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June 20, 2009

Podcast: Interview with David Cochran on the how of creating the first scientific calculator

This is the 1st in a series of interviews of individuals and teams who have created what I would consider killer innovations.  In this episode, I recorded an interview with David Cochran, the original Product Manager of the HP35 calculator.  Per the entry in Wikipedia:

The HP-35 was Hewlett-Packard's first pocket calculator and the world's first scientific pocket calculator (a calculator with trigonometric and exponential functions). Like some of HP's desktop calculators it used reverse Polish notation. Introduced at US$395[1], the HP-35 was available from 1972 to 1975.

Market studies at the time had shown no market for pocket sized calculators. In about 1970, HP co-founder Bill Hewlett challenged his co-workers to create a "shirt-pocket sized HP-9100". Thus, the first ~12 HP-35 portable calculators were made as a "hack" by and for other engineers at HP. It is rumored that the development engineer got carried away and implemented a full suite of scientific functions to satisfy requests from his co-workers. When these prototypes proved popular, HP decided to turn the HP-35 into a commercial product. The HP-35 was the first calculator with a full suite of trigonometric and transcendental functions.

In the first months, orders were exceeding HP's expectations as to the entire market size, which was 10,000 units per year. Before the HP-35, the only practical portable devices for performing trigonometric and exponential functions were slide rules. Existing pocket calculators at the time were only four-function, i.e., they could only do addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.

In this interview, David not only shares the history and how of creating the HP35, but also shares stories about Bill Hewlett, David Packard and others including Steve Wozniak.

 

Link to the MP3 of the June 20th podcast

Comments for "Podcast: Interview with David Cochran on the how of creating the first scientific calculator"

Great podcast! Can't wait for the next one...

FYI - Another HP calculator innovation: Rather than silkscreening numbers on the keys (which can be worn off), HP manufacturing engineers created a way a dual-color injection mold process so the numbers could be molded into the key. I'm not sure in which calculator this first appeared, but it was a another first!

I really enjoyed his comments about "benches" and the impacts of proximity on working and innoavation.

Here's my commentary on this podcast:

http://www.ddmcd.com/pocket.html

I loved this interview, and look forward to more like it. Hearing the comments straight from the mouth of the innvator gives a fresh perspective. Thanks!

I tremendously enjoyed listening to the interview both for its historical content and for the broader lessons that can be extracted about what conditions make a product development effort successful. I'd love to hear Phil interview more engineers who have worked on landmark products of the past. My only frustration with the interview was not having any background information about David Cochran. I'm surprised that Phil did not ask David how many years he'd be at HP before the 35, what projects he had worked on previously, which school he'd gone to, etc. The anecdote about how Hewlett essentially designed the calculator from the outside in and the story of Wozniak's tenure at HP were the best segments.

I sent the podcast link to a staff member at the Computer History Museum, as the curators will want to include the interview in their audio collection. The Museum has often had evening lectures featuring the founders of Grid Computing, the founders of Compaq, the Fairchildren and so forth, and the Cochran interview will fit in well with those recordings.

I really enjoyed the interview Phil, and I hope you'll do more like it. It's impossible to hear too many success stories.

I am glad to talk with you and you give me great help! Thanks for that,I am wonderring if I can contact you via email when I meet problems.

I've listened to each episode from No 1 on and I must say that I really enjoy the "historical" ones.

I guess I'm an antique (or some type of engineer geek) too because I actually used an HP35 back then. I also used HP41C/CV and HP67s over the year. I still have an HP34C and an HP71B.

Add Your Comments ....




May 30, 2009

Maker Faire Presentation - “Creating Killer Innovations”

 

“Creating Killer Innovations” presentation given at Maker Faire on May 30th. 

To view the presentation, click in the presentation window then the “right arrow” at the lower right to advance the content.

The tool used to create the presentation is Prezi.  It allows you to break “free” from the constraints of the typical presentation format.  If you give it try, tell Paul and Adam where you heard about it . . . .

Comments for "Maker Faire Presentation - “Creating Killer Innovations”"

Hi Phil -
Whose workshop (ex garage) was that at the end of your presentation?
Thanks,
George H.

The picture at the end of the presentation is the HP garage ... where Bill & Dave started the company.

The point was to encourage the audience to start something ... even in their garage. You never know where it might lead you.

Phil

Really interesting presentation style - I'm going to give it a try.

Add Your Comments ....




April 19, 2009

Podcast: Getting Comfortable Taking Innovation Risks

42-16470503So ... you've come up with that killer idea.  To move it forward, you need to take some risk.  Risk that could include: investing your retirement fund, quitting your job and possibly including convincing others to invest their retirement fund and quitting their job to join you.  Suddenly you hesitate ... the risk seems enormous and you start to second guess the original idea.  Is the potential reward worth the risk?  The natural reaction when fear takes over is to retreat back to the comfort of the "safe" option.

Each individual has their own risk profile (comfort level with taking risk).  A german researcher interviewed 20,000 people about their willingness to take risks.  The researcher found:

  • Tall people are more prepared than short people to take risk (not sure I understand why)
  • Woman take fewer risks than men
  • Willingness to take risk decreased dramatically with age

The key influencers for risk across the survey were: age, genders, height and parental education.  The research also found that people who are most content with their lives (relationships, job, etc) were willing to take more risks.

Does this mean you are doomed to never execute your killer idea if you are in one of the "unwillingness to take risk" groups (e.g. older woman)?  No!!

Recognizing that you have that tendency to shy away from risk is your first step to changing your risk profile. 

To overcome your fear of risk, you need to understand what is driving your fear and then brainstorm ways to neutralize them.

To learn more .. listen to this weeks podcast.

 

What are the fears that you need to overcome?

Comments for "Podcast: Getting Comfortable Taking Innovation Risks"

Thanks for your podcast. Phil, your gift to me has been the ability to unravel what the rest of us think about, place it into understandable steps and help move us farther faster. Thanks for the podcast!!!!!
Clay: flyingtheplanet.com

Hi Phil, this podcast could not have come at a better time for me personally. Thank you so much! I will be searching for ways to evaluate risk in detail now. I have what I think is a killer idea and the opportunity to execute it... the only question is if I am willing to risk something to do that.

Add Your Comments ....




March 15, 2009

Podcast: How To Uncover Emerging Trends And Weak Signals

(audio)

image During a recent press interview, I was asked by a reporter for my view on what the next "hot" thing will be.  A question that is becoming more common with each press interview given the current market conditions.  I shared a few trends of personal interest that I've been tracking.

So, what is the process I use to uncover emerging trends and weak signals?

First, what is a trend?

A trend is a change that will eventually have a significant macro impact on society and business while a fad is a change that will be a fleeting (brief) impact on society and business.

Uncovering trends is about observation ... watching, reading, listening, scanning a wide range of sources.  For me, one key source are a set of observers from all over the world.  They feed me their observations, thoughts, insights which I then synthesize into a long list of trends.  I focus on uncovering the non-obvious.  If its in the press, in an analyst report or on TV, I'm too late.

The process I got through is:

  1. Brainstorm a list of trends/changes.  These could include: GDP change and the impact on the economy, aging of the population, shifts in technology, society view on education, government regulation, etc.
  2. Take each trend and compare it to every other trend.  For example:  aging of the population and shift in technology.  Identify possible future trends at this intersection.  In the example of aging of the population and shift in technology you could see:  Growth in medical devices such as diabetic meters that will send data to the doctor or the ability to do kidney dialysis from home rather then having the patient go to the hospital.
  3. Search for trends at each intersection of trends from your original list.
  4. For each emerging trend you've uncovered at the intersections of mega trends from your original list, list the drivers (actions that support the trend and can help it expand) and barriers (roadblocks that will prevent the trend from coming to reality).  For example:
    • Driver: escalating cost of healthcare and desire of the population to live at home rather than a hospital or nursing home
    • Barriers: Government regulation on launching of new technologies in the healthcare field
  5. Be exhaustive
  6. Create a grid to identify the ones to focus on
    • The horizontal axis is barriers (going from "really tough barriers" on the left to "no problem" on the right) while the vertical axis is drivers (going from "no drivers" at the bottom and "major drivers" at the top).
    • Size each trend based on impact (size of market, revenue, margin, growth rate, etc)
    • Color each trend based on when the trend will go mainstream
  7. Focus on the items in the upper portion of the quadrant with particular interest on the ones in the upper right.

Maintain the grid ... Update and add to the grid on a regular basis.

For the rest of the process and in particular, how to stay fresh and hot to uncver weak signals, download the podcast ..

