So, you were talking about carriages after all. Make up your mind.
I'm sure Daimler never talked to anyone who had made carriages nor studied them at all before he put an internal combustion engine on one. That's the logical thing for an inventor to do, right? Reinvent the carriage from the ground up.[/sarcasm]
The notion of the outsides who revolutionizes a system, and improves it, with no experience in the system nor advice from experts, is a myth. It's not reality. That's not how human progress works. It's Besty DeVos running the Department of Education. We make progress by standing on the shoulders of those who came before us to reach new heights.
Let me take me back to my original post: "Innovation rarely comes from those entrenched in any institution."
You use Daimler as an example, which of course totally supports my thesis.
Read Clayton M. Christensen, this idea is now very widely accepted.
And of course the innovators get advise from experts, that point is completely moot.
Why would you bring the idiot Betsy Devos into a discussion? We are talking about successful innovators, haha! : - )