ahead of time.
(Laughter)
So this started early: when I was a kid, I took Nintendo games very seriously.
start playing and not stop until I had mastered them.
Eventually it got so out of hand that a local newspaper came
and did a story on the dark side of Nintendo, starring me.
(Laughter)
(Applause)
Since then, I have traded hair for teeth.
(Laughter)
But this served me well in college,
because I finished my senior thesis four months before the deadline.
And I was proud of that, until a few years ago.
I had a student named Jihae, who came to me and said,
"I have my most creative ideas when I'm procrastinating."
And I was like, "That's cute, where are the four papers you owe me?"
(Laughter)
No, she was one of our most creative students,
and as an organizational psychologist, this is the kind of idea that I test.
So I challenged her to get some data.
She goes into a bunch of companies.
She has people fill out surveys about how often they procrastinate.
Then she gets their bosses to rate how creative and innovative they are.
And sure enough, the precrastinators like me,
who rush in and do everything early
than people who procrastinate moderately.
So I want to know what happens to the chronic procrastinators.
She was like, "I don't know. They didn't fill out my survey."
(Laughter)
You actually do see that the people who wait until the last minute
are so busy goofing off that they don't have any new ideas.
And on the flip side, the people who race in
are in such a frenzy of anxiety that they don't have original thoughts either.
There's a sweet spot where originals seem to live.
Maybe original people just have bad work habits.
Maybe procrastinating does not cause creativity.
To find out, we designed some experiments.
We asked people to generate new business ideas,
and then we get independent readers
to evaluate how creative and useful they are.
And some of them are asked to do the task right away.
Others we randomly assign to procrastinate
by dangling Minesweeper in front of them
for either five or 10 minutes.
And sure enough, the moderate procrastinators
are 16 percent more creative than the other two groups.
Now, Minesweeper is awesome, but it's not the driver of the effect,
because if you play the game first before you learn about the task,
It's only when you're told that you're going to be working on this problem,
and then you start procrastinating,
but the task is still active in the back of your mind,
Procrastination gives you time to consider divergent ideas,
to think in nonlinear ways, to make unexpected leaps.
So just as we were finishing these experiments,
I was starting to write a book about originals,
and I thought, "This is the perfect time to teach myself to procrastinate,
while writing a chapter on procrastination."
and like any self-respecting precrastinator,
I woke up early the next morning
and I made a to-do list with steps on how to procrastinate.
(Laughter)
toward my goal of not making progress toward my goal.
I started writing the procrastination chapter,
and one day — I was halfway through —
I literally put it away in mid-sentence
But when I came back to it, I had all sorts of new ideas.
"You call it procrastinating. I call it thinking."
And along the way I discovered
that a lot of great originals in history were procrastinators.
He toiled on and off for 16 years
He wrote as much in his journal.
But some of the diversions he took in optics
transformed the way that he modeled light
and made him into a much better painter.
What about Martin Luther King, Jr.?
The night before the biggest speech of his life,
he was up past 3am, rewriting it.
He's sitting in the audience waiting for his turn to go onstage,
and he is still scribbling notes and crossing out lines.
When he gets onstage, 11 minutes in,
he leaves his prepared remarks
to utter four words that changed the course of history:
By delaying the task of finalizing the speech until the very last minute,
he left himself open to the widest range of possible ideas.
And because the text wasn't set in stone,
Procrastinating is a vice when it comes to productivity,
but it can be a virtue for creativity.
What you see with a lot of great originals
is that they are quick to start but they're slow to finish.
And this is what I missed with Warby Parker.
When they were dragging their heels for six months,
"You know, a lot of other companies are starting to sell glasses online."
They missed the first-mover advantage.
But what I didn't realize was they were spending all that time
trying to figure out how to get people
to be comfortable ordering glasses online.
And it turns out the first-mover advantage is mostly a myth.
Look at a classic study of over 50 product categories,
comparing the first movers who created the market
with the improvers who introduced something different and better.
What you see is that the first movers had a failure rate of 47 percent,
compared with only 8 percent for the improvers.
Look at Facebook, waiting to build a social network
until after Myspace and Friendster.
Look at Google, waiting for years after Altavista and Yahoo.
It's much easier to improve on somebody else's idea
than it is to create something new from scratch.
So the lesson I learned is that to be original you don't have to be first.
You just have to be different and better.
But that wasn't the only reason I passed on Warby Parker.
They were also full of doubts.
They had backup plans lined up,
and that made me doubt that they had the courage to be original,
because I expected that originals would look something like this.
(Laughter)
a lot of original people look confident,
they feel the same fear and doubt that the rest of us do.
They just manage it differently.
Let me show you: this is a depiction
of how the creative process works for most of us.
(Laughter)
Now, in my research, I discovered there are two different kinds of doubt.
There's self-doubt and idea doubt.
It motivates you to test, to experiment, to refine,
And so the key to being original
of avoiding the leap from step three to step four.
Instead of saying, "I'm crap,"
you say, "The first few drafts are always crap,
Well, there's a clue, it turns out,
in the Internet browser that you use.
We can predict your job performance and your commitment
just by knowing what web browser you use.
Now, some of you are not going to like the results of this study —
(Laughter)
But there is good evidence that Firefox and Chrome users
significantly outperform Internet Explorer and Safari users.
Yes.
(Applause)
They also stay in their jobs 15 percent longer, by the way.
Why? It's not a technical advantage.
The four browser groups on average have similar typing speed
and they also have similar levels of computer knowledge.
It's about how you got the browser.
Because if you use Internet Explorer or Safari,
those came preinstalled on your computer,
and you accepted the default option that was handed to you.
If you wanted Firefox or Chrome, you had to doubt the default
and ask, is there a different option out there,
and then be a little resourceful and download a new browser.
So people hear about this study and they're like,
"Great, if I want to get better at my job, I just need to upgrade my browser?"
(Laughter)
No, it's about being the kind of person
who takes the initiative to doubt the default
you will open yourself up to the opposite of déjà vu.
There's a name for it. It's called vuja de.
(Laughter)
Vuja de is when you look at something you've seen many times before
and all of a sudden see it with fresh eyes.
It's a screenwriter who looks at a movie script
that can't get the green light for more than half a century.
In every past version, the main character has been an evil queen.
But Jennifer Lee starts to question whether that makes sense.
reinvents the villain as a tortured hero
and Frozen becomes the most successful animated movie ever.
So there's a simple message from this story.
When you feel doubt, don't let it go.
(Laughter)
but what sets them apart from the rest of us
is that they're even more afraid of failing to try.
They know you can fail by starting a business that goes bankrupt
or by failing to start a business at all.
They know that in the long run, our biggest regrets are not our actions
The things we wish we could redo, if you look at the science,
Elon Musk told me recently, he didn't expect Tesla to succeed.
He was sure the first few SpaceX launches
would fail to make it to orbit, let alone get back,
but it was too important not to try.
And for so many of us, when we have an important idea,
But I have some good news for you.
You are not going to get judged on your bad ideas.
A lot of people think they will.
and ask people about their biggest idea, their most important suggestion,
85 percent of them stayed silent instead of speaking up.
They were afraid of embarrassing themselves, of looking stupid.
But guess what? Originals have lots and lots of bad ideas,
Take the guy who invented this.
Do you care that he came up with a talking doll so creepy
that it scared not only kids but adults, too?
No. You celebrate Thomas Edison for pioneering the light bulb.
(Laughter)
the greatest originals are the ones who fail the most,
because they're the ones who try the most.
Take classical composers, the best of the best.
Why do some of them get more pages in encyclopedias than others
and also have their compositions rerecorded more times?
is the sheer volume of compositions that they generate.
The more output you churn out, the more variety you get
and the better your chances of stumbling on something truly original.
Even the three icons of classical music — Bach, Beethoven, Mozart —
had to generate hundreds and hundreds of compositions
to come up with a much smaller number of masterpieces.
how did this guy become great without doing a whole lot?
I don't know how Wagner pulled that off.
But for most of us, if we want to be more original,
we have to generate more ideas.
The Warby Parker founders, when they were trying to name their company,
they needed something sophisticated, unique, with no negative associations
and they tested over 2,000 possibilities
before they finally put together
So if you put all this together, what you see is that originals
are not that different from the rest of us.
They feel fear and doubt. They procrastinate.
And sometimes, it's not in spite of those qualities but because of them
So when you see those things, don't make the same mistake I did.
And when that's you, don't count yourself out either.
Know that being quick to start but slow to finish
that you can motivate yourself by doubting your ideas
and embracing the fear of failing to try,
and that you need a lot of bad ideas in order to get a few good ones.
Look, being original is not easy,
but I have no doubt about this:
it's the best way to improve the world around us.
(Applause)