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Friday, April 17, 2015

EDUCATE to Innovate !!!



Learnings from US experiment: 

  
Educate to Innovate (ETI) project was established to “help identify and assess skill sets critical for innovation, and explore best practices for inculcating these in US-based students of engineering, Science, mathematics, and technology.”


The project began with 60 semi structured, open-ended interviews with US innovators. Digital recordings of the interviews were transcribed and qualitatively analyzed to identify attributes common to several innovators. The workshop, held in 2013, at the NAS Building of the National Academies in Washington, DC, brought together 56 innovators and leaders from various fields to share insights on innovation and its education.


What book contains?
a) What Is Innovation? Exploring the Relationship between Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Defining Innovation

b) Skills, Experiences, and Environments that Contribute to Innovation: Analysis of the Interviews, Skills and Attributes, Experiences and Environments


 

 

Sunday, April 12, 2015

New Book- Frugal Innovation: How to do better with less...

Credit: Business Line

A flat production model that brings the consumer and producer closer leads to remarkable outcomes
Navi Radjou and Jaideep Prabhu are on a multi-city tour to promote their second book, Frugal Innovation, How to do better with less, a sequel to their earlier book, Jugaad Innovation. Radjou, who hails from Puducherry, is an innovation and leadership advisor based in Silicon Valley and a fellow at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, where he teamed up with Prabhu, who is the Jawaharlal Nehru Professor of Business and Director of the Centre for India & Global Business at Judge. Their new book focuses on cases of frugal innovation from the West, and develop insights about a Western model of frugality. It’s not just about products and processes but also about a mindset, say the authors in an interview to Business Line. Excerpts:


Frugal innovation has many connotations: to some it’s cheap, low quality, or could be something delivering great value. How do you define it?
Navi: In the first book, we referred to jugaad to capture frugal, flexible innovation in resource-constrained countries such as India. It’s actually a continuum; essentially people are using tools, to be able to do more with less, better with less, to deliver more value, to the end customer, shareholder and society, using less resources which could be financial, natural or even time.

How would frugal in India and the Western model be different?
Navi: Frugal in the Indian context is not necessarily a product; it is often talked about as the Nano or affordable healthcare (of the kind delivered by Aravind Eye Care). These are frugal solutions; this is one dimension. Frugality can extend to the entire supply chain and business model; it can apply to the value you can bring to customers. Two criteria are affordability and quality. In the West we are seeing two other attributes being added. One is simplification; customers have had to put up with complex solutions so far, but now people, especially the young, want to simplify their busy lives. The fourth attribute is sustainability, because while you can do something cheap it shouldn’t be polluting. A product and service can also be frugal, like car sharing/pooling, which can have a lower environmental impact.

So, frugal is essentially a state of mind?
Navi: We call it mental models; we have three levels: one is at the product level, the second is a frugal business model where you can systematically create a solution, and the third level is a frugal mental model, which is a mindset. If your staff are not trained and incentivised, you can have it (a frugal mindset) for a while and people can go back to doing things the way they were before.

So, in your book, you refer to frugality in processes as well?
Navi: We refer to the Logan example, a car made by Renault. They set a target cost of €6,000 but what they didn’t do is take an existing car and reduce its features, value-engineering as it’s called, trim it down to the point where a car without these features can hit their cost target. But it’s not the right value to customers.
In this case, both R&D and designers were in cross functional teams and were involved in leveraging customer insights. Reducing costs is not about reducing comfort and safety; R&D started doing work from scratch on the entire value chain.
So, it meant more collaboration between R&D, design and manufacturing. Things are done in a linear way in car manufacturing and that adds to the cost. In the case of Renault, they put these guys together to reduce lead time in making it and reducing cost as well.

How much does consumer insight and feedback work in frugal innovation?
Jaideep: That’s our first principle of engage and iterate. It started with digital startups and has now extended to other startups as well. You start with a customer insight and develop a minimal viable product, something that addresses the main part of the need.
You develop that quickly and test that with consumers, follow the consumer home as they say; this is part of the process.
Rather than develop a finely engineered product from scratch, which takes a lot of time, and then find that it hasn’t met the market needs, here you have a better chance of hitting a sweet spot and doing it faster, better and cheaper.

What was the most exciting innovation you came across while writing the book?
Jaideep: There are many, but an example I really love, encapsulates what we’ve been talking about. It’s not found in the book. In Barcelona, politicians wanted to turn it into a smart city, but a different kind of smart city, more a 21st century kind of one.
We cite the example of prosumers --- consumers who are not passive recipients of products but also participate in making those products. They have access to resources that only big companies could do in labs 10 years ago. Consumers have access to 3D printers and spaces where they can go and work on prototypes and bounce their ideas off others and also market it through social media.
In Barcelona, the city has set up several fab labs, where the community is involved --- ordinary citizens and students of engineering and architecture. One of these is on pollution, which we can appreciate in India.
Instead of installing sophisticated equipment around the city, they said it would be much smarter if individual consumers can test pollution levels out of their homes using simple equipment.

