Posts Tagged ‘innovation’

Good communication embraces ingenuity.

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

Call it clever, resourceful, creative, inventive, inspired, or imaginative.  It’s what makes inventors relentlessly pursue solutions and entrepreneurs zero in on new ideas. Good communication embraces ingenuity to tell the story of a product or service in a memorable way.

People are inherently ingenious, always finding solutions to problems or making something from nothing.

Many mornings I jog along the canal banks in Phoenix.  It is a great place to exercise without traffic and the route is flat and scenic.  In fact, using the canals for exercise is an ingenious use of space otherwise wasted. There are always joggers, walkers, cyclists, fisherman, ducks and puppy dogs.  But yesterday, I saw the most ingenious use of the canal yet.  A man, jogging, was approaching holding a leash, but his dog was not visible.  As the man passed I could finally see the dog at the end of the leash joyfully swimming along in the canal. The man had created a completely new spin on an age old activity with Man’s Best Friend.  

How can you be ingenious today?

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Off the grid.

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Today is my first day back on the grid after being unplugged for most of July. The experience is like getting a massage to work out the kinks and toxins, only better. A massage only lasts 90 minutes and the benefits, at best, a day or so.

Our digital world lets us always be connected, but all that information all the time can be paralyzing. Leave it behind, lose the stress of connection and simplify as a way to cleanse the mind and spirit. Suddenly you can stop to smell the roses. Take time to ponder a challenge. Revel in the real connections between people, places and cultures.

Maybe the world is smaller, but it is not homogeneous. It is immense in its diversity and character; misfortune and opportunity. If it is your job to innovate, it should also be your job to be a student of the world. Get off the grid and mingle. You might discover a parade of Vespas and convertibles, sporting the Spanish flag, wildly celebrating the World Cup win by Spain, in France. Really.

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Two Birds & One Stone – Brand Strategy

Monday, January 21st, 2008

For the past seven years, The New York Times Magazine has published the “Annual Year in Ideas” to highlight some of the most interesting ideas, perspectives and innovations from different disciplines during the year.

One entry was particularly telling and relevant to marketing. “Two-Birds-With-One-Stone Resistance.” Psychologist Ayelet Fishback of the University of Chicago conducted an experiment that showed connecting one tool or method to multiple goals weakens the mental association between the tool and any one goal.

In one study, participants were informed that jogging both strengthens muscles and increases the body’s level of oxygen. When researchers reinforced the idea of strengthening muscles, participants illogically decided that jogging was less effective for boosting oxygen.

In another study, test group participants were shown a pen and told about its dual function as a laser pointer. Later, they joined a control group to complete a short form and were given the choice of the laser pen or a conventional pen. Of the participants in the test group 17% selected the laser pen, in contrast 50% of the control group chose the laser pen.

Knowing that the pen had more than one purpose made the students reluctant to use it. Fishback explains, “Once you associate the pen with another function, that same pen doesn’t come to mind as easily when it comes to writing.”

So, it is not possible to communicate two or more things with equal effectiveness and doing so could be damaging to the message of a campaign.

One Brand. One Voice.

Messages bombard people everyday – watching television and listening to the radio; driving through the city and driving a shopping cart: reading the newspaper in a kitchen or online; in airports, restaurants, movie theatres, malls, and at ballgames; through text messaging, e-mail blasts and sky writing. It’s a wonder that any messages get through at all. That’s why the messages that are the most successful are the ones that are simple, clear and single focused.

Bill Bernbach founded DDB Advertising in New York in 1949. He said, “Our job is to simplify, to tear away the unrelated, to pluck out the weeds that are smothering the product message.”

It may be tempting to try to kill two birds with one stone, but as research shows it just doesn’t work. In fact, it could confuse consumers into selecting the competition, because they can’t remember your brand, your voice, or your message.

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