Many of my business students tell me, “If I just had the right idea, I’d be set.” I get it. They picture themselves as the next unicorn founder. They assume a brilliant idea will sell itself. But that’s rarely how it works. I’ve seen plenty of great ideas stall before they ever had a chance. In fact, many new products never get traction because they fail to get noticed. According to Harvard Business Review, even promising products often fail to gain traction without the visibility and support needed to reach real customers. That’s why it’s worth looking at how some of the most recognizable products almost didn’t make it. They weren’t short on innovation. What they lacked was the right timing, visibility, or someone who believed in them. Curiosity plays a much bigger role than most people realize. Each of the following examples had a rough start, but curiosity didn’t stop at the invention. It showed up again when someone else saw the potential and helped the rest of the world see it, too.
1. How Curiosity Took Bubble Wrap From Failed Wallpaper To IBM’s Shipping Solution
In 1957, Alfred Fielding and Marc Chavannes thought they’d come up with a fun, textured wallpaper by sealing two shower curtains together. It didn’t sell, and the version they tried as insulation didn’t sell either. Then they saw that IBM needed a solution to ship their new computers without damage. They pitched their idea. IBM said yes. And just like that, Bubble Wrap found its home, not on walls, but in shipping boxes. Once they found the right fit for it, Bubble Wrap went from forgotten idea to something that changed how we ship and protect just about everything.
2. How Post-It Notes Became A Hit After A Moment Of Curiosity In A Hymnal
Back in 1968, Spencer Silver invented a pressure-sensitive adhesive that wasn’t strong enough to be useful. It hung around in 3M’s archives until fellow employee, Art Fry, needed something to keep his place in his church hymnal without ruining the pages. Having worked for a company that cared about building a culture of curiosity, he had learned about Silver’s adhesive and made a prototype. When 3M handed out samples in Boise, people couldn’t get enough of them. What started as a solution to a personal frustration turned into something most of us use every day.
3. How Curiosity About Velcro Gained Attention From NASA
George de Mestral got the idea for Velcro after taking a walk with his dog and noticing burrs stuck in the dog’s fur. The design was clever, but people weren’t convinced it had value. It was already patented and known in industrial circles, and someone at NASA saw it as a smart way to keep tools from flying around in zero gravity. Once people saw astronauts using it, interest exploded. Now it’s in shoes, jackets, hospitals, you name it. Seeing it used in space gave it the credibility it needed. From there, it took off in ways de Mestral could never have predicted.
4. How Curiosity Turned Super Glue Into A Household Staple
Super Glue (cyanoacrylate) was first discovered by scientists at Eastman Kodak in 1942 while trying to create clear plastic for gun sights during World War II. It was too sticky to use for what they needed at the time, so it got shelved. Years later, Kodak discovered its potential, rebranded it as Eastman 910, and started showing how it could be used. Once people understood its value, it became a staple in homes, hospitals, and toolkits around the world.
5. How Curiosity Made Slack Take Off After Teams Shared It
Slack didn’t start as a startup communication tool. It came from a failed video game project. The team used it to stay in touch while building the game. When the game flopped, they realized the tool itself might be the real product. They let other startups try it. Early adopters like Airbnb and BuzzFeed embraced it and spread the word. Slack grew from a repurposed internal tool to a platform millions rely on daily.
How To Train For This Kind Of Curiosity
Maybe you noticed a pattern in these stories. First, someone builds something useful. Then, they don’t stop there. They stay curious. They ask, “Who else might want this? Who hasn’t seen it yet?”
If you’re helping teams build this mindset, focus on a few things: teach them to ask better questions. Not just about what they’re building, but who it’s really for. Get them sharing their ideas before they feel ready. Encourage them to stay open to feedback, especially from outside their immediate circle.
Why Visibility And Curiosity Work Together
Beyond a marketing push, sometimes, you just need the right person to notice and say something. These products succeeded because someone recognized their potential and talked about it. The teams that get noticed build great products and then ask, “Who else needs to see this?” and do the work to put it in front of the right audience. A culture of curiosity means asking questions, spotting unexpected patterns, and being willing to share something even before it’s perfect. These products didn’t take off the first time they were introduced. What made the difference was that someone else believed in them enough to keep them alive and visible. That’s what gave them a second chance, and that’s what made them matter.