Posts Tagged ‘Idea Engineering’

Trend Observation

By admin on March 16, 2011 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , , | 1 Comment

One of Idea Engineering’s role within our two workspaces is to observe trends. We are currently looking at how technology and knowledge are playing a role in the rise of more panoramic economic model rather than the current hierarchical model.

An example is peer to peer economy as published in Gigaom.com. The basic crux of the theory is ‘transactions happen between individuals or a group of individuals and not between corporations and individuals.’ Some examples of this are Air BnB, Kickstarter, and workspaces like THECUBE and WECREATE NYC.

This type of economy is creating independence and equality, it means that anyone with a great idea and will can generate their own economy.

It all seems revolutionary, but if you look at native american tribes in the Amazon this has been their economy for thousands of years.  There are no corporation or big governing bodies just individuals creating an equal sustainability through collaboration and power balance.

The question now is, will this rise accessibility and openness begin to erode at the corporate talons?

Problem solving with Six Sigma tools

By admin on December 2, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , , | No Comments

There are many ways to solve and define problems, we at IEA have decided to use six sigma tools as they have been used to solve complex industrial processes and systems. Complex, however doesn’t equate to complicated, solutions can be both simple yet complex. Innovation for business is complex and layered, so it needs tools that can be adjusted at the various stages to provide the optimal simplest solution.

Below are three tools, we will be exploring them in further contexts both in articles and in PLATYPUS events.

Y= F(x)

All problems are a simple equation of Y=f(x). Y is the outcome of the problem and x is all the inputs that control the outcome Y.  The goal in problem solving is finding ways to manipulate x’s which will lead to the desired results of Y. For example, if Y is building clients the x’s are researching their needs, creating new marketing strategies, modifying communication, re-branding, creating a service/product, extending your network, and so on.

DMAIC

DMAIC is a six sigma tool, we have modified it to the context of business and innovation. DMAIC stands for Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control. This tool is when you are looking to improve, pivot, or create a change.

Define: Define the problem by going to the root of the symptoms. For example, a business can be short staffed, not generating profit, loosing customers.  These could be symptoms of a more fundamental problem, like and outdated service or product.

Measure: Collect data, look at current processes, research.

Analyze: Look at data and ask questions. Go back and see if the original diagnosis of  problem is correct. Sketch out new discoveries. Be a good observer.

Improve: Start to generate new process, make changes and pivots. This stage is  experimental as you are still looking for the best solutions. Generate prototypes of possible solutions, try them out and get feedback.

Control: Every solutions generates other problems, so create a risk assessment. Basically what are the consequences of taking this action and continue to observe and adjust.

DMADV

DMADV is another six sigma tool, which use in making a new processes from scratch or looking to innovate. Here are some questions and tips to remind and ask yourself when problem solving, again we have modified to fit our context:

Define: What is the desired result

Measure: What is the complete impact of the idea or new process?

Analyze: Ask questions about how will the idea live in desired market, how will it be perceived, what are its vital elements? Also analyze other systems that are similar and pick out the points that you can use. Be open minded on the systems you analyze.

Design: Design the idea. What are its full dimensions and perimeters? Imagine that your idea is a Cube, it has to have full dimension of height ( how far do  you want it to go) cubic space ( how will people interact and obtain your idea) it has faces ( the components of your idea). Ideas are three dimensional and need to be designed as objects, so they are ready to be played with.

Verify: Create prototypes that are low cost and test your idea with potential customers, go back and make changes if necessary, ask more questions and make new observations.

What leads to Greatness

By admin on October 22, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , | No Comments

HBR posted a blog about how forethought not intuition separates the good from the great. We disagree on the blog and here is our points. Our opinion based on our observations and research we have conducted with entrepreneurs is as follows.

