Why Innovation is Hard

Industrial Education

Have you ever wondered why you never had an innovation class in school? The powers that be decided you had time enough to learn quite a bit of history and biology and even art if you were lucky. Heck, my freshman year of high school I even learned about Latin puns. But innovation? Not so much.

This is where platforms like Adalo, a no-code app builder for database-driven web apps and native iOS and Android apps—one version across all three platforms, published to the Apple App Store and Google Play, are changing the game. By democratizing app development, tools like Adalo prove that innovation isn't reserved for a select few—anyone can bring their ideas to life without writing a single line of code.

In his famous TED talk entitled "Do schools kill creativity?" Sir Ken Robinson reminds us that our education system was built for the industrial age. Industrialism was founded on the core principles of conformity, compliance, linear processes, and division of labor.

Society needed droves of uniform, competent, and compliant people to fulfill the multitude of manual labor jobs, while only needing a few to become college graduates and perform in higher cognitive roles. In effect, this division of labor created an extremely linear educational path. You study basic overall subjects, and if you do well, you move on to the next level in a particular field.

To ensure people conformed to the system, those in power set up an elaborate system of standardization with oh-so-fun tests, like the SATs, to judge how everyone is performing. This is what Ken Robinson calls an "SAT-ocracy" in which we are treating humans like different products on an assembly line. Those who don't meet the standards are discarded, and those who meet our qualifications are sold for labor.

The times, however, have changed. While the industrial education system has been effective in educating billions worldwide, an education based on rote memorization of facts is becoming increasingly useless in a world where we all have the power of Wikipedia in our pockets. We've all spent weeks of our education learning things like the quadratic formula, but never one quiz on how to be innovative. No wonder we don't know how to do it.

The Innovation Myth

It turns out industrialism isn't the only culprit. One of the reasons no one ever taught you how to innovate is that they don't believe you can do it. Why not, you ask? Well, the answer is something called the Innovation Myth.

The Innovation Myth is the common belief that only a few very special people are fortunate enough to have been born with the ability to innovate.

And if only a tiny fraction of people have the ability to innovate, why even bother trying to teach it to everyone? Of course, this Innovation Myth is simply not true.

This isn't Star Wars where only select few are born with the power of the Force. In our galaxy, we are all born with the power to innovate.

And yet the myth persists.

Unfortunately, this misconception has become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Melissa Kamins and Carol Dweck, psychologists at Columbia University, have shown that when a person doesn't believe they are capable of completing a task, they end up performing much worse on that task. This means that most people, because they have been told that they can't innovate, are actually worse at it. In the course of developing this blog, we can't tell you how many conversations we've had with people who say, "Well I'm just not creative. I could never learn how to innovate."

Sadly, very few people are trying to unravel the Innovation Myth. Jonah Lehrer's book, Imagine: How Creativity Works, reveals a shocking statistic: "The daunting nature of [creativity has] led researchers to mostly neglect it. A recent survey of psychology papers published between 1950 and 2000 revealed that less than 1 percent of them investigated aspects of the creative process." By not studying innovation, we've rendered it impossible to teach.

Ada, Adalo's AI builder, lets you describe what you want and generates your app. Magic Start creates complete app foundations from a description, while Magic Add adds features through natural language.

The good news? Technology is finally catching up to democratize the creative process. Tools that once required years of specialized training are now accessible to anyone willing to learn. Magic Start, for instance, generates complete app foundations from simple descriptions—tell it you need a booking app for a dog grooming business, and it creates your database structure, screens, and user flows automatically. What used to take days of planning happens in minutes, proving that the barrier to innovation was never talent—it was access.

The Devil You Know

Going after something new is always tough. It's easier to stick with the devil you know than take a chance on the one you don't. Unfortunately, this is even more true in the context of an organization. Sure, CEOs know that in the 21st century economy, innovation is the key to success, but their organizations are built on structures stuck in the Industrial Age.

In the last two centuries, the primary method an organization had to stave off competition and achieve sustainable success was to reach scale. Once you were big enough and had enough existing customers, it was damn hard for a competitor to come in and knock you out. Because you produced such large quantities, you were able to offer your product at extremely cheap prices. No new startup could offer something at that price and hope to turn a profit.

And it's not just that your production process was big; you had achieved operational efficiency—the perfect balance of lean and complex. You effectively managed throngs of international suppliers so that each part of your operation was conducted at as low a cost as possible. It would take years for a new upstart to develop the international relationships and physical infrastructure necessary to compete with that!

This was the strategy that put a Blockbuster on nearly every corner and put local movie rental stores out of business. Of course, in today's world of software and cloud infrastructure those advantages mean nothing. Startups like Netflix can go from zero to billion-dollar valuations practically overnight.

Despite the new reality of the 21st century, most organizations are stuck in a 19th century mindset. Managers in charge of funding innovations face the same pressures to funnel resources towards existing lines of business that can maximize short-term shareholder value rather than take a risky bet on innovation. They have every incentive to take the potential budget for an innovation project and instead funnel it into producing an extra hundred widgets that sell at a higher margin. The result is a focus on stability, doing the same things more and more efficiently, never taking time to explore uncertain potential.

