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Yoram Solomon

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Yoram Solomon
YoramSolomon_square_2_1200.png YoramSolomon_square_2_1200.png
Native nameYoram Solomon
Born1965/01/08
Tel-Aviv, Israel
🏡 ResidencePlano, Texas
🏳️ NationalityIsraeli American
🏳️ CitizenshipUnited States, Israel
🏫 EducationPhD, MBA, LLB, E-Tech
🎓 Alma materCapella University, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, Tel Aviv University
💼 Occupation
Author, Professional Speaker, Professor
📆 Years active  38
👔 EmployerInnovation Culture Institute LLC
Notable workThe Book of Trust, Culture starts with YOU, not your boss!, Un-Kill Creativity, Bowling with a Crystal Ball, Cause of Death: Political Correctness
🏡 Home townPlano, Texas
Term2015-2019
Board member ofPlano Independent School District
👩 Spouse(s)Anat Solomon
HonorsBeta Gamma Sigma
🌐 Websitehttps://www.yoramsolomon.com
👍 Facebookyoram.solomon
📷 Instagramyoramsolomon
💼 LinkedINyoramsolomon



Yoram Solomon (Hebrew: יורם סולומון; born January 8, 1965) is an Israeli-American innovation culture and trust author, speaker, trainer, and thought leader. He is known for his work in the area of innovation culture, trust, entrepreneurship, and technology forecasting.

Early life and family[edit]

Yoram Solomon was born in Tel-Aviv, Israel, to two immigrant parents from Romania. He grew up in Yaffo, and lived in Bat-Yam until his military service in the Israeli Defense Forces. He met his wife Anat in Tel-Aviv, and they were married in 1993. In 1998 they moved to Silicon Valley, where both their daughters, Maya and Shira were born. In 2003 they were relocated to Plano, Texas, by his then employer, Texas Instruments.

Education and academics[edit]

Prior to his military service, Yoram Solomon attended Ort Singalowski junior college and received his electrical engineering technician degree. In 1998, he graduated from Tel-Aviv University’s law school with a law degree (LLB). After moving to the U.S., in 2001, he obtain an MBA from the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, and finally, in 2010, he graduated with a PhD in Organization and Management from Capella University. For his dissertation research, he studied the reasons people are so much more creative when they work in startups than when they work in mature companies, which was published in From Startup to Maturity. He also attended executive education programs at Stanford University and the Center for Creative Leadership.

In 2010, Dr. Solomon became an adjunct professor of entrepreneurship at the University of Texas at Dallas’ Jindal Graduate School of Management’s Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship.[1]. In 2017, he became an adjunct professor of entrepreneurship at the Hadassah Academic College in Jerusalem, Israel[2], and in 2018 he became an adjunct professor of entrepreneurship at the Southern Methodist University’s Caruth Institute of Entrepreneurship in Dallas.[3]

Professional career[edit]

Right after his military service, Yoram Solomon began working as the R&D manager for an Israeli technology company in Israel, Electronics line. In 1995, he left to start his own startup company, Solram Electronics Ltd., which developed one of the early Internet telephony products. In 1998, he moved to Silicon Valley to join Voyager Technologies, a small engineering company that was an early developer of Bluetooth and Wi-Fi technologies. Voyager was acquired by PCTEL in 2000. In 2002, he joined Texas Instruments in the Mobile Connectivity Solutions group, developing mobile Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, and Mobile DTV components for cellular phones. In 2008, he joined Interphase Inc. as the Vice President of Corporate Strategy, responsible for the development of penveu, an interactive display system for the education market. He left Interphase in 2015 and founded the Innovation Culture Institute, LLC, a consulting firm focused on helping companies build trust, a culture of innovation, and find the next big thing. As part of his professional career, he served on the boards of the Wi-Fi Alliance, the Wi-Media Alliance, and as the president of the Mobile DTV Alliance.

Personal life and community service[edit]

Yoram Solomon had his Israeli Defense Forces basic training in an artillery brigade in 1982. From 1983 to 1988, he served his active duty in the Center for Computing and Information Systems, Mamram. He then served ten more years as a reservist in the Israel Defense Forces 35th Airborne Paratroopers Brigade. He was honorably discharged with the rank of First Sergeant Major. He got his private pilot’s license in 1999 and volunteered for the US Air Force Civil Air Patrol from 2004 to 2006, and from 2014 to 2016, as a Transport Mission Pilot and as an Aerospace Education Officer.

Before flying USAF CAP mission during hurricane Rita
Serving at IDF's 35th Airborne

In 2013, he ran for the office of trustee on the board of the Wikipedia:Plano Independent School District|Plano Independent School District]]. He won 35.41% of the votes but lost to the incumbent trustee, who won 41.75% of the votes[4]. In 2015, he ran again for the same office, but this time won the election with 40.39% of the votes against 27.04% of the votes that the incumbent trustee had. Solomon served on the school board from May 2015[5] to May 2019. He did not run for reelection or for election for any other office.