Semantics

A. Forethought: the planning or preparation for the future. Deliberation, thinking and consideration for the future.

B. Intuition: rapid cognitive thinking based on past primers, experiences, and thought.

The Forethought VS. Intuition

It has been documented that many of the ‘greats’ have had their moments of insight when they were not even thinking, Einstein, for example used to favor long walks to generate his answers than sitting in his laboratory. So how did his strokes of genius happen? Well according to Dr. Keith Sawyer, author of Group Genius, strokes of greatness do not happen in isolation rather from a lot of smaller moments, which are mixed of failures, mistakes, smaller ideas,varied knowledge, and collaboration. Now, imagine that you you take these moments and repeat them over and over to create experience, then experience is honed to create intuition, which can then be used to react to situations, where finally you get a moment of greatness. The example of the snake that the blogger gives is just untrained intuition, our intuition is only as good as the patterns we create in our brains. If the patterns have been created via great mistakes, vast knowledge, and detailed observations our intuition will make us better reactors. Intuition is also very layered, it is not only patterns, but also things like reading body language, tone of voice, assessment of how your environment feels. For example, Native Americans used to watch how certain changes in the environment would indicate a certain event, they would see how the air would feel, how the trees would move, or the animals would react, all of that made them great intuitive thinkers and reactors, which allowed them to be great hunters. ??The problem with forethought is that it creates false untested patterns in our brains, we all have had it happen, when we think that a certain event will unfold in a particular manner and then it doesn’t, so we have just wasted valuable time in forethought for no reason. forethought also guides you down a path leaving little room for innovation, observation and reaction, which is detrimental to ideas of greatness. Einstein for example, had no forethought on his law of relativity, he got there through many years of experimentation, honing his intuitions, reacting, restructuring, and collaborative knowledge. A person of greatness would not waste their time pondering his idea in the future, as they are too busy reacting to the moment and observing the changes to make better decisions. If you ask people that have achieved greatness they will tell you that they didn’t plan it, most say ‘ I couldn’t have imagined or predicted, what I have achieved’ . Finally, forethought can lead to negativity and depression, if your idea doesn’t unfold as you had predicted it would. The future is unpredictable and the more time spent thinking about it the less time is spent reacting to current situations, which is what will lead to greatness.

Ingredients for Greatness

  1. Train your intuition, fill it with detailed observations, vast knowledge, diverse experiences, and mistakes.
  2. Create contrasting associations for your brain. Learn languages, listen to other ideas, learn an instrument, etc. etc. This helps engage your imagination into new realms and thus creates better ideas.
  3. Be a great reactor. Success is like a ball coming towards you, if you try to use forethought and predict where it will land you will miss the fact that its coming straight at you.
  4. Be a great observer, Einstein, Newton, Galileo, etc, spent a lot of time just observing and letting that fuel their imagination and solutions.
  5. Relax your brain and let it breath, so it can give you the moments of insight, which will lead you to greatness. Meditation, walks, restful sleep, exercise are all way to turn off and let the brain relax.
  6. Always think positive and set positive primers in your life, so when the opportunity does strike you will be in the right mind to grab it.

The Importance of ‘Right Brain Thinking’ in Business

By admin on October 19, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , | No Comments

Firstly lets start with taking away the myth that we are either ‘left brain thinkers’ or ‘right brain thinkers’ , in truth research has shown that we use both hemispheres to accomplish complex thought or tasks.

For instance it’s a stereotype that creative talents like writing or painting is a right brain activity, actually its both, you need your left hemisphere to engage imagination as we can only imagine things that have an association linked to our past. It is our left brain that allows us to associate to past events and then link them to a concept in the future, at its most basic this is what imagination is. For example if you were to imagine a creature on mars, you would go back to what you know, alter it to then create a new creature, this is quite a linear process. On the other hand the painter or writer needs his right brain to create a whole concept and to have an nonlinear flow of thoughts, however once it’s time to execute he is back to the left brain as it is where we create detail.

How Does it Apply to Business

Business has its own stereotype of being only for linear thinkers, however just like the creative needs both hemisphere’s so do people in business.  We need to understand how the right brain functions as well to get the most of our brains. Through out the week we will begin to explore ways to engage the right brain to get the most of ideas, generate more economy, and grow your business

Intuition: Plays are very important role in business as 93% of the information we pick up is through a  mix of body language, gut feeling, experience, and intuition. So next time that you are preparing do a pitch for a  to client take time to analyze the type of clothes you are wearing, the colors, what body posture you use, how often you smile, the tone in your voice, etc. etc as only 7% of your client’s decision will be made based on the words itself.