Comments for "Podcast: How To Uncover Emerging Trends And Weak Signals"

Great thought provoking podcast as always.

Putting yourself in the position to being sensitive to new trends and weak signals seems to be the challenge. Do you have any thoughts on Twitter as a potential source for these ideas?
Best
Ed

I love the metaphor of weak signals. One thing I might add to the dialog is the need to build an ecosystem to test weak signals quickly. I'm in the innovation consulting field, and I've gotten in the habit of comparing my list of weak signals with the list being gathered by peers and, especially, the leaders of other firms in my category. This is the Golden Age of innovation consulting, when it comes to open dialog, since the firms are virtually all small and young. The METHODS, by contrast, are often BIG and young. So we find ourselves comparing notes in a collegial community.

One key phenomenon has gone from weak signal to STRONG signal: business model innovation. The late-90s version of it might be called a "fad" by your definition, but the 2009 version is mature and thoughtful. If this discipline gets built out like Six Sigma, imagine the pace of innovation that will result!

We're holding an online dialog on this topic next month, so please join us if you can (contact me for details).

Add Your Comments ....




March 01, 2009

Podcast: Using Creativity To Create A Killer Career

(audio)

N8I215AX.jpgI’m amazed at the breadth of human ingenuity to solve social, economic, political and even technical challenges.  The one area where I don’t see ingenuity applied nearly as much is when it comes to planning our careers and preparing future job prospects.

Can you apply the same killer question approach to planning your career?  YES!

By asking better questions, you can greatly improve the quality of the ideas generated which in turn create higher quality innovations.  How?  My adapting the killer questions to your specific needs.  For example, a common killer question used is:

What do people not like about the process of purchasing my product?

You can adapt this question by exchanging key words.  Take the original question and then replace people, purchasing and product for words that better fit your specific needs.  For example:

What do people not like about the process of purchasing my product?

  • people = customers, managers, 18-25 years old
  • purchasing = ordering, specifying, finding information about
  • product = service, solutions, content

So, how would you adjust the killer questions to help you think differently about your career?

  1. What assumptions am I making about my managers understanding of my skill and abilities?  What if the opposite where true?  How could you correct/reverse this understanding to your favor?
  2. Why don’t companies look for/hire people with my skills set?  How would you change this barrier?
  3. What value could I deliver of I had expertise across the entire value chain?  What is the entire value chain?  What are your gaps in expertise? How do you fill the gaps in your expertise?
  4. What external jolts have the potential to significantly impact my career?  Create most likely, pessimistic and optimistic scenarios of where your industry/career are going.  What decision would you make today/tomorrow/next month/next year if you know a given scenarios would happen?  Develop career strategies that are robust to withstand most if not all of scenarios.

What killer questions would your create to help think differently about your career?

To learn more, listen to March 1st podcast ….

To receive the weekly twit of killer questions, then follow on twitter.... twitter-bird-1

Comments for "Podcast: Using Creativity To Create A Killer Career"

Finding creative people to innovate, is key for businesses these days.

Great thoughts. Career planning is almost an oxymoron for most. Only when some disruption happens in people's lives do they even think about where their career is headed, or if they should switch (I'm on my third.)

I recently wrote an article that answers some of your questions. I'd like to share it with you and hope you find it of interest.

http://andromeda-30.blogspot.com/2008/12/resolution-for-2009-lose-your-job.html


All the best!

Add Your Comments ....




February 08, 2009

Podcast: Telling Your Idea Story

(audio)

64/365How do you create a convincing message so that others will sacrifice to make your idea successful?  Its all about storytelling.  If you follow the same structure used by movie industry and by book authors, you can create a story that will attract others to your killer idea.  What is that structure?

  1. Stimulate their emotion
    • Change the mood.  Create an environment for the storytelling (why are movies better in theaters?)
    • Establish fear/concern.  Need to create tension so there is something to be solved/fixed.
    • Put the listener into the story.  Weave the story so they see the challenges from their perspective.
  2. Change their opinion
    • Change their mind.  Listeners will immediately try to solve the problem and most likely their solution will not be aligned with your idea.
    • Show them a way out.  Just like in the movie, you need to have a way to relieve the fear/concern/tension created.
  3. Get them to act
    • Create a desire to act.  Establish a sense of urgency.
    • Show how easy the idea is to make real.  Focus on simplifying the idea so that listeners don't get distracted.
    • Show them what the future will be like.  Establish hope.

This alone will not be enough to ensure you have the right story.  You will need to:

  1. Don't wing it.
    • Write it out
    • Get comfortable with your story so that you can present it without notes/slides
    • Be able to adjust the story based on the audience
    • Remember - its a discussions not a speech
  2. Always end early
    • Time is the most precious resource someone can give you
    • Show respect for the time and end early.  It will leave a positive impression on your idea.
  3. Ask for feedback
    • What do you think of the idea?
    • How would you suggest I improve the idea/story?
    • Who else would you recommend I talk with about the idea?
  4. DON'T GIVE UP!!!
    • Get out there a tell your story
    • Don't listen to the negative voices (inside yourself or from others)

 

The difference between winners and losers is that winners keep getting up everyday and try.  Losers just give up.

 

To learn the rest, list to the Feb 8th podcast

Comments for "Podcast: Telling Your Idea Story"

Hi Phil.

I just read this post a couple hours before listening to the podcast, so it was fresh in my mind. 37Signals blog recently did a post about "going rogue" aka under-management's-radar of with your idea http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/1572-going-rogue-inside-a-big-company-a-la-best-buy . I am sure you have mentioned this strategy in a past episode.

If you can change assumptions you can change attitude and then change behaviour. Story is the single most powerful tool in the World It controls the world religions. It motivated millions to set out and cross the world and found nations. No-one ever changed their mind because they saw a Power Point presentation. Telling the story and asking the beautiful question is the fuel for innovation and creativity.

In South Korea they have a story, one person, one invention. 50 years ago the country was recovering form the ravages of war and now it is one of the technical centres of excellence worldwide. Stories work my friends. All of you struggling to persuade your masters of the benefits of investing in innovation a story can tell more in five minutes than any spreadsheet, or sales projection. Numbers don’t mean anything anymore. Stories do.

Thanks for all the stories Phil

www,thebeautifulquestion.blogspot.com

Add Your Comments ....




January 25, 2009

New Killer Innovations Logo ..

 

KI_text_med

After much much procrastination, we finally got around to getting a new logo developed (logoworks.com) .  We focused on keeping it simple and clean while also conveying what the podcast and site are all about.

Inspiring the readers and listeners to use their inherent ability to create breakthrough/killer innovations.

So .. what do you think?

Comments for "New Killer Innovations Logo .."

Looks great! Conveys the inspiration concept.

Get your money back.

Clean, simple, nice ... but that poor old light bulb is in desperate need of its own killer innovation!
... Robert Rath

Looks very good! How about an additional sharks fin embedded in the logo?

Phil,
I like it, because it appears fresh and the flashing bulb still is the best icon for having an idea.
Regards,
Frank

Wouldn't it be better as a fluorescent light bulb?

Phil, I think it's just not you... It's a bit boring and it should be exciting. I'd say you should have a go at 99designs.com!

I am pleased it's a low energy lightbulb. I has amazed me how many people in innovation and entrepreneurship are still using an image, however, iconic, for a product that is on its way out.

Not sure about the logo though.

Should add a hint of "green" there as well ...

I like the new logo! It's definately a step up from the old one! It nicely conveys the idea of innovation.
Perhaps in the next iteration of the logo you might consider emphezising the breakthrough/killer aspect a little bit more. How about this: A light bulb sitting on top of a rocket and going through a wall (think breakthrough). Another approach might be to think in terms of killer... something like a devil character lighting a fuse of an explosive lightbulb (along the line of what competitors might wish for top innovator in their field)?

Get your money back.. You have built a strong name (brand) for yourself don't lose it. It screams 1980. Be innovative.

Add Your Comments ....




January 19, 2009

Podcast: Estimating The Value Of An Idea

(audio)

dollar$ and ¢ents

So you have a great idea.  How big is it?  What is the value of the idea to the organization?  Most people get hung up trying to come up with the exact answer.  In most cases, you won't find the perfect answer.  Especially if you are breaking new ground.  What I find lacking is the basic skill of "estimation".  Estimating is nothing more than using the information you know to create a "good enough" approximation of the market opportunity for an idea.

The objective is not the find the answer but to find out what makes up the answer.  So what are the steps?

  1. Take the question (how big is the total number of customers for my idea?)
  2. Break down the drivers that allow you to estimate the answer to the question.
  3. For each driver create an educated estimate of its value
  4. Create the estimated answer to the question

You're not done yet ... You need to estimate when the value will be realized.

  1. Determine the total life cycle of your idea (2 years, 5 years, 10 years, etc)
  2. Spread that time line evenly over the five phases of "innovation adoption"
  3. Apply the adoption rate for each phase based on Rogers rules ..
    • 2.5% for Innovators
    • 13.5% for Early Adaptors
    • 34% for Early Majority
    • 34% for Late Majority
    • 16% for Laggards

You're not done yet ... Now you have the total value.  You need to determine the value to you and your organization.

  1. For each phase, apply your estimated market share.  Be realistic ...
  2. Apply some estimated revenue per unit/customer.

Now you have the estimated value of an idea.

To learn the rest, listen to the podcast ...

Comments for "Podcast: Estimating The Value Of An Idea"

very insightfull podcast . Would definately be helpfull in our projects
thank you very much. Especially loved the SEQUENCE in which questions are asked to come up with the value for the idea

Add Your Comments ....




January 06, 2009

Podcast: Improve Innovation Adoption

(audio)

IMG_0490Why are some innovations more successful than others?  Innovation success is never just about what is possible.  It's always about the choices customers and markets make from among what we can do.  A key consideration when making the choices on which innovations to us is the "total utility" -- which is defined as:

The sum of all benefits a customer gains from consuming particular goods or services minus the cost involved.

The innovation that offer more utility value will win, assuming you can communicate the value in terms that customer understands and agrees with.  One approach that I've found useful in communicating the value of an innovation is based on Everett Rogers Diffusion of Innovations.

  • Relative Advantage -- How is the innovation better than what is being used today?
  • Compatibility -- Does the innovation leverage existing infrastructure and/or ecosystem?
  • Complexity -- Is the innovation easy for a customer to understand?
  • Trialability -- Can the customer try/test the innovation before committing?
  • Observability -- Will the customer be able to see/measure the benefit?

To learn more, listen to the January 4th podcast




December 31, 2008

Forbes.com video interview ....

 forbes_logo

Just prior to heading out on holiday last week, I was asked to do a video interview with Forbes.com about my view (predictions) for 2009 around technology and innovation.  These interviews will be stretched out over a number of segments.  The first was posted this morning in the "tech" section under the title of "Technology Outlook 2009".  Enjoy .....

Forbes.com interview




December 24, 2008

The Killer Innovations Podcast has been selected ...

 

Alltop, all the top stories

During the downtime of the holidays, I've been working on cleaning up the website, updating the archive, etc.  In the craziness of the last few months, I didn't notice that the podcast has been included in the innovation section of alltop.com.  If you are not familer with alltop, it took its inspiration from popurls.  As they describe it, the site is an "online magazine rack" of popular topics from the leading content providers.

I appreciate the recognition ....Thanks!

If you are interested in following some of the other great sites around innovation, then bookmark innovation.alltop.com

Comments for "The Killer Innovations Podcast has been selected ..."

Wow! that's great, congrats!

Alltop is very good, something I discovered few days back.

Happy New Year.

Add Your Comments ....




December 15, 2008

Podcast: Finding The Dream Innovation Job

(audio X)

RF242297Finding that dream job in the innovation/creativity economy seems out of reach to many.  It's not.  With the right level of commitment, energy and passion, you can land that job.  What is your dream innovation job?  Some may say that I have the dream job and I would have to agree.  Now that doesn't mean  its perfect each and every day.  The most common question I get is "how do you I get your job?" ... more accurately the question being asked is "how do I get a job like yours?".

To learn how to find that dream innovation job, listen to the podcast X (24:30 mp3)

For the entire back catalog of shows (+60 hours of content from +100 episodes), subscribe to the podcast RSS feed.

Comments for "Podcast: Finding The Dream Innovation Job"

Phil, I have been quietly listening to your podcast for over two years now. I have always found your insights very enlightening for me as I quest to become a deployed innovator. Last year I finished an MS in Managing Innovation and Information Technology, and, frankly, am somewhat frustrated.

