In a Loud World, A Beginning
If this resonates with you, consider this your invitation.
An idea is born in a silent mind. I’ve always believed that because that’s how I build. Quietly. Patiently. Without noise.
But the moment an idea begins its journey from imagination to real prototyping, whether in technology, management, or writing, it stops being just personal. It becomes something that deserves dialogue. It needs to be shared with people who operate on the same wavelength, who understand the discipline behind creation.
I truly understood this when I entered the startup world as an entrepreneur. When I began networking, I felt a subtle disappointment. The internet isn’t what it once was. It’s louder. Heavier. Filled with performance and polished self-celebration. LinkedIn, especially, often feels more like a stage than a space for substance.
But real inventors don’t perform while building. They build in silence.
And somewhere in this noise, meaningful knowledge-sharing is fading. True creations, thoughtful, imperfect, deeply worked on, are getting buried under algorithms or left isolated without the conversations they deserve.
That realisation stayed with me. And it changed how I look at innovation and where I choose to speak about it.

Over the years, I’ve had the opportunity to work across industries and technologies, spending time with some of the world’s sharpest leaders and innovators. I’ve witnessed breakthroughs discussed in polished boardrooms and watched determination unfold inside ageing factories. I’ve seen cutting-edge research in well-funded labs and equally powerful ingenuity emerging from under-resourced workshops.
What stayed with me was never the funding size or the media attention. It was the steady conviction of people who kept building even when conditions were uncertain, imperfect, or uncomfortable.
Many of these builders never enter the spotlight. Their ideas are practical. Sometimes unfinished. Often born out of necessity rather than trend cycles. But their thinking carries weight shaped by constraints, field realities, and lived experience. That kind of work deserves reflection, not just recognition.
IInventors Cove emerged from that understanding. I’ve always wanted to shape a written space where innovation is treated with seriousness where conversations go beyond surface-level praise and into the reasoning, trade-offs, failures, and discipline behind real creation.
After spending more than a decade writing and contributing as a thought leader across platforms, I’ve come to understand one simple truth: depth of discussion among aligned minds does more than amplify creativity. It exposes blind spots. It surfaces bottlenecks. It clarifies whether what we are building truly belongs in a deserving market.
It has just begun. We are in our early adoption phase, and for now, it’s completely open and free for those genuinely building something.
If you are an innovator, a creator, or simply someone carrying an idea that refuses to stay quiet, I invite you to start a conversation with me and the “IInventors Cove” team as a guest. Let’s explore how we can thoughtfully surface your work above the noise through a written-first interview, not through hype, but through meaningful dialogue that captures the depth and the fine details of your innovative mind.
Our guidelines are attached for your reference. Feel free to follow and subscribe to our LinkedIn and Medium pages for updates. And if something resonates, don’t hesitate to drop a direct message in my LinkedIn inbox.
IInventors Cove: Guidelines 2026
Submission Guidelines for Written Conversations
The best way to connect with us is to message us directly on our LinkedIn page.
Some conversations are worth starting.
I’m grateful to the ILLUMINATION Community and Dr Mehmet Yildiz for welcoming this story and giving it a thoughtful home.
Connect with me anytime
Substack: abhishekbiswas.substack.com
Medium: abhishek005.medium.com
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/abby33459
My Introductory Page: here



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