Thomas Edison — "Anything that won't sell, I don't want to invent."
Anything that won't sell, I don't want to invent.
Anything that won't sell, I don't want to invent.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"I am not a believer in the theory of evolution. I believe in the theory of creation. I believe that God created the world and everything in it."
"The first thing is to find out what the world needs; then proceed to invent it."
"Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration."
"I have friends in the other world. I have had very pleasant conversations with them. I am rather unorthodox in this matter."
"I am not a spiritualist. I am not a medium. I am a scientist. I am trying to build a machine to communicate with the dead. I am trying to prove that there is life after death. I am trying to prove tha…"
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
An invention is worthless if no one will buy it. Edison is saying he refuses to spend time on ideas that lack a market, no matter how clever or technically impressive they might be. Practical commercial value, not novelty or pure curiosity, is the only test that matters. If a product cannot find customers willing to pay, the effort that went into creating it has been wasted and should never have started.
Edison held over 1,000 patents and built Menlo Park as the world's first industrial research lab, explicitly organized to convert ideas into revenue. He famously lost the War of the Currents because Westinghouse's AC sold better than his DC. The phonograph, light bulb, and motion picture camera were all pushed toward mass markets, not left as demonstrations. This quote captures his self-image as a businessman-inventor, not a scientist.
Edison worked during America's Gilded Age industrial boom, when Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Morgan were building empires and venture capital first flowed to inventors. Patents had real monetary value, and General Electric formed around Edison's commercialized work in 1892. Universities still treated applied science as lesser than pure research, so framing invention as profit-driven pushed back against that snobbery and matched the era's worship of productive, wealth-creating enterprise.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty