CNCounty News

Not Impossible Labs founder issues challenge: ‘Help one, help many’

Image of 7-24-22-DJH_7598.jpg

Key Takeaways

The founder and CEO of Not Impossible Labs sent county leaders home across America with a simple, direct challenge: “Help one. Help many.”

Mick Ebeling, who founded the award-winning social innovation lab and production company in 2011, spoke July 24 at the final General Session of NACo’s Annual Conference in Adams County, Colorado.

“We get scrappy through stories,” Ebeling said. To avoid being overwhelmed by trying to solve the devastation of disease, hunger and war, “at the beginning, we try to reduce it down to solving for one person and telling the story about one person.”

Ebeling told his audience a series of stories that started with one person’s seemingly overwhelming problem and ended with a clever technical solution that can benefit many others.

Each story starts “When you say, ‘That’s not right, that’s absurd,’” according to Ebeling. “Then you commit. And then you work it out.”

Not Impossible Labs “works it out” by bringing together a team of hackers, doers, makers and thinkers to create devices designed to better the world by bringing accessibility for all.

The lab’s mission is to provide “Technology for the Sake of Humanity.”

For his work Ebeling has been named by Fortune magazine as one of the Top 50 World’s Greatest Leaders and is the only person honored twice by TIME Magazine for a Top Invention of the year.

One of the stories Ebeling tells is of a 14-year-old boy in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan named Daniel Omar. When bombs were dropped on his village, Daniel was injured so badly he had both his arms amputated.

“Here was a boy who had lost both arms, who was never going to throw a ball,” Ebeling said. After hearing Daniel’s story, Not Impossible Labs launched Project Daniel and set to work creating a 3D printing prosthetic arm that only costs about $100. (A prosthetic arm can cost from $5,000 to $100,000.)

Thanks to Project Daniel, the teenager “fed himself for the first time in two years,” Ebeling told his audience. “Why do we pull this off? Beautiful, limitless naivete. We didn’t get the memo that it shouldn’t be possible.” After helping one person, the team set up a training facility in Sudan to print prosthetic limbs to help many. 

Quoting educational reformer Horace Mann — “Refuse to die until you have won some victory for humanity,” Ebeling asked: “What’s your victory going to be?”

“Who is your one? Imagine that if this next week, every single person in this room helped one person. It’s simple. One turns to two” and the numbers continue to multiply. Who is your Daniel?”

Tagged In:

Attachments

Related News

Johnson County, Iowa Supervisor Royceann Porter poses at the grand opening of her soul food restaurant, Royceann's. Photo courtesy of Royceann Porter
County News

Royceann Porter’s role makes history in Johnson County, Iowa

Porter uses her position as one of few Black county elected officials in the state to advocate on behalf of marginalized communities, but also as a learning opportunity for herself as a leader. 

Spivey
County News

Now I know to close the public disconnect

When you're making decisions as a commissioner and engaging with the public, you have to be an insider and an outsider. 

Bruce Reimers' 1991 Fleer trading card during his last season playing for the Bengals
County News

Iowa county supervisor reflects on NFL career, 1989 Super Bowl

Bruce Reimers loves serving on the Humboldt County, Iowa Board of Supervisors, but if any NFL team called looking to sign “a 63-year-old guy with two plastic knees,” he’d gladly return to his earlier career.