One thing we writers are good at is taking others' concepts, repackaging them, giving them a new name, and then proclaiming a new discovery. Geoffrey Moore essentially did that when he popularized the work of the Department of Agriculture in Iowa in the 1930s on the technology adoption-diffusion cycle in his very successful book called Crossing the Chasm. Blue Ocean Strategy, another best-selling business book, gave a new name to an old entrepreneurial strategy--looking for unserved needs in the market. So, not to be left out of this game, I developed what I call the Allen Technology Richter Scale, with all due apologies to Mr. Richter who helped us measure the intensity of earthquakes.
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