In your "Dream Job" podcast you mentioned that it is good to have work experience and interests that are diverse. I have this in spades, but it leaves me feeling that I want to work on innovation projects ranging from alternative energy to bio-tech to database optimization to embedded systems design. I am fascinated by so many different areas of technology that I have a difficult time settling on where and how I should innovate. I fall short of being a scientist, don't have enough money to be an angel investor--any thoughts on my predicament?

I really enjoyed this podcast and will add a link to Killer Innovations on my Blog--TechHeck.

Very good podcast I am approaching 60 and have done most of the things mentioned. I never found a mentor or anyone to give me advice. That is sad since I have been an innovator for 30yrs.

I have had three manager in a row that wants to place innovation in a silo, control the environment. The last on laid me off, my present state. I one breath they say I am doing a great job creating products for the company and willing to prove in by salary. They are fully aware that I think logically and accurately when I review new product ideas. At the same time they do not like that I think logically and accurately about new ideas because I define holes. They do not want to hear about problems.

They also have experienced and do not like the result of not fixing problems when they proceed.

What would a mentor suggest to deal with this catch22?

Add Your Comments ....




December 07, 2008

Podcast: Proving The Value Of Innovation

Diminishing Value

audio

Innovation is one of the key catalysts from the economic recovery - but only if senior management protects and support it, rather than cut it or even eliminate it.  The reason senior managers consider cutting innovation programs is because of the impression that it delivers little to no impact.

So, how do ensure senior management sees and appreciates the value from innovation?

One method to prove is value is through metrics

  • What is the process to build up the proof>?
    • Benchmark yourself
    • Benchmark your industry/competitors
    • Define the gaps shown by the benchmark
    • Develop steps (in priority order) to eliminate the gaps
  • What are the right set of metrics?
    • Standard financial metrics (revenue, gross margin, operating profit and R&D spend and then drill down and capture these numbers at the product line level.  At the product line level, also capture the CAGR (compounded annual growth rate)
    • R&D labor costs
    • IP creation (not for every industry)
    • Idea funnel (new ideas, ideas killed, ideas resulting in products)
  • What are the right ratio's to use to understand effectiveness?
    • GM/R&D (covered in more detail on a post on the blog) - The theory being that if you build a better mouse trap, the customer will reward you with a margin premium.
    • R&D per R&D person
    • Patents per employee (not my favorite but some find it useful)
    • Revenue and gross margin impact based on age of introduction (products introduced < 1 year ago, < 2 years ago, etc)
  • Now what? ... Go back 3 years and ask ..
    • Are these the right metrics?  If so ...
    • Have they improved?
    • What plans are in place to improve them going forward?

The point is:

  • Innovations can be measured
  • Therefore management can "see" the impact
  • If the impact is consistent, then your innovation efforts will be resilient during the touch economic times

What if you're trying to launch a new innovation team?

  • Do it .. don't let the current economic turmoil scare you off
  • Use the competitive benchmark to show what others are doing
  • Show the impact if your organization were "best in class" compared to your competitors
  • Show a well thought out plan to move the organization towards that target

What if you are an individual looking to secure your job during these tough economic times?

  • Show your creative/innovation skill by applying them to a really tough problem facing the organization (e.g. increasing revenue, reducing costs)
  • Show where previous ideas had impact
  • Run a training class and show others how to use creativity and innovation in their roles ... become an innovation mentor/evangelist
  • Create a proposal to management showing how innovation could have impact to the organization

 

Click to listen to: Proving the value of innovation (mp3)




October 26, 2008

Podcast: When is the best time to innovate?

IMG_3743.JPG

 

When is the best time to innovate?

  • Innovation is 24x7 .. not something that you wait "until your in the mood"
  • Some of the drivers that cause people/organizations to all of sudden change their view of innovation
    • Competitors ... they are constantly beating you to market
    • Economic Trends ... our old products aren't selling - hurry up and come up with something new
    • Quarterly Results ... we are having a tough quarter so lets pause on any new ideas/innovations
  • Just as great writers set down and crank a defined number of pages per day, the great innovators define a daily idea quota
    • 2 to 5 ideas per day
    • Set aside a time of day (for me, its morning)
    • Don't filer when you are capturing ideas
    • Combine new ideas with ones already in your idea notebook
    • If you are having struggles to come up with your daily quota, use the killer questions from previous podcasts
    • Try to capture the inspiration for each idea (great use of photo's)
    • Every week or two