April 8, 2025

Are We All Built To Create? We All Can Bring Ideas To The Table With Nick Jain

Are We All Built To Create? We All Can Bring Ideas To The Table With Nick Jain

Are all of us built to create? Nick Jain thinks so, and in this conversation, he shares how real impact comes from aligning with a mission and empowering your people's ideas whether you're working with NASA or launching your own business.

Are all of us built to create? Nick Jain thinks so and he’s got the track record to back it up, having led transformations at NASA, Comcast, and even NASCAR. He breaks down what it really takes to build something meaningful, whether you're navigating government red tape or scaling a private company, and why aligning with a mission matters more than chasing quick profits. He also shares how his platform, IdeaScale, helps organizations tap into the creativity of their people and turn ideas into action. If you’re building, dreaming, or just trying to make your thing work better, this conversation is packed with the kind of insights that’ll stick with you. 

 

To connect with Nick Jain: 

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickjain/

Twitter/X: https://x.com/NickMJain

Website: https://ideascale.com/

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Ideascalesolution

Free Gift: IdeaScale software is completely free for individuals/teams up to 100 people, no strings attached. Just click "sign up" on https://ideascale.com/

 

To connect with Frank Iglesias: 

https://www.frankiglesias.com/links. To partner, do business, get FREE resources or get coached by Frank, visit the links at Frank’s site, message me on social media or call/text us at 678-408-2228. I also do free introductory calls at the link below. 

https://calendly.com/seefrank/synergy-chat

Nick Jain Profile Photo

Nick Jain

Nick Jain is the CEO of IdeaScale, the social network for ideas. Major organizations ranging from the post office to Comcast to ING bank use IdeaScale to crowdsource, evaluate and implement great ideas. Nick holds an MBA from Harvard Business School and spent the first half of his career as a professor investor on wall street.