Intuition has been defined as rapid cognition based on past experiences, which in the moment of interaction creates ‘ a gut feeling’, which then allows us to make quick on the spot decisions. Being in the now is very much a right brain function, which we will exploring in tomorrow’s blog.

Innovation

By admin on September 26, 2010 | Category: Innovation Process | Tags: , , , | No Comments

IEA believes that innovation should be accessible, tangible, and an immediate course of action.

What is innovation? Innovation is when a strong idea is turned into a successful enterprise, which has the stamina to survive fluctuating economies and obstacles. Bottom line- it can create and sustain economy.

How Does Idea Engineering Create Innovation?

  1. We dissect and valuate ideas using our uniquely blended neighborhoods of knowledge to ensure that we start with a strong idea.

  2. We create a bespoke process for each client, which will have a immediate course of implementation that is simple, easy to follow, and fits with the ultimate goal.

  3. Finally, we create a process of risk assessment and troubleshooting, which clients can take away to create sustained innovation and continue to implement their idea efficiently.

The process in detail is below…

Idea Catalyst

Before the brainstorming process of ideas starts, there is a process of exploration to analyze where good ideas come from:

  • Where to search and where to focus attention
  • Neurology based training

Idea Generation

Generating ideas is good, however generating strong ideas is optimal. The IE intelligence generates ideas that have depth, unique value, and innovation. Starting with a well designed idea makes the implementation process easier and reduces risk of failure:

  • Neurobics
  • Observe & Research
  • Cross industry & bespoke think tanks
  • Idea Maps
  • Neighborhood of thoughts using neurological processes

Idea Valuation

Knowing the value of the idea is important to decide whether or not it is good to move forward or pivot:

  • Analyse the value of the idea for originality
  • Analyse the depth and dimension of the idea
  • Create empathetic scenarios
  • Measurement of observational capacity
  • Evaluation of potential risks

Idea Selection

Once ideas have been generated it is crucial to create a selection process to know which to move forward and which to leave behind:

  • Measure the economic viability of the ideas
  • Measure the cubic space of the idea
  • Idea Map

Idea Prototype

After the idea are selected- an experimental environment from which to test run the idea:

  • Measure the limitations of the idea by including target market
  • Revise the skeletal processing and systems of the idea
  • Facilitate an empathetic process that observes and trials the idea with low economic impact
  • Flow Map

Idea Implementation

One the idea has proven its economic value and innovation, it is time for implementation:

  • Implementation Map
  • Creating economy
  • Revenue Map
  • Business Flow Map
  • Systems and process distillation

Staff Psychology & Utility

Neurological based application process to increase leadership in the workplace.

Communication Psychology

Business  should not ‘sell’ but rather communicate with their client base:

  • Analysis of sales strategy
  • Psychological observation of target market
  • Map out communication strategy
  • Create a reactive marketing map

Sustained Innovation

Idea Engineering is a intelligence that teaches individuals and companies how to be more effective thinkers. Therefore it is essential for innovation to be sustained a long time after the initial strategy:

  • Our industrial and systems engineer conducts a productivity, efficiency, and quality scan of your business to continue to produce a lean operation system.
  • Streamlining costs
  • Reducing growth risks

Neurobic Solution

By admin on September 13, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , | No Comments

Idea Engineering Agency has a open door research strategy. We are always looking into expanding our knowledge in various fields, however neurology is a particular area of interest as it helps us understand how people think and form ideas. This understanding helps Idea Engineering to provide our clients with a unique method of idea generation, one that produces strong ideas.

One of the tools we have found useful are neurobic exercises, the term was defined by authors Dr. Lawrence C. Katz and Dr. Manning Rubin, who have written a book on the subject called Keep Your Brain Alive.

We have used neurobics to teach clients how to make their brain more flexible and ready for generating strong ideas. Our brains learn new knowledge based on association. For example, if you wanted to teach a child how to read, you would start with creating an association between his new knowledge (letters) and old knowledge ( a sound he already uses). Creating clear associations makes passing on new information a lot more tangible and accessible.

