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3 Creative Business Ideas That Were Before Their Time Some visionary ideas came before the world was ready for them.

By Margaret Littman

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

For every idea that changed the world, countless others fell flat.

Of those duds, some weren't fully thought out; others were poorly executed or underfunded. And, yes, some were just bad ideas.

Some missteps, meanwhile, really were visionary -- but, just possibly, ahead of their time. Could they have been fixed?

Electric car motor

Electric car motor
Long before Prius, LEAF and Volt made eco-cars fashionable, Nikola Tesla invented a workable AC auto engine. This was 1888.

Fixable? Matt Crowe, founder and CEO of Palo Alto, Calif.-based "social ideation" firm Ahhha, believes there were too many controlling interests in gasoline-powered engines to make an AC engine a reality more than a century ago. "It always helps when the powers that be help make things a success. If things are really disruptive, they don't like that," he says.

WebTV

WebTV
As early as 1983, Microsoft was working on an interactive TV product. WebTV launched in 1996 but floundered among consumers, who saw the TV and computer as mutually exclusive technologies. Now, thanks to faster internet connections, touchscreens, higher-resolution monitors and laptop ubiquity, TV streaming has taken off.

Fixable? "The devices were not ready, and people were not ready," says Naveen Jain, former Microsoft exec and founder of Moon Express, inome and Blucora. He says sometimes an BIZ Experiences just has to wait for the technology, the consumer or, in this case, both to catch up with the idea.

Newton
Apple Newton alongside the iPhone

Newton
Before the Handspring, Palm and BlackBerry there was the Apple Newton. But in 1987, only the earliest adopters "got" the idea of a handheld PDA. Apple still came out ahead on this idea. See now: the iPad and iPhone.

Fixable? The handwriting-recognition software was slow and hard to learn. The touchscreen solved that.

Margaret Littman is a journalist who covers small businesses, travel and all manner of other topics, with a sweet spot for anything relating to stand-up paddling or Music City. She is the author of the Moon travel books to Nashville and Tennessee and is at work at a guide to the Natchez Trace. Her work has appeared in many national magazines, and she is the former editor of BIZ Experiences magazine’s Start It Up section.

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