Among other community activities, he served on the board of Plano Youth Leadership, the Texas-Israel Chamber of Commerce, the Alliance for Higher Education, the North Texas Center for Innovation and Commercialization, and the Association for Strategic Planning. In 2020 he was appointed to the Plano Comprehensive Plan Review Committee[6], which delivered the long-term comprehensive plan for the city of Plano, Texas, in 2021[7].

Books and articles[edit]

Solomon published his first book, Bowling with a Crystal Ball[8], in 2007. The book described the process he followed to initiate the work on the USB 3.0 and 3.1 specifications. The book also included seven-year forecasts of 18 different fast-paced technology trends. In 2014, he published his dissertation in the book From Startup to Maturity[9]. On an unrelated topic, in 2012, after finding the right motivation, based on his doctoral research of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, he lost 32lb and published that journey in the book Worst Diet Ever.[10] Eight years after publishing his first book, Dr. Solomon checked the accuracy of his original forecasts in that book and published the second edition of Bowling with a Crystal Ball[11], including his new findings and the story behind the formation of the USB 3.0 specifications. In 2016, he published Un-Kill Creativity: How Corporate America can out-innovate Startups [12]. This book not only explains why people are less creative in mature companies but also provides tools and processes for mature companies to reverse those trends. In 2017, Yoram published three books. The first, Business Plan through Investors’ Eyes[13], was a workbook that accompanies his online Udemy course by the same name[14], based on his experience as one of the founding members of the North Texas Angel (investor) Network. The second, Blueprints for the Next Big Thing[15], is a concise tool guide for companies to build a culture of innovation and find the next disruptive product or service in their market. The third, Culture, starts with YOU, not your boss![16] Includes nine fictional stories inspired by true events that demonstrate the importance of innovation culture, how it is created, and how it is destroyed in companies. In 2018, Yoram Solomon collaborated with Lori Vann, a teen non-suicidal self-injury expert, to publish Cause of Death: Political Correctness[17]. The book demonstrated the devastating consequences of political correctness on corporate creativity and profitability and the loss of life. It tracks the causes of political correctness and provides two alternative futures.

In 2017, Yoram Solomon began his research of trust, resulting initially in five mini-books: Can I Trust You? 50+1 Habits that will make you a Trustworthy Salesperson[18], Can I Trust You? 70+1 Habits that will make you a trustworthy Leader[19], Can I Trust You? 67+1 Habits that will make you a trustworthy Team Member[20], Can I Trust You? 60+1 Habits that will help you build trust and be a trusted project manager[21], and Can I Trust You? 55+1 Habits that will make you a trusted Consultant, Advisor, or Coach[22]. Finally, starting in 2020, he put all his research and work on trust into a major book, The Book of Trust (now 3rd Edition)[23]. The book received a foreword from Former Air Force Fighter Pilot, Vietnam POW, and Congressman Sam Johnson, and is also available in a shorter version, The (MINI) Book of Trust[24].

Between 2016 and 2018, Yoram was a contributing columnist to Inc. Magazine, writing a column called Non-Accidental Ideas[25]. Starting in 2012, he also wrote many articles for the online blog Innovation Excellence[26], which named him one of the top 40 innovation bloggers[27]. Thinkers 360 ranked him in the top 50 global thought leaders on culture[28], human resources[29], and startups[30]. He also wrote articles for HR.com[31], the Directors & Boards Journal[32], and the Better Business Focus Magazine (UK)[33][34].

TEDx talks[edit]

Speaking at TEDxJCU 2023

In 2014, as part of the Leadership Plano class, Yoram was one of the organizers and the host of the first TEDxPlano event[35]. Resulting from the research he has done for the book Cause of Death: Political Correctness, Solomon found a surprising cause for the culture of litigation that exists in the U.S. It was an event that occurred in the late 1960s. In 2018, he explained that connection in his TEDxOakLawn talk, The Day that Forever changed American Culture [36]. In 2022, he delivered his second talk at TEDxPlanoSeniorHS, titled The Relativity of Trust[37], and in 2023, his third talk at TEDxJCU, titled 3 Reasons to Trust Students with ChatGPT[38]

The Trust Show Podcast[edit]

In 2021, Dr. Solomon published the first episode of his podcast, The Trust Show[39]. Since then, it has been ranked by Listen Notes, a podcast search engine, in the top 3% of podcasts globally[40].

Patents[edit]

Dr. Solomon’s first patent was issued in 1999, covering the invention of InterHome, an early Internet Telephony product created by his Israeli startup, Solram Electronics, Ltd. Since then, he filed several patents related to mobile technologies while working at Texas Instruments, and finally, several patents related to the invention of the penveu interactive display system at Interphase, Inc[41].