With this in mind, we have devised our own neurobic exercises to highlight how the brain functions at different stages of the idea process.

We will begin by showcasing an excersise that helps the brain create new patterns.

Exercise # 1: Getting the brain to see things in a perspective

Problem
When we first engage in an activity our brain ‘turns on’ to create new neurological connections and maps. After a while of the same exposure our brains ‘turn off’ with little to no neurological connections being made. Therefore when we engage in a brief, it is a easy temptation to fall on past patterns and approaching the brief in the same way. How will innovation be created, if we keep responding to briefs by using the same patterns of implementation?

Neurobic Solution:

Below are the steps to a neurobic exercise we created to help create break patterns.

  • Take an ordinary object that you have contact with on a regular basis ( shoe lace, paper clip, a piece of paper, etc.).
  • Set a timer for 60 seconds
  • Grab pen & Paper
  • Clear your mind
  • As fast as possible create new possible usages for the object, as many as possible in 60 seconds.
  • Repeat exercise with a different object if desired

How it Helps
The exercise helps the brain see a mundane object in a new perspective, which is what is needed when presented with briefs we have seen time and time again. Try to then to do the same with your brief and create a new approach to the brief.

Reactive VS. Proactive

By admin on September 3, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , , | No Comments

As part of IE we are always looking to challenge and find new process to help increase the success of ideas. Through out the corporate world the word proactive is constantly mentioned, you have to be a more proactive employee, show your immediate superior that you are able to anticipate situations. In this environment being proactive is a positive, you can anticipate needs and tasks, if you are really good at it, being proactive can lead you to a pay raise.

The problem with being proactive is that it gives you tunnel vision and you don’t stop and observe your surroundings. You are making assumptions, looking to the past to anticipate the future and the creating plans based on this knowledge. This can be dangerous because you are leaving room for new thought and without new thoughts you can not reach ideas

However, in the world of ideas, being proactive is not enough or applicable at least not at the idea generation stage. If as most of us you have come from employment into enterprise, the old neurological connections are very much still there, the need to anticipate, project, assume, and be proactive are engraved, making us want to respond in the same way we always do.

Why is Reacting better for Ideas?

1. When you react it is under the assumption that first there was an observation process, therefore your idea starts from an empathetic point.

2. Starting your idea from empathetic perspective will help you later on understand exactly who your market is, what its needs/wants are, and how to communicate with them.

3. When you react to a need or want in the market you increase the success rate of your idea, because you are reacting to a tangible desire.

4. There are different degrees of reaction, if you are a great observer and engage your imagination you will be able to see further than current needs/wants and begin to create ideas that are ahead of the trend curve – really begin to innovate. For example if you react to a sunny day and sell lemonade, great your idea is good and you will make a humble living, however if you engage imagination and further observation you can create a lemonade lounge, sell a variety of lemonade flavours, offer cooling tips, a place to relax in the shade, partner up with local parks and set-up mobile lemonade stands etc. Facebook is a good example of this, Zuckerberg observed his peers and imagined a whole  new platform that would help them keep in touch.

5. Reaction helps create a sense of timing, which is essential for ideas. As you are reacting to your surroundings and creating an idea based on that observation, you will have a better gauge of where you are in regards to your competitors and trends. Knowing when to launch an idea is crucial too early and wont get off the ground (if twitter had come before Facebook, the social psychology would not have been there) too late and you will miss a good portion of the market ( take the American auto industry, they never reacted to the need of small vehicles like the Japanese and now they are now a crippled industry).

6. Reacting helps you save time as well, instead of spending time brainstorming ideas out of thin air or wasting time with bad ideas that come from assumption rather than observations; you can get straight to the idea by reacting to your surroundings. Then spend time brainstorming how to get the idea of the ground, which is time much better spent.

7. Reaction gives you a head start from bigger competitors. Again as reaction is a consequence of good observation and most big companies don’t allow themselves to observe, you can reach the market first by reacting faster. Also bigger companies have to go through hierarchy and bureaucracy so their reaction time will be slower, giving smaller businesses the advantage of speed and reaction.

