May 16, 2008

Graduation

Well guess what – tomorrow is graduation. After a busy nine months I’m all done! I will be a graduate of one of the leading design and innovation graduate programs with a Master of Design Methods degree under my arm. And it flew by!

As those of you who have followed along know, this has been a great experience. I’ve learned a ton – from user research and rapid prototyping to analyzing data and creating and evaluating concepts. I’ve learned to “cut cubes out of fog” using design strategy from Doblin’s Larry Keeley, innovation methods and frameworks from Professor Vijay Kumar, the intersection of design and business from Jeremy Alexis, user observation and human factors from Judith Gregory and so much more.

I’ve met incredible fellow students from all over the U.S. and all over the world – China, Germany, India, Japan, Kuwait and Korea – and from all disciplines – car designers, architects, graphic designers, interactive marketers, brand strategists. Even a cook and a former DJ. It was hard quitting a great company like Harley-Davidson to go full time but looking back I wouldn’t change a thing.

So what’s next? I’ve interviewed with a range of companies and consultancies and narrowed it down to a few I’m super interested in. I’ll be making a decision in the next couple of weeks and will be sure to let you know.

Also, just because I’m graduating doesn’t mean the blog is done. I’ll keep posting with thoughts, musings, articles and questions (hopefully more regularly now that school projects are done and interviews are wrapping up).

As always, if anyone is considering applying to the Institute of Design please don’t hesitate to shoot me an e-mail with questions.

Don’t forget next week is the Design Strategy Conference. Unfortunately, I will not be in attendance as I’ll be on a relaxing vacation. I’m bummed I’ll miss it but enjoyed working with the team Vince LaConte ran to pull together some great material for attendees.

Hopefully you can make it!

April 23, 2008

Don Norman Lectures at ID

Another example of the great opportunities at the Institute of Design - Design guru, consultant and author Don Norman spoke during lunch today for ID's lecturette series.

Don has written several classic books including The Design of Everyday Things and Emotional Design: Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things. If you haven't read him, get on it!

His lecture today was refreshing - no PowerPoint presentation, simply an introduction at the beginning that he enjoys thinking through new ideas and wanted to share these topics in the presentation rather than reflecting on what he's already written and covered. And with that he spoke for 1-1/2 hours on service design and operations with great humor and insight.

The overarching topic was that service design is the same as what the business world calls "operations" and that there is so much opportunity in this area. Operations, though, doesn't get this yet. Business-driven operations mostly focuses on optimization and efficiency in driving down costs but this is so often done in silos with short-term profits in mind, leaving huge opportunity to optimize what's most important - profits - by looking at areas for designing meaningful experiences that improve long-term customer retention in the front stage of the service and enhancing the many employee-to-employee interactions in the back stage.

As Seth Godin has also criticized, take a look at any big company's call center operations. Customers are actively engaging with you, a rare commodity in today's media-fragmented, cluttered market, by calling your employees. And the metrics that drive success for this "cost center" are centered around getting you off the phone as quickly as possible. To top it off, the issues raised by them are often opportunities which, predictably, are ignored. Actually, not ignored as that would mean they actually are forwarded to departments and people who can act on them. They just go into a hole.

At any rate, some of the questions Don raised include:

"How can you design a service so when a person wants service you're right there for them, but when they want to be left alone they're left alone?"

For service, citing Disney theme parks as an example, "waiting lines are necessary but how do you make it feel like part of the game?"

A couple of great quotes from the lecture:

- Regarding communication between humans and machines today: "Two monologues are not a dialogue."

- Regarding the ability to solve problems and the importance of first asking the right questions, which design can help do: "As engineers you know how to solve problems. As MBAs you know ho to solve business problems. You don't know what the real problem is though."

I thought it was great and love how being in school exposes us to great thinkers, different ideas and exploration of topics. Very cool.

