Instead of jumping straight to a solution, TRIZ uses an "abstract-to-apply" workflow to broaden your thinking. TRIZ For Dummies by Lilly Haines-Gadd · Audiobook preview

TRIZ is built on the idea that someone, somewhere, has already solved your problem (or one very similar to it).

The goal of every system. An "ideal" system provides all benefits with zero costs or harms—essentially solving the problem without adding complexity.

A master list of solutions—like "Segmentation" or "Prior Action"—derived from global patent history to resolve contradictions. 🔄 The TRIZ Process

The heart of any problem. A contradiction occurs when improving one thing makes another worse (e.g., making a phone screen larger but keeping the device light).

TRIZ is a systematic toolkit designed to solve complex problems and drive innovation by following predictable patterns rather than relying on random "lightbulb" moments. Standing for Teoria Reshenia Izobretatelskikh Zadach (Russian for "Theory of Inventive Problem Solving"), it was developed by Genrich Altschuller after he analyzed over 200,000 patents to uncover how inventors actually solve problems. 🛠️ Core Concepts

Triz For: Dummies

Instead of jumping straight to a solution, TRIZ uses an "abstract-to-apply" workflow to broaden your thinking. TRIZ For Dummies by Lilly Haines-Gadd · Audiobook preview

TRIZ is built on the idea that someone, somewhere, has already solved your problem (or one very similar to it). TRIZ For Dummies

The goal of every system. An "ideal" system provides all benefits with zero costs or harms—essentially solving the problem without adding complexity. Instead of jumping straight to a solution, TRIZ

A master list of solutions—like "Segmentation" or "Prior Action"—derived from global patent history to resolve contradictions. 🔄 The TRIZ Process An "ideal" system provides all benefits with zero

The heart of any problem. A contradiction occurs when improving one thing makes another worse (e.g., making a phone screen larger but keeping the device light).

TRIZ is a systematic toolkit designed to solve complex problems and drive innovation by following predictable patterns rather than relying on random "lightbulb" moments. Standing for Teoria Reshenia Izobretatelskikh Zadach (Russian for "Theory of Inventive Problem Solving"), it was developed by Genrich Altschuller after he analyzed over 200,000 patents to uncover how inventors actually solve problems. 🛠️ Core Concepts