How to become a better reactor

1. Observe, observe, and observe. What is happening in your surroundings, peer group, market, society, etc.

2. Move away from your comfort zone, as when you are too comfortable your brain goes on autopilot and you don’t observe. This is why most car crashes happen within the first 2 miles of your home.

3. Engage in new environments, peer groups, etc

4. Research behaviours, interest, and preferences of your peers or desired market

5. Read material that gives you insight on the sociology and psychology of your environment and society.

6. Read material that educates you on what others are doing, have done, industry, and trend behaviour.

7. Spend time in your right brain and learn to trust your instinct and gut feeling.

8. Assume nothing be curious and investigate.

9. Read books on process rather than ‘how to books’ as the former will encourage you to think and engage your imagination instead of sitting passively and ingesting someone else’s thoughts.

10. Be an outsider, investigate different theories other than your own realm of knowledge. This will help you engage your imagination and expand your mind-space, leading to distilled innovative ideas.

11. Let the idea takes its course, so you don’t limit the success of the idea. So the reaction process continues, keep reacting the possibility rather then plotting each step meticulously.

12. Build neighbourhoods of thoughts; investigate other related mindsets/theories that the idea may live in, in order help the idea develop and expand. For example the Wright Brothers, had to investigate their observations in physics, engineering, nature, and Da Vinci in order to imagine the possibility of an apparatus that would transport humans in flight. Their neighbourhood of thought was expansive expanding their observational field and thus making their idea great and achievable.

All the above will help your brain make new mind maps which will lead you to create that epiphany faster and effectively.

Once the idea has been created and you need to implement being proactive is good, this is when you switch from right brain to left brain thinking.

How Coworking Spaces Will Help Shape The New Economy

By admin on August 27, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , | 1 Comment

Idea Engineering  Agency has put together four visions of how coworking spaces will help shape the economy:

THECUBE has created a process to make innovation leaner, faster, and effective for its members. People will be coming to coworking spaces with a lot of questions and we should be prepared to provide answers. With the creation of our Idea Engineering Agency, we are giving our members a leading edge against their competitors. Coworking spaces should be experimenting with processes of innovation and help create enterprises that are quickly sustainable in order to help create faster economy. It will be incredible to look back in five years and see how many jobs were created due to coworking innovation.

Coworking spaces have the ability to create a voice in their respective entrepreneurial communites and as such can begin to support the needs and wants of entrepreneurs beyond the space. We can act like a magnet to attract what would be unattainable resources for our members, like investment firms, sponsorships, and external partnerships. Being a voice and a guide for enterprise will move things faster and help influence change.

Coworking spaces bring together people of different thought processes, experiences, and talents. The interaction between people of such diverse backgrounds makes our spaces a breeding ground for strong idea communities, which will then lead to the creation of new sectors and industries. As we discussed in our article How To Build Economy, new sectors will help build a stronger economy as they will use the intelligence of people in new ways and create better jobs. Coworking spaces provide a faster economy for start-up businesses. One of the most important ingredients in building an economically sustainable business is contacts and community. We are creating tribes of people who are helping each other connect faster.

Not all cities are ready for a coworking space. Many cities have a general population who still feel that the only way to earn is by employment. With a changed attitude and fresher perspective, coworking can help such cities change this philosophy and teach the local community to become innovative. People dont need to be dependent on companies to employ them to make a living.

The 21st Century Mom & Pop

By admin on August 19, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , , | 5 Comments

Strap in Ladies and Gentleman. This might be a long one. I’ll try to keep it straight-forward…

If it wasn’t for Detroit’s unique position to capitalize on its characteristics that are unlike any typical western city, I would not feel as driven to work here. Detroit has the potential to become a representational city of how to revitalize urban communities in the 21st century. The decline of major manufacturing is turning our cities into ghost towns (Detroit isn’t the only one- look at all major industrial cities), and I strongly believe that major commercial retail will be next to go. Yep- it might be decades before we really notice the difference, but something is shifting. Everything I read, hear, study, and analyze is based on the main principle that consumerism as we know is changing. People are beginning to realize the destructiveness of a linear production system on our planet and many just simply cannot afford the mass consumption lifestyle that was once a reality for many of us.