March 31, 2008

Reading Roundup - Issue 2

For those looking for some good reading, here are some interesting articles worth checking out:

Coming off the heels of the last issue of Fast Company, which ranked the 50 most innovative companies, Dev Patnaik of Jump Associates shares his thoughts on the list, who should've been on there, who shouldn't, etc. I love the description of how Virgin does process innovation, innovating "through lawyers and accountants."

Speaking of Fast Company, as Spreenkler pointed out in a comment to my post on Barack's integrated campaign, the new issue features "The Brand Called Obama," which outlines how business can apply lessons from his campaign.

Today I presented to my old ad agency, Cramer-Krasselt, sharing with them design planning, human-centered innovation and my belief that ad agencies are going to soon be relegated to executing brand strategy dictated by client innovation teams and the design innovation consultancies they hire. This Adweek article discusses the rise of design in ad agencies. I would argue, however, that they still need to move further upstream in helping craft new offerings and develop these brands as opposed to settling for solely the role of communicating at audiences.

More on Starbucks' attempt at reinvention.

David Armano has a great post on design gatekeepers. I love his comment regarding the masses participating in design "It's not a substitute. It's an addendum." That's spot-on and a reason why "traditional designers" shouldn't feel threatened.

I'm considering launching back into the design vs. design thinking debate and the role of business....wait...but...no, another time. On to the last two articles.

An article on Open Innovation and the benefits during a recession.

And finally, a column by Nicholas Kristof. It's not related directly to branding or innovation but I enjoyed it's call for a higher level of discourse, the intelligent debate of issues, and such. A great benefit of attending ID has been the ability to debate and discuss a wide range of topics with super smart people. Every day I can hop in on a conversation regarding everything from brand authenticity to how realistic sustainability is in a free market to cultural nuances of India. I love that! It gets me juiced! We need more.

Gotta run. I think I just saw a UFO!

March 13, 2008

A Crazy Couple of Weeks at ID

Things have been crazy busy at school. I thought I'd recap the last couple weeks, giving a bit of insight for those considering going to school here:

Two weeks ago we held our Spring recruitID with a whole range of companies coming in to interview students for full-time jobs and internships. I was lucky enough to meet with nine organizations, both companies and consultancies, and came away impressed with them all. Interestingly, there was one company and two consultancies looking to bring innovation and design planning into their organizations for the first time and came to ID to talk to students, learn more about the program and see how they can dip their toe in the water as they look at adding these capabilities. This just helps reaffirm my decision to come to school here, as it reflects the increased interest and opportunity for design thinking.

Last week was the end of our first quarter, or A Session, so all of us were scrambling to wrap up projects and refine presentations for classes. For me, this included a super interesting project for my Design Analysis class focused on the growing car market in India and, in Larry Keeley's Strategic Design Planning, we presented killer recommendations on new functionality to the team at Chicago Public Radio's vocalo.org, a radical experiment in engaging younger people with pubic radio.

This week is Intersession, during which I took Physical Human Factors, taught by Stanford professor Bill Verplank, who is fantastic. Funny, engaging and smart as a whip. He's done some amazing work including at Xerox on the graphical user interface. He's also known for his drawings as he talks and presents, with one of his drawings on the cover of Bill Moggridge's book Designing Interactions. I received permission to write a post about a couple of his drawings he did for us in class, which will be upcoming.

And this morning I got to interview Matt Mason, author of The Pirate's Dilemma, for a project we're working on for the Design Strategy Conference, where Matt will be a speaker.

They keep you busy here at ID but I wouldn't have it any other way. Just recapping all this in a post makes me sit back with a grin on my face at the exposure, experience and knowledge I'm picking up.

How cool is that?!

February 25, 2008

A Few Interesting Articles

Doing some reading over the past week or so, I came across a few interesting articles I thought I'd share:

In an earlier post on ad agencies as commodities, I mentioned some examples of good/new/different/game-changing/relevant agencies, including Anomaly. Ad Age has a nice write-up of what they're doing well including, most importantly in my opinion, addressing compensation and working on innovation of offerings not communication about offerings.