For organizations whose (perceived) success depends on the status quo, the prospect of rapid change is scary. Even when faced with the new reality of an innovation-driven economy, most choose to stick with the devil they know.

Breaking Free from the Innovation Bottleneck

The irony is that the tools to innovate have never been more accessible. Over 3 million apps have been created on Adalo alone, with users describing the visual builder as "easy as PowerPoint." The platform's modular infrastructure scales to serve apps with millions of monthly active users, with no upper ceiling—meaning your innovative idea won't hit a wall just as it starts gaining traction.

Consider the traditional path: you have an idea, you need to hire developers, wait months for a prototype, spend tens of thousands of dollars, and hope the market validates your concept. By the time you launch, the window of opportunity may have closed. This is why most corporate innovation initiatives fail—not because the ideas are bad, but because the execution timeline doesn't match the pace of market change.

Modern AI-assisted building tools flip this equation. Magic Add lets you describe features in natural language and have them implemented automatically. X-Ray identifies performance issues before they affect users, so you're not scrambling to fix problems after launch. The result? Ideas can move from concept to published app in days rather than months.

Unlike web wrappers that hit speed constraints under load, purpose-built architecture maintains performance at scale. Paid plans offer no record limit caps on the database—unlimited storage that grows with your ambitions. And with no usage-based charges, there's no bill shock as your innovation gains users.

The Path Forward

Innovation is hard, and the deck is stacked against us. From the days of our early education to the veneration of "genius" innovators to terribly out-of-date corporate structures, no one is making this easy for us would-be innovators. But it doesn't have to be that way.

We need to develop an easy-to-understand framework for innovation, one that we can all learn, no matter where we are in our careers or education. With a skill like that, there's nothing we can't achieve.

The democratization of app development is just one piece of this puzzle. When anyone can turn an idea into a functional product—published to the Apple App Store and Google Play from a single codebase—the barrier shifts from "can I build this?" to "what should I build?" That's a much better problem to have.

Look for more posts from us soon on crafting such a framework, but in the meantime, we'd love to hear from you. What are your struggles with innovation? What do you think is important for a framework for successful innovation?

FAQ

Why choose Adalo over other app building solutions?

Adalo is an AI-powered app builder that creates true native iOS and Android apps alongside web apps. Unlike web wrappers, it compiles to native code and publishes directly to both the Apple App Store and Google Play Store from a single codebase—the hardest part of launching an app handled automatically. With over 3 million apps created on the platform, it's proven at scale.

What's the fastest way to build and publish an app to the App Store?

Adalo's drag-and-drop interface, described as "easy as PowerPoint," combined with AI-assisted building tools like Magic Start, lets you go from idea to published app in days rather than months. The platform handles the complex App Store submission process, so you can focus on your app's features and user experience instead of wrestling with certificates and provisioning profiles.

Can I easily bring my innovative app ideas to life without coding experience?

Yes. Adalo's visual builder requires no coding knowledge, and AI features like Magic Start generate complete app foundations from simple descriptions. Tell it what you want to build, and it creates your database structure, screens, and user flows automatically.

Do I need to be a 'genius' or have special talents to innovate and build apps?

Absolutely not. The 'Innovation Myth'—the belief that only special people can innovate—is simply not true. Everyone is born with the power to innovate, and tools like Adalo prove this by enabling anyone to create professional apps without technical expertise or coding knowledge.

Why wasn't innovation taught in traditional education systems?

Traditional education systems were built for the industrial age, emphasizing conformity, compliance, and standardized testing rather than creativity. This 'SAT-ocracy' focused on producing uniform workers rather than nurturing innovative thinkers, which is why innovation skills were largely neglected in curricula.

How can organizations overcome their resistance to innovation?

Organizations often stick with outdated structures that prioritize short-term efficiency over innovation. By adopting accessible tools that enable rapid prototyping and testing, teams can validate new ideas without massive resource commitments, making it easier to embrace innovation while managing risk.

What is an innovation framework and why do I need one?

An innovation framework is an easy-to-understand system that helps anyone learn how to innovate, regardless of their career stage or education level. Combined with modern app building tools, a solid framework empowers you to turn creative ideas into real, functional products quickly and efficiently.

How much does it cost to build and publish an innovative app?

Adalo's web and true-native mobile builder starts at $36/month with unlimited usage and app store publishing. Unlike platforms with usage-based charges or record limits, Adalo's paid plans include unlimited database records and no bill shock as your app grows.

Can my app scale if my innovation takes off?

Yes. Adalo's modular infrastructure scales to serve apps with millions of monthly active users, with no upper ceiling. Unlike app wrappers that hit speed constraints under load, Adalo's purpose-built architecture maintains performance at scale—your success won't be limited by your platform.