The Story of Stuff does a great job of explaining why a mass consumption lifestyle became the norm over the last 50 years, and exploits what the true cost is of a linear production system. If you haven’t seen the video or explored the website yet, you can find it here.

We are just beginning to see patterns emerge that point to a shrinking consumer culture. The entire conversation about shrinking cities, growing food/the local movement, and certainly everything presented in James Howard Kunstler’s work, suggests that people are seriously interested in recreating a time of village-like community oriented living. Cities in the 21st century and beyond will need to reflect this. I don’t think we’re going to see too many luxury skyscraper condominiums going up anymore (look at the Chicago Spire- the budget for that monstronsity dried up post fall 2008 by no coincidence… and the site is still sitting empty today.)

I think that attracting large mainstream retailers to downtown Detroit will offer little value and long-term consequences. In order to arrive into the 21st century mindset on time, we need to be proactive, not reactive. Detroit needs to show the world that it is thinking ahead, not simply copying the progressive actions of others who were innovating decades beforehand.

In a sense we’re lucky, because we won’t need to experience the undoing that cities like Chicago and New York are going to go through, eventually. I see no reason why those cities won’t go through a similar decline, although perhaps not as severe. But, their response is going to need to be the same as Detroit’s.

Consider the pop-up shop trend, which is huge in London. Even a big brand like Doc Martens opted for a pop-up shop in Spitalfields Market ,rather than committing to a permanent retail space in the area. The real question to be argued here is: Is this kind of decision the effect of the present recession or is there a gradual yet permanent shift occurring? (I welcome your comments!)

So what is the solution? Well, have you noticed all of the local, independently-owned retail shops popping up? What if we did more to empower would-be retailers to set up shop, and simply narrow the scope of retail in general, making way for more civically minded activities and areas like parks, farms, festivals, and education/entertainment centers. These things are going to be huge players in every city in the decades to come. Retail will thrive in temporary pop-up shops, festivals, and semi-permanent/part-time channels like space at market stalls or downtown street kiosks.

I mean frankly, do any of us really need to go shopping at a 50,000 square foot warehouse in the middle of a concrete jungle on top of what used to be a wetland?

It’s going to take more work, but our quality of life will be more rewarding, if we learn to be more community-centric in our consuming. And I strongly believe that it will benefit Detroit and other cities far better than whoring ourselves out to any unethical and un-community oriented chain stores. To be fair, they would of course be welcome if they adopt their own businesses to meet the changing urban needs of these times. But that’s going to mean a major overhaul of many very bureaucratic organizations, and aspiring would-be retailers/creative enterprises are going to be able to respond faster, with a lot help (money) from their friends and family, etc.

A sales tax holiday for 10 years would fit in brilliantly with all of this, without needing any help from companies like Gap (who of course also own Old Navy, Banana Republic and Bath & Body Works, etc.) If the city government could work to make this happen along with easing the process of setting up new business in the city, then we’ll have even more Leopold’s Books and “Good Girls” type businesses, both locally-owned and independently created. There’s momentum with these types of businesses and they shouldn’t be overlooked. Adding typical chain retailers to Detroit will not make anyone care more about Detroit. To the contrary, The reason why most Detroiters care so much about the city is because of their fellow new business owners and the friendly community they’re creating. Not to mention the fact that a place like The Gap will cause any fashion retailer in the city to have to complete with outrageously unrealistic margins and won’t be able to afford to maintain their businesses if they try to compete. And cheap, homogenized, bland retail is not going to create the kind of environment that will attract a vibrant culture of residents.