They created these remote sensing devices in these fab labs which that can sense light, nitrogen, carbon levels, noise, and which can send data to another device. They use cheap computers and micro processors. Data is sent through the internet to a central server.

These devices are sold through Amazon and anyone in Barcelona can buy them. Consumers get back processed data, which shows pollution levels relative to other parts of the city. We can do it in India; we have the need. 

You refer to conversations with consumers…is that where the strongest ideas come from?
Jaideep: What you are seeing in the West is a democratisation of capitalism. Things like innovation, which was the preserve of big companies because you needed capital and sophisticated labs and special people to work there. That’s going away, ordinary people now have the tools and with training and space, they are able to do stuff. Maybe it’s not the most sophisticated, but they are innovations nevertheless.
One of my other favourites is something called the Square, which fits into the audio jack of a smart phone. And it enables you to take credit card payments. It was developed in a tech shop by Jack Dorsey, who came up with Twitter. A friend of his wanted to sell spare stuff in his garage and he couldn’t sell it because he couldn’t take card payments.
They developed a prototype of the Square in a tech shop and it’s a huge business; in four years, they have transacted something like $30 billion. It’s a flattening of the structure; innovation is now easier to do as small teams with focus can do it.
You can sell online, outsource manufacturing, you don’t have to own a distribution and market through social media.
The whole process of doing business is more democratic. Even though ‘prosumers’ may not come up with the most earth-shattering idea, they come up with ideas that have social application and that ingenuity is what you want to tap into.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Advertising—all about STORYTELLING!!!


Glimpses from fascinating session of Alumni of MICA at MICA for MICA...(23-25 January 2015)




Panel:
Dennis Koshy (Vice President, Draftfcb), Ganga Ganapathi (Vice President, Ogilvy & Mather), Shweta Bhatnagar (Vice President, Lowe Lintas and Partners), Prapti Banerjee (Mobility & Digital marketing Consultant), Ajinkya Pawar (Strategist, Junxion) and Ajay Gupta (Brand Partner, Rediffusion-Wunderman) and moderated by Madhukar Sabnavis (Vice Chairman, Ogilvy & Mather).
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Advertising is a dynamic industry and requires certain temperament. It is in a way full with equal amount of chaos and need to have order—whether it may be marketing, brand, sales. Even though this industry is all about sales number, data, RoI; fundamentally it is about crafting brands. In a way, advertisers have a responsibility in shaping society and culture along with television, newspapers and recently online-digital media. (ex. Johnson`s baby advertisement always showed baby girl than baby boy.)

In a way, if we reflect upon evolution of advertising media business; “nothing has changed” and you know as they say, “more things change, they remain same…”. Eventually, you are in a business of ideas. We have to reflect upon the fact that how it continues to be a business industry even after 2000 dot com crisis and 2008 financial crisis. Even though social media is hitting charts and is competing like anything, advertising is the name of the game. In the meanwhile, industry has moved from being an service agency to specialization service; but this change has come with lot of negatives.  And once we internalize the “inevitable reality” that we are in a business of ideas; we have to understand how we can nurture idea throughout every vertical, every media platform and every application we develop. And then further we have to see how this idea is taken forward and touches consumer. Increasingly, in recent times; ideas based on needs are passing away in history. Today the technology is defining idea and this redefined idea is further shaping our need.

Stress, tension of deadline and performance stretches across all domains of media industry. This is the era of mobiles and thus mobile marketing. Technology is shaping everything we have in front of us. Essentially we have to understand that, “way we communicate has become very exciting since arrival of verities of technologies in recent times.” How mobility, social media and technology is shaping our lives—is phenomenal. This is the change many big companies and big advertisers did not heed to. They were reluctant to diversify until emergence of social media.

Now the biggest problem this industry is facing is that too many agencies are working on single brand. (For example—offline, online-digital, creative, outdoor, direct marketing, PR, social media, Google). At the meeting everyone tries to push their agenda and it is becoming difficult and difficult for agency to do justice with every stakeholder because there is so much overlapping in each other`s work. So, it is necessary and it is a friendly advice to future professionals that it is needed to break these silos. All this specialization is a great thing, but sometimes advertising professionals are busy in doing ordinary things. 

Many times, we don’t get creative stuff to work on. That adds to the stress factor even more. But there comes a time when after a ordinary routine of 100 days, one day erupts with some kind of unique blend of idea, creativity which kills the frustration of last 100 ordinary performance. Even in ordinary schedule if we are ready to handle whatever opportunity comes to us, we can do marvels. Therefore be ready to welcome and embrace every change, every new opportunity coming your own way.

Our industry is catered to principle “stick to the brief…”. Whenever we try to do something new, or whenever we make mistakes—there are people who can stand behind you. Your ideas may be accepted or rejected. Doesn`t matter. But don’t shy away from expressing and working on those ideas. And if you are lucky to get working on big ideas—mostly it is because of you and your idea are shaped by some mentor. So, always be ready to jump into learning opportunity and try to get insights so as to enable you for bridging gaps between strategy and execution. Being ahead of the curve by experimentation is so exciting and new technologies, nature of new technologies is enabling.