References[edit]

  1. "New Master's Degree in Entrepreneurship Prepares Students to Take Charge of Business Creativity". 11 January 2010.
  2. "Hadassah Academic College".
  3. "Southern Methodist University, Cox School of Business, Faculty Directory: Yoram Solomon".
  4. "Election Summary Report, City and Schools General and Special Elections, 05/11/13". 11 May 2013.
  5. "Election Summary Report Collin County, Texas General and Special Elections May 9, 2015" (PDF). 9 May 2015.
  6. https://content.civicplus.com/api/assets/b6304e21-0c80-424e-8954-8b8a24406b70
  7. https://www.planocompplan.org/
  8. Yoram., Solomon (2007). Bowling with a crystal ball : how to predict technology trends, create disruptive implementations and navigate them through industry. Charleston, S.C.: BookSurge. ISBN 9781419652875. OCLC 226241856. Search this book on
  9. Solomon, Yoram (2015). From Startup to Maturity: A case study of employee creativity antecedents in high tech companies. Charleston, SC: Create Space. ISBN 978-1519112200. Search this book on
  10. Solomon, Yoram (2014). Worst Diet Ever: How to find the motivation to lose weight and live healthy. Charleston, SC: CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1975807504. Search this book on
  11. Yoram., Solomon (2015). Bowling with a crystal ball : how to predict technology trends, create disruptive ... [Place of publication not identified]: Createspace Independent. ISBN 978-1518768279. OCLC 941877287. Search this book on
  12. Solomon, Yoram (2017). Un-Kill Creativity: How Corporate America can out-innovate startups. Plano, TX: Large Scale Creativity. ISBN 978-1535525282. Search this book on
  13. Solomon, Yoram (2016). Business Plan through Investors' Eyes WORKBOOK. Charleston, SC: CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1543089387. Search this book on
  14. "Business Plan through investors' eyes | Udemy". Udemy. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  15. Solomon, Yoram (2017). Blueprints for the Next Big Thing: Building a Culture of Innovation. Charleston, SC: CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1975880798. Search this book on
  16. Solomon, Yoram (2017). Culture starts with YOU, not your Boss! The 5 Pieces of the Innovation Culture Puzzle. Charleston, SC: CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1548206734. Search this book on
  17. Solomon, Yoram; Vann, Lori (2018). Cause of Death: Political Correctness. How and shy P.C. kills creativity, productivity, and children, and what the future might be. Charleston, SC: CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1974549542. Search this book on
  18. Solomon, Yoram (2019). Can I Trust You? 50+1 Habits that will make you a trustworthy Salesperson. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 978-1796442250. Search this book on
  19. Solomon, Yoram (2019). Can I Trust You? 70+1 Habits that will make you a trustworthy Leader. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 978-1093526813. Search this book on
  20. Solomon, Yoram (2019). Can I Trust You? 67+1 Habits that will make you a trustworthy Team Member. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 978-1097715442. Search this book on
  21. Solomon, Yoram (2021). Can I Trust You? 60+1 Habits that will help you build trust and be a trusted project manager. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 979-8726677194. Search this book on
  22. Solomon, Yoram (2021). Can I Trust You? 55+1 Habits that will make you a trusted Consultant, Advisor, or Coach. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 979-8466618136. Search this book on
  23. Solomon, Yoram (2022). The Book of Trust: Build Trust, Be Trusted, Know Who to Trust, 3rd Edition. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 979-8788445649. Search this book on
  24. Solomon, Yoram (2022). The (mini) Book of Trust: Build Trust, Be Trusted, Know Who to Trust, 3rd Edition. Charleston, SC: Kindle Direct Publishing. ISBN 979-8790407925. Search this book on
  25. "Yoram Solomon's articles | Inc.com". www.inc.com. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  26. "Yoram Solomon – Innovation Excellence". innovationexcellence.com. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  27. "Top 40 Innovation Bloggers of 2019 – Innovation Excellence". innovationexcellence.com. Retrieved 2020-05-28.
  28. https://www.thinkers360.com/top-50-global-thought-leaders-and-influencers-on-culture-2022/
  29. https://www.thinkers360.com/top-50-global-thought-leaders-and-influencers-on-hr-2022/
  30. https://www.thinkers360.com/top-50-global-thought-leaders-and-influencers-on-startups-2022/
  31. https://www.hr.com/en/app/profile/Yoram_Solomon/contents/articles
  32. "Directors Don't Just Direct a Board, They Guide Their Board to Success". www.directorsandboards.com. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  33. Solomon, Yoram (June 2018). "How the government (US) could easily boost crowdfunding, innovation, and jobs" (PDF). Better Business Focus: 22–23. line feed character in |title= at position 43 (help)
  34. Solomon, Yoram (July 2018). "How to convert time into trust and creativity – the 7-38-55 rule" (PDF). Better Business Focus: 34.
  35. "Front Page - TedX Plano". TedX Plano. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  36. "TEDxOakLawn | Home Page". tedxoaklawn.com. Retrieved 2018-06-04.
  37. https://www.ted.com/talks/yoram_solomon_the_relativity_of_trust
  38. https://www.ted.com/talks/yoram_solomon_3_reasons_to_trust_students_with_chatgpt
  39. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-trust-show/id1569249060
  40. https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/the-trust-show-yoram-solomon-2EC0VGubKSz/
  41. "US Patent and Trademark Office Patent Full-Text and Image Database".


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