If there was ever a time and place in history to fully get behind independent and small businesses, this would be it and Detroit would be the place. Let’s not miss this opportunity to decrease retail/consumer mediocrity. The new mainstream consumer is beginning to demand ethical/responsibly sourced merchandise for a fair price and with a unique quality. Hey, rather than attracting the nearby suburban shoppers, why don’t we position Detroit as the most unique shopping city in the country and attract interested parties from all over? It’s a bold idea, but one completely worth exploring before we fall back on the bland, boring, not to mention often unethical big brands that have already ruined other cities’ characters (and I’ll say one more time that Detroit’s character is the only thing that it has going for itself and the only thing that keeps people like us interested!)

My favorite author on the subject of creative city initiatives, Charles Landry, offers the following perspective in his book The Creative City:

Shopping centres are usually formulaic, lack local distinctiveness, have no real public space.They rarely retain natural features; the mix of shops is predictable; opportunities are rarely taken to integrate public buildings such as an arts centre or a library. Distinctiveness is key, for although cities draw on each other, the danger is that pioneering cities around the world quickly become textbook case studies for city officials. Cities then tend to adopt generic models of success without taking into account the local characteristics and conditions that contributed to those successes. The result is a homegenous pastiche of building- aquariums, convention centres, museums, shops, and restaurants- that prove to be remarkably similar the world over. If you replaced one city name by another you would not know the difference.

Promoting local distinctiveness can be difficult. In Liverpool, people appreciated the character of the place, its creativity and rebelliousness while outsiders liked that eccentricity in a framework of security: city marketers emphasized either one or the other. The city marketing task is to show that, under the surface, the city is diverse and vibrant, but that is not immediately readable or dramatic. Tourism promotion can damage what makes a city attractive by pushing out local identity. Peter Hall’s analysis of innovative cities shows how outsider cities cut off from the mainstream are often the most innovative- Los Angeles, Memphis or Detroit, Glasgow or Manchester at different periods of their lives.

The workings of capital produce tension between reducing cost and increasing value and quality. This assessment shapes the built environment where there is a constant temptation to focus on short-term profits by reducing quality rather than generating longer-term value. This requires doing ‘context evaluations’ of real cost and benefits going beyond the project itself.

In other words, suburbanites traveling downtown just to snag a deal at The Gap will not create a sense of PLACE, which is the real value of any town or city, and is most certainly the concept that Detroit needs to make No. 1 priority.

As far as general consumer behavior goes, we need to change our collective mindset. Some major retailers are beginning to respond to the demand for organic, local, etc. This is a trend that shouldn’t be ignored. We need to focus on rewiring consumer behavior in the same way that we need to encourage people to take climate change seriously. It’s coming, but it will take a while. However, we can get Detroit ready now, and we can create a PLACE where forward-thinking individuals flourish and set a good example.

Another option is this. Let’s create a massive local movement, and force the major retailers to respond. If I have a choice between Gap and something unique from a Detroit boutique, I’ll go with the boutique simply based on its unique offering even if it costs 2x as much. But what could really work here is some cooperative solutions between local makers (hello, CCS wonder designers) and the chain stores. If anyone still feels like we absolutely must have a Gap, what if it was a conceptual Gap that stocked some regular Gap products but also promoted the work of local designers through competitions and design briefs? Kind of like how H&M commissions people like Stella McCartney to design a line, but in reverse by commissioning common folk (emerging Detroit designers) in a competition format, and if they win then they get their designs produced and sold at the downtown Detroit Gap and a percentage of the proceeds goes into a fund for them to start their own Detroit-based brand or open a boutique (depending on their aspirations… design or merchandising, or both.) That would solve the problem of having to find companies with the money to set up shop in that downtown stretch of Woodward yet could simultaneously promote local makers and create some place identity along with meeting the needs of both the average joe Gap shopper and the forward-thinkers I’m certain Detroit will be full of in time.

However, I see that as a last resort. Granted we can’t control who decides to take advantage of that space, but we can look for ways of securing the opportunities for more authentic businesses.

