Thomas Edison didn't just invent—he industrialized invention. At his Menlo Park laboratory, he promised "a minor invention every ten days and a big thing every six months." He hired specialists in different fields, created systematic testing processes, and built the world's first research and development facility.
Edison understood that innovation isn't magic—it's method. He tested thousands of materials for lightbulb filaments, documenting every failure. "I have not failed," he said. "I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work."
He turned creativity into a business process: identify a problem, research solutions, test systematically, improve continuously.
At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we apply Edison's method to serving {CITY}. We don't wait for inspiration—we systematically improve our products, our processes, our service. Innovation is a discipline, not an accident.
America's 250th celebrates the process that turns ideas into reality.
#USA250 #Innovation #SmallBusiness #{CITY}
Edison understood that innovation isn't magic—it's method. He tested thousands of materials for lightbulb filaments, documenting every failure. "I have not failed," he said. "I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work."
He turned creativity into a business process: identify a problem, research solutions, test systematically, improve continuously.
At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we apply Edison's method to serving {CITY}. We don't wait for inspiration—we systematically improve our products, our processes, our service. Innovation is a discipline, not an accident.
America's 250th celebrates the process that turns ideas into reality.
#USA250 #Innovation #SmallBusiness #{CITY}
Historical Event
Thomas Edison's Menlo Park Laboratory, February 1876-1882
Story Angle
entrepreneur