Spending less on TV, more on worthwhile areas such as interactive, experiences, etc. And make sure and short the stocks of those media giants.

Building off my last post, more on Obama's marketing. Brands that are dynamic and relevant to their audiences generate this kind of work.

Chris Anderson, Wired editor and Long Tail author, on Free and Abundance. Anderson spoke at the Design Strategy Conference last year and previewed this book topic. Smart stuff. And you can get the issue for free.

I was excited to see Lara Lee, former Vice President, Enthusiast Services at Harley-Davidson, with a Business Week article regarding the danger of over-promising on the power of design thinking, lest it come back to haunt you when the economy is down.

Kluster.com - a fantastic concept! Why didn't I do this? (don't answer that) This is sweet and potentially super huge. Any chance they need someone to help integrate innovation frameworks to provide some structure and direction?

And building off my Linkages post, this Business Week article gives me hope that Motorola sticks with mobile phones in spite of themselves.

I hope you enjoy. If it seems like people are getting value out of these types of roundups, I'll post more as I come across good pieces since I'm always reading and harvesting information from all over.

February 16, 2008

Wanna see a great example of an integrated digital campaign?

You can receive text updates and reminders straight to your cell phone.
You can follow along on Twitter.
You can become a friend on Facebook and MySpace.
It’s hard to avoid the banner ads on sites and blogs.
You can view remix videos on YouTube from rabid fans and celebrities alike.
You can check out photos shared on Flickr.
Sign up on the web site and receive relevant, timely permission-based e-mails.
Hundreds of thousands of online transactions are taking place on the web site.
Even a profile on LinkedIn.

A profile on LinkedIn?

Okay, that tactic may not fit for a packaged goods brand. That’s because the campaign is Barack Obama’s. And, regardless of political leanings, this is one of the finest examples of a coordinated, integrated online marketing campaign I’ve ever seen, having followed politics avidly for years and been involved in the online space for just a little less time.

It’s possible to look back to 2004 and Howard Dean to see the beginnings of this type of campaign with his emphasis on online donations, his strategy of using MeetUp and so on. But this is at a different level, which I suppose shouldn’t be shocking in 2008 except that it is so far beyond anything any candidate has ever done or any competing candidate is doing.

Here is an article and a column that speak to some of the tactics. Permission marketing. Interactive marketing. Together they’re incredibly powerful. To paraphrase from a speech, if politicians can set this up from scratch in less than a year then your brand can do this as well. Yes you can.

February 06, 2008

Motorola, Linkages and the Impact on Innovation

Radios. Televisions. VCRs. Cars. Mobile phones?

On January 31st Motorola announced it is considering getting out of the mobile phone business. This isn’t a huge shock, and has been pushed by some investors for a while, but will be detrimental to Motorola and the United States in the long run.

Last Fall I read Clyde Prestowitz’s Three Billion New Capitalists, which discusses the rise of Asia, specifically China and India, and the fall of U.S. dominance. It’s a fantastic read, spanning trade and government policy, innovation, outsourcing and the diminishing value of the dollar.

One area of his book, technological innovation, is incredibly relevant to the current situation with Motorola. In it, Prestowitz shares the story of a high-flying, post World War II tech company called Ampex and its battle with a small Japanese start-up, Sony, in the new area of recording, specifically magnetic tape recorders. Prestowitz’s broader argument in this section has to do with the importance of governments working with companies to create policies, and thereby opportunities, for technological dominance.

In his book, Prestowitz writes:

“The conglomeration boom of the time was supported (or at least rationalized by) new business theories arguing that the linkages between a company’s various products and technologies were of small importance, and that products should be managed like a portfolio of stocks.”