What if there was a Spitalfields Market type model in that stretch of Woodward? If you’re not entirely familiar, Spitalfields (massive shopping centre in East London), features a mixed-format retail opportunity for essentially any brand big or small. There are large chain restaurants (Wagamama, Giraffe, etc.), mixed in with market stalls in the centre (low barrier to entry), temporary pop-up space, (low-to-mid barrier to entry- good for prototyping), and then high-end boutique space (the $200 dress kind of boutique.) It works because there is literally something for everyone. Even with food, there is the small “come get these cookies I just baked” kiosks set up next to the massive chain-style eateries. Something like this could support an Eastern Market annex and an amalgam of different types of retail.

Another thought I just had is if we could magically discourage the cliche suburb chains like Gap and attract the higher quality yet still affordable and popular retailers that other cities have but aren’t otherwise available in Michigan. If we could attract TopShop, for example, to set up in Detroit instead of Somerset, then every bubble-gum chomping suburban teenager and 20-something female would make at least one patronage to get their signature Kate Moss inspired wares.

Here’s another suggestion from Charles Landry:

The cliche ‘if it ain’t broke don’t fix it’ may have some truth, but it does more harm than good in modern cities. Where issues are addressed only reactively they are already problems if not crises, and responses are defined by the problems themselves, so we are forced to deal with yesterday’s problem not tomorrow’s opportunity. The pace of urban change demands that policy makers be forward-looking, proactive, and address issues which are not yet problematic. Trends need monitoring accurately to detect little changes that may become significant in the future.

Detroit is, will be, and should be, a niche city. We’re not trying to create another Chicago or another Manhattan (right?) I think you can absolutely ‘just have niche stores’ in Detroit. I don’t see how destination stores (um, Pottery Barn? Sick of talking about the Gap) will drive anymore shoppers downtown then the niche shops will. Quite the contrary, people will shop downtown in boutiques anywhere- to get things they can’t get at the mall.

Enter the 21st Century Mom & Pop: local, independently-owned retailers with a conscience towards community/social responsibility, and a creative/innovative product offering. Whether you see it as us returning to an older tradition or creating a new phenomenon, it’s these types of businesses that give a city its sense of place.

Written by Bethany Betzler

bethany@ideaengineeringagency.com



Metaphor for Innovation

By admin on August 18, 2010 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , , | No Comments

Innovation, implementation, and ideas are words that keep popping up in conversations, events, media, and in boardroom meetings. We all understand that it is these three words  which will be the future and restoration of the economy. However, first we need to understand their meaning and the role that they play.  Idea Engineering Agency have chosen a simple metaphor to articulate our interpretation.

Imagine that innovation is getting from Florida to California, idea is the vehicle (one has to valuate which is best for the ride, you wouldn’t want to make the journey in a beat up car) and creativity is the fuel ( fuel that is composed of imagination, empathy and observation). The map in front of you is the equivalent of the implementation strategy, guiding you along the terrain and allowing you to see all the possibilities.

Every single stage of this metaphor is important. Choosing your destination is crucial or you could be taking your idea in the wrong direction. Choosing the vehicle is important; what idea do you take forward? Observe what idea fits within the market your are trying to create or reach. Then there is the fuel. You want to put in high performing octane fuel, which means your creativity has to be of good quality. This comes from observation, empathy, and imagination. Ask questions instead of jumping to answers, for example: what is happening socially? What type of services do people want? What are the dynamics, needs, and wants of the local community?  Last you have the map, which is your implementation strategy. We like the metaphor of a map as you are able to see the options of any direction.

From our research and observation we have concluded that the most common mistake in implementation is keeping an inflexible tunneled vision. CEO’s, entrepreneurs, creative directors, design graduates, you name it- we are all been guilty of creating inflexible strategies that do not allow the idea to change and evolve as it needs to. What if your market changes? Or you observed the wrong traits in your target market? If you just keep moving forward you will end up with a badly implemented idea.

We cannot stress enough how important it is to observe at every stage to make sure that you are heading in the right direction. We can only reach innovation when our idea has been implemented successfully and created economy, otherwise it is just an idea.

Client Thoughts

Without Idea Engineering, our business would not have been possible.

THECUBE
www.thecubelondon.com

Client Thoughts

It helped turn my ideas in to reality and I felt like an entrepreneurial support group that gave people the confidence, advice and even contacts to go for it!

Celia Norowzian