One can be skeptical about how much creativity there can be in digital? Do planners have role in campaigns? Answer to these questions lies in again—focus is on ideas. What many times happen in this industry (or for that matter in any industry) that idea is pushed to back seat and business is promoted in front of it. In short, agreed—that is pragmatic compulsion to follow. But in the long run—this will fail like anything. Always, we run behind headlines. But remember, first crack the idea and then wait for the headline to flash. Currently there is lot of hodgepodge about our understanding about how digital works especially in Indian context but we have to see how things really move in next five years.

Is digital becoming new analog, we have to ask this question again and again. Are we stuck in a self-defeating game of idolizing digital too much. Historically after a long run of print-press, television has been flavor of our lives for a long time. Every medium has some complexity and we have to understand that how we navigate our strategy through the channels of interpretation of this complexity. Amidst all these complexities this business is all about communicating ideas—however long we have travelled—from print to electronic (Radio-TV), internet and recently social media.  

Role of client service and accounts management is still valid—no doubts. Still, we have to understand as a committed professional the need to erase divides in diverse media platforms. Clients don’t wish to spend money on ten different types of agencies and different types of services. They don’t wish to get confused. They wish to spend minimum aspiring maximum returns. Amidst in all these changes and dynamic reality of media business—one thing has remained bottom-line for forever—this business is all about storytelling. Earlier it was one to one communication and today amidst the emergence of social media, big data—it is still one to one communication that rewards opportunity for business expansion.

On one side, it is great to be specialist because it gives you unique incentives and rewards to work upon unlike generalists; but as we have already embarked upon age of IMC and our ultimate aim is to satisfy consumers through client service, we have to learn to become generalist. Doing everything, knowing everything is a gem of a life and specialist can’t beat this inclusiveness’ generalist. In a way, the point of reinforce is that era of specialist is ending and era of generalist is coming back. It is not always possible for specialist to go up in a ladder of value chain and generalist has great capability and potential to do that.

Our aim remains to sell idea to customers/clients. But before that we have to understand that where from ideas come and travel and how they propagate. We have to always be curious and conscious about who can come up with great idea and takes ownership of those ideas to shape the future. Therefore we have to constantly check the way we define an idea. Idea is always AGNOSTIC, it has universal appeal. It has no linear/stereotypical approach. But harnessing ideas and creating possibilities takes courage of fostering collective ownership to that idea. How that idea renovates the brand and how it resonates with customer.

Many times, change is driven by people outside industry. They can be people in our society, consumers, kids, young generation. Yes, change happens from outside. We have to enhance our abilities to know and track changes coming from outside world. As each and every medium is finding its niche after need gap analysis, measurability is still big problem. Every medium has its uniqueness and we should make sure that how we measure the unique potential, incentives and rewards this niche area offers.

In the age of data-big data, we are in search of engagement, interaction with consumers because engagement-attention quotient is the name of the game. It is paradox that, “so early after its inception, age of like has passed.” Next level may be—can follower/user/consumer become champion/ambassador of that idea. Can followers comment on it, can they disagree about it? Can they express their opinions about it? Can these types of conversation opens up new ways, new possibilities? And can these interactions create further roadmap for not only business development but solving some kind of problem consumers are facing?

So in these times, there is heated up debate of whether data helps or patterns? Obviously, numbers cannot fake but in the complex society like ours we have to have tools to apply sociology, psychology and cultural studies for better understanding about not only changes in our society but also how to apply that understanding of society for better client service and better customer satisfaction. So in a way this is not conflict between creatives and analytics, data and patterns, statistics vs. understanding; but it is about how to interpret those numbers, stories and insights for better engagement, better lead and better results. Even though language of data makes it easier to sell pitch, it is the number behind cost per contact, cost per lead, cost per acquisition and cost per engagement that determines the perception of client for collaboration and creativity. Client is in the business of selling products and services but we as advertisers are in the business of selling ideas. Everyone in this industry lives on monthly and quarterly reports. Everything has been planned and geared for greater benefits.  

We are struggling with online-offline nature of industry and life at large. Is it a blessing or a curse, we have to live with it. But coming generation, five years down the line will be borne into it. What is novelty today will become common-sense/everyday life tomorrow. 

 
In essence, we never ever should be disconnected from three things; culture, technology and our shared life. It defines the prescription for anything—understanding client`s brief, consumer`s requirement and further our capabilities in dealing with challenges of communicating with the world—through advertising—through storytelling. Therefore refresh ourselves and get fresh minds to crack it. We have to learn how to tap, nurture and receive ideas from huge crowd out there. We have to learn to swim in relational contexts to enlighten ourselves about this world. Throwing open the challenges open to public and engaging with them and further recognize those, harness those and capitalize on those is really the way ahead. It is World 4.0 and Web 4.0; it is Communication 4.0.
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