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News
For those of you who receive CNBC you can still
catch me in programme 3 of The Business of Innovation. The
screening dates (US date format) are:
US: 3/4, 3/11, 3/18, 3/25, 4/1
and then they repeat
Japan: 3/1, 3/8, 3/15, 3/22, 3/28 and then
repeat
Rest of the world: 3/8, 3/15, 3/22, 3/29, 4/5
and then
repeat | |
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Dear Reader,
Welcome to the March 2007 edition of Innovation
Matters. In the last edition we asked "Do you need people
for Innovation?" Well since the answer is yes, this edition
gives you a list of the types of people that you need.
My ebook series YES You can! contains a short chapter
entitled "What Can I do on Monday?" This has been updated and
published here. It also references my new Techniques Kit which
will be available shortly, giving you an easy way to create
techniques cards for your workshops.
More news of this and other products next month.
Happy reading Derek Cheshire
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Innovation - the people you
need
How do you choose the right people who will
support and nourish an innovation initiative? This article
will attempt to provide you with a set of important roles
together with some attributes of the people who should fill
those roles. Here we are less concerned with titles or
hierarchies and more concerned with getting the people who can
help drive each critical role or task.
In reality, you
will find people in your organization that will fit multiple
roles; your goal is not to find an individual person for each
role listed below, but rather to make sure your team covers
each of the areas identified. Many times people can play
multiple roles, especially in smaller
organizations.
Connector Connectors
have the ability to connect departments, organisations, and
industries that normally would not be connected. Although they
may be an expert in their own field, Connectors are generally
people you'd describe as a mile wide and an inch deep. They
know things about a variety of fields and industries and can
connect them.
Collector The Collector
holds the key position of collecting ideas and providing
organised access to others who can help build the knowledge
base and map what is already
there.
Framer The Framer works with
business functions and management to determine the appropriate
evaluation schemes and frameworks teams should use to evaluate
ideas fairly, transparently and consistently. The Framer can
construct the evaluation frameworks which your team will use
to evaluate your ideas, and ensure the evaluations are
consistent and transparent.
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| What can I do on Monday (remix)?
You've
heard the talk, read the book, bought the T-shirt but what
practical steps can you take on Monday morning to help
creativity to flourish?
To start off, here are a few ideas. However with your new
found idea generation skills, you should be able to think of
lots more.
- Create space (physical and time) for
idea generation
- By cutting down on non essential
meetings
- Avoiding micro managing staff
- Allowing time for 'play' or to make
mistakes (within reason)
- Allowing interaction between
individuals (at the coffee machine or water cooler).
- Adopt simple techniques for modifying
existing products or services
- Think about having after action reviews to ensure that
you avoid re-inventing the wheel.
- Look at reward systems to encourage
know-how to be shared and for salaries and bonuses to
promote team working.
- Hold curiosity meetings where people
are allowed to ask 'What if?'
Small organisations without boards could consider having an
informal board of trusted acquaintances who
will give advice in return for a meal, say.
Start looking at methods of gathering ideas that will
encourage new ideas not just complaints (avoid the baggage of
the traditional suggestion box). Ensure that contributions are
recognised and that the process is transparent.
So what? You may say, these are not very creative. Well
they are if you have been doing something else. Creative or
alternative thinking does not mean playing with brightly
coloured balls all day long. It means selecting appropriate
techniques and methods from as wide a variety as possible and
matching them to the task in hand to get the best results
possible.
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Trivia
- Wal-Mart has 460 terabytes of data on consumer shopper
habits stored on Teradata mainframes at its Bentonville
headquarters. To put that in perspective, the Internet has
less than half as much data, according to experts.
- Japanese convenience stores are merchandised by
location, customer demographics, region, day and most
importantly, time of the day. In 7-Eleven electronic
labelling is used to change the prices up to seven times a
day!
- A study published recently by Sydney University showed
that spending increased 38% in supermarkets when slow
classical background music was played compared to fast pop
music.
- Nintendo was established in 1889, and originally made
special Japanese playing cards.
- The largest manufacturer of musical instruments in the
world, is the Yamaha
Corporation.
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