Openness explains the ability to innovate and come up with big ideas because you're open to them, and fluid intelligence explains the ability to go and execute.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Two things I'm trying to work on are openness and flexibility.
Open is something, I think, that will continue to drive a lot of innovation.
Human societies vary in lots of independent factors affecting their openness to innovation.
Openness is something any teacher strives to instill in his or her students.
It is increasingly important to be open-minded.
It's really easy to have a nice philosophy about openness, but moving the world in that direction is a different thing. It requires both understanding where you want to go and being pragmatic about getting there.
Openness has been vital to Asia's fast growth in the past and it will continue to be crucial for the area's further development.
A high openness score means you're open-minded - you see the world for what it is - whereas a low openness score means you're incredibly closed-minded, and you see the world the way you want to see it, regardless of what is actually going on.
Fluid intelligence is not a Big Five personality trait: It's a measurement of one's ability to rapidly learn and apply a rule set. As an entrepreneur, you're rapidly dealing with different issues, and your ability to switch from one issue to another is very important.
There are a number of traits that combine to create entrepreneurial potential. We find that openness coordinates very well with successful entrepreneurs. The more open-minded you are, the more you see the world as it actually is. The more closed-minded, the more you see the world as you want it to be.