“Meanwhile, in Tokyo, Sony and the other Japanese makers were sticking to their knitting.” “They also began aggressively developing recorders based on the so-called helical scan technology that Ampex had licensed to them at a time when it was desperate to raise money to keep its conglomerate strategy alive. In particular, the Japanese began to use this technology to develop products aimed at potential consumer market.”

Prestowitz describes the ongoing battle and how, in 1970, Ampex unveiled the Instavideo, the first consumer recorder. Within five years, Ampex had cancelled the Instavideo due to unrelated financial improprieties, and Sony (Beta) and JVC (VHS) had rolled out their own consumer versions to huge success.

He writes:

“The pattern kept repeating itself. A U.S. company would introduce a new product that would enjoy success in the US market until a Japanese competitor introduced an improved model at half the price. Then the Americans would get out of the business. Ampex represented a milestone in that the VCR business was the first major business from which the Americans were excluded from the beginning.”

To deviate slightly from the central point on linkages, this also speaks to the dangers of focusing on short-term profits, which is incredibly problematic in the U.S. I believe the penchant for living for the next quarter is a huge hindrance to the ability to think big picture, take calculated risks and develop disruptive innovations that can fundamentally change the game for an industry (or if truly disruptive, industries), benefiting in a ridiculous number of ways the company that actually does it.

The competing East vs. West points-of-view of running a company was best captured in a presentation slide our professor, Jeremy Alexis, shared in last week’s Economics and Design class on value, highlighting the general differences of focusing on stakeholders vs. shareholders and balancing all stakeholder needs vs. creating predictable profits.

In last semester’s Design Planning class, Larry Keeley discussed the distinction between innovation and invention. As an example, invention is tinkering in the shop and coming up with the first MP3 player. Innovation is often taking several different existing ideas, technologies and needs and combing them in new ways to create something unique and compelling. As Keeley said in class, “Innovators are aware of lots of things on the arc of the frontier. They harvest from all over the world.”

In innovating you don’t need to be creating from scratch.

Building on that, Prestowitz tells a similar story:

“Although you may think that the development and manufacture of products are independent and separable operations, that is not necessarily the case. As Elkus [an Ampex manager] recalls, Sony president Akio Morita insisted that any technology pushed to its logical extreme is related to many other technologies. For example, anyone who is not involved in the VCR business will find it difficult to get involved in what arises from the VCR. Because of this dynamic and the huge size of the market, the Japanese dominance of the VCR contributed greatly to a shift in the technology balance of power that is still going forward. The VCR drove development of flat-panel display, battery and materials technology to new heights and to the Asian shores of the Pacific.”

“As more and more U.S. manufacturers struggled to stay in business, there were more and more things no longer made in America. Elkus and Morita were right about the importance of linkages. Flat-panel displays, though invented in the United States, had followed the television, VCR, and laptop computer to Asia – or perhaps it is more accurate to say the laptop went because the flat panels were there. The VCR had morphed into the digital camera, made in Asia along with the tiny motors that drive them and the displays that make them so user-friendly.”

There is so much potential, with the mobile phone industry really only in its infancy (short-term, mid-term, long-term). High-speed Internet and the mobile phone are leading to GPS, social networking, purchasing and more. And that’s only the beginning.

I realize there are a bunch of large issues raised here:
- the role of government in helping promote innovation
- Keynesian economics vs. Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand
- the perils of short-term behavior to feed profits to Wall Street

But my primary concern in this post is specific to linkages, and what that portends for Motorola and the U.S. If Motorola sells off its cell phone business it is out of the phone game, wherever that game leapfrogs to in all future iterations and permutations. And they won’t be able to get back in. And with the cell phone business otherwise dominated by non-American companies Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson and LG, that means this is another technological arena that the U.S. won’t be participating in.

Is that a bad thing? From the viewpoint of pure competition and capitalism, I suppose not. It’s simply a choice by companies looking to “maximize shareholder value.” But for the U.S. and its self-assured feeling of eternal technological superiority and innovation dominance we’re definitely losing ground. And this latest news could reverberate for decades.

