How New Ideas Spread

The Diffusion of Innovations Theory explains how new ideas, products, and trends spread through a community in a predictable pattern. Introduced by sociologist Everett M. Rogers in 1962, it classifies people into five adopter categories: Innovators, Early Adopters, Early Majority, Late Majority, and Laggards.

The full story
01 Innovation Curve

This is the pattern new trends and inventions tend to follow on their path to dominance. Understanding it allows you to join the innovators instead of the laggards. The diffusion of innovations theory explains how new products and ideas spread across five groups of people—eventually reaching all of us.

02 Innovation Curve

Innovators, around 2.5% of us, are the first to buy into something new. They’re curious, love trying new things, are often well off, and can take risks like spending $4,000 on a cell phone back in 1983.

03 Innovation Curve

Early Adopters follow the innovators. They are respected, serve as opinion leaders, and carefully consider anything new before buying into it. Once they do, early adopters like to share their advice. Many of them got a $1,000 cell phone by 1996.

04 Innovation Curve

People from the Early Majority wait until early adopters have paved the way. They’re all about innovation but want to see real-world proof before making a move. Think of them as the ones who picked up $300 phones around the turn of the century.

05 Innovation Curve

People from the Late Majority are skeptical and cautious. Often more traditional, these folks wait until a majority has embraced something before they do. They finally got a $100 cell phone in 2008, long after everyone else.

06 Innovation Curve

Laggards are last to pick up new trends, often due to aversion to change or lack of resources. They rely heavily on traditional methods and may adopt new things only when it’s unavoidable.

Speed of diffusion
07 Innovation Curve

Research by Nicholas Felton suggests that as communication speeds up, innovators and early adopters can share new things faster with everyone else.

everett m. rogers’ definition
08 Innovation Curve

Everett M. Rogers, the sociologist who introduced the theory back in 1962, defined diffusion as: “The process by which an innovation spreads through a community over time using different channels.”

adoption factors
09 Innovation Curve

He also describes five characteristics that we evaluate when deciding whether to adopt an innovation. Does it fit with our existing values or habits? Can you try it before you buy it? Is it actually better? Can we see the benefits? And, is it easy to use? For example, an innovation might be incompatible, complex, and impossible to try out, all of which reduces its likelihood of being adopted.

But if it has a huge edge over current options innovators might be all over it, and early adopters spread the word fast. 

10 Innovation Curve

And once the price drops, which usually happens when production ramps up—see solar cells—more people jump on board. Although Rogers himself once noted: “Getting a new idea adopted, even when it has obvious advantages, is often very difficult.”

what do you think?
11 Innovation Curve

So, where do you see yourself on this spectrum? And what’s your take on this theory? Do you think it also explains how ideas, beliefs, or even social movements spread? Leave your thoughts in the comments below!

Sources

Dig deeper!

Classroom activity

Objective:
Students will understand how new ideas and technologies spread through society by exploring the five adopter categories in the Diffusion of Innovations theory and reflecting on their own position within the adoption curve.

Materials Needed:

  • Sprouts video: How New Ideas Spread
  • Whiteboard or flip chart
  • Markers
  • Sticky notes or cards labeled: Innovators, Early Adopters, Early Majority, Late Majority, Laggards
  • Student notebooks

Duration: 60 minutes

Steps:

1. Introduction and Video Viewing (10 minutes)

  • The teacher asks: “Who here got the newest phone or app before everyone else? Who usually waits until it’s popular?”
  • Play the Sprouts video.
  • The teacher drew a table with five groups (Innovators to Laggards) on the board.

2. Group Analysis: Mapping the Curve with Real-Life Examples (20 minutes)

  • Divide students into groups, ask them to draw the “innovation adoption curve” with its five segments.
  • Assign each group with one modern innovation (e.g., electric cars, Tiktok, Ai tools, VR headset ) and identify how each adopter category might respond to it.
  • Ask each student to evaluate himself and his group members and as a result place themselves on the curve. 

3. Group Presentations and Synthesis (10 minutes)

  • Group present and share their examples. 
  • Briefly discuss why they chose that position.
  • The teacher highlights how innovation spreads over time and the role of communication speed, risk-taking, and price.

4. Discussion (15 minutes)

  • Ask the students: Does this theory only apply to products – or also to ideas and social changes?

5. Reflection (5 minutes)

  • Ask students to write down individually if they believe this theory is true and what other models of distribution of information they can imagine?

Collaborators

  • Script: Jonas Koblin
  • Cartoon artist: Pascal Gaggelli
  • Producer: Selina Bador
  • Voice artist: Matt Abbott
  • Coloring: Nalin
  • Editing: Peera Lertsukittipongsa
  • Sound Design: Miguel Ojeda
  • Publishing: Vijyada Songrienchai