Tina Seelig is Executive Director of Knight-Hennessy Scholars, and Director Emeritus of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program. She teaches courses in the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (d.school) and has led several fellowship programs in the School of Engineering that are focused on creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Dr. Seelig earned her PhD in Neuroscience at Stanford Medical School, and has been a management consultant, entrepreneur, and author of 17 books, including inGenius, Creativity Rules, and What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20. She is the recipient of the Gordon Prize from the National Academy of Engineering, the Olympus Innovation Award, and the Silicon Valley Visionary Award.
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Author
Speaker
TED Talk - How to Catch Luck:
Entrepreneurs manifest new ventures seemingly out of thin air. On the surface they look incredibly lucky, but they are really masters of making their own luck. The key is understanding that luck is rarely a lightning strike – isolated and dramatic – but a wind that blows constantly. Therefore, you need to build a sail - made up of tiny behaviors - to catch the winds of luck. This talk was delivered at TED NYC in June 2018. |
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The 6 Characteristics of Truly Creative People
Creativity often feels like a mystery. Whether we are struggling to generate fresh ideas or staring at problems with no solutions in sight, the spark of creative genius often seems out of reach. In this talk, delivered at Lincoln Center in New York City, Tina Seelig reveals a set of tools and conditions that we each control - our Innovation Engine - that allows us to increase our own creativity and that of our teams and organizations. She shows that just as the scientific method demystifies the process of discovery, there is a formal process for unlocking the pathway to invention |
A Crash Course in Creativity with more than 44,000 Student
Tina Seelig taught several interactive, online creativity courses to tens of thousands of people around the world. In this video she describes the experience and what she learned about online education, including the challenges, surprises, and opportunities. One key take away is that teaching in a classroom is like surfing, where you learn how to skillfully ride the incoming waves. In contrast, online teaching is like steering an ocean liner - if you see an iceberg, you are very likely to hit it! |
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Podcasts
Take a deep dive into how to launch your career by unpacking the often overlooked and under-taught soft skills critical to the success of every entrepreneur, including knowing when to quit, what to do in an interview, and how to find your superpower. This podcast is brought to you by the Stanford Technology Ventures Program and Stanford eCorner
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Tina Seelig is the host of the Stanford Innovation Lab podcast, brought to you by Stanford eCorner and the Stanford Technology Ventures Program (STVP). This series is designed to give you a taste of the topics that Tina and her colleagues at STVP explore in their classes on innovation and entrepreneurship.
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People often think of luck as something that happens to them. It's actually much more nuanced because there's quite a difference between fortune, chance and luck. In this TED Radio Hour podcast, Tina shares her thoughts on luck with host, Guy Raz.
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Contact
Tina Seelig welcomes feedback and questions as well as queries about speaking engagements at [email protected]. You can follow Tina on Twitter and Medium. On this page is a form to submit questions/requests.