My hope? Since our government does not really intervene as they did in the past to ensure innovation opportunities are maintained in the national interest (which Prestowitz points out they did with airplanes - Boeing, electronics - RCA, and telephones - AT&T), our best chance is that Motorola says, “What the hell? Our stock is down. Wall Street is already beating us up. Let’s double down. We’re going to invest in this business unit, make a few, select, calculated bets and try the Radically Different. Find the Game Changers. The Blue Ocean. And be there to reap the rewards in the long term.”

I’m keeping my fingers crossed.

February 05, 2008

Stop Trying to Yell

BusinessWeek has an interesting article on the problems Google and advertisers are having with click-thru rates on MySpace. The number of visitors is dropping, time spent is dropping, and click-thrus are dropping. Therefore Google isn't making the money on ads and advertisers aren't getting the eyeballs and purchases.

As I discussed in an earlier post, this is not surprising as this advertising is interruption-based and therefore not as relevant to users as, for example, keyword search. While the article quotes various people promising that social networks are in their infancy and ad revenues will grow, I really believe ad revenue growth is not sustainable and, long-term, the prospects are dim. Not just for social networks but any interruption-based advertising, be they online display ads or AdSense text ads.

The best bet for companies on social networks or online in general is to create authentic, meaningful, relevant experiences that offer an opportunity to engage in two-way dialogue. I’d rather put my budget toward content on my site, a Facebook page or Adwords than run skyscrapers on a site. I believe the success of social networking sites will continue to be based on collecting, organizing and providing access to highly-targeted audiences. Marketers need to find how to interact with these valuable audiences beyond the lowest common denominator, ads.

Yelling at people is over.

February 04, 2008

The Design Strategy Conference is coming

The Institute of Design holds its Design Strategy Conference each May, with killer speakers, great roundtable discussions and an opportunity to meet a ton of smart people from all over.

Attending last year’s conference for Harley-Davidson sealed the deal for me in deciding to go to school at ID. I was able to hear Roger Martin of Rotman speak about how design and business can work together; Wired Magazine’s Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail, on the topic of abundance; and David Lawrence of Shimano on their new Coasting product, among many others. Great insights. Great conversations. Great case studies. And everyone was super friendly and accessible. Both Martin and Steelcase's Jim Hackett took time to speak with me and several students and professors provided some great info about the programs.

This year’s lineup is just as good or better with speakers such as John Seely Brown, Matt Mason, Bill Buxton and Bruce Nussbaum, who is a fan of the event. Two speakers I’m excited to hear from that reinforce just how big design is getting in the business world are A.G. Lafley and Claudia Kotchka from P&G.

I’m also super excited to be among a team of students working with Vince LaConte, director of marketing at ID, on a book project for the Strategy Conference. More on that later though.

Hope you can make it. If you’re going, be sure to shoot me an e-mail and we can try and meet up during the conference.

January 23, 2008

School's in Session

Today is the first day of the new semester and I'm jazzed as always! I'm halfway done with my MDM degree, which is hard to believe.

I have some really cool classes coming up and I'm debating on a couple of others. So just like last semester, I thought I'd share my schedule as it currently reads.

1st Quarter
Product Design Workshop - the topic is "Social Networking as an Economic Development Strategy in the US and India"
Strategic Design Planning
Design Analysis
Design Planning Implementation
Cultural Human Factors
Economics and Design

Intersession
Applied Design Research

2nd Quarter
Product Design Workshop, cont.
Lifecycle and Sustainability
Design Synthesis
Social Entrepreneurship
Social Human Factors

I have another week to make adjustments so we'll see what happens. As it sits now this is a bit too much, 17 credits. I might have to drop one class which hurts because I want to take them all, plus an additional three that I already had to rule out. If anyone wants to share their opinion I'm open to ideas, except for staying another semester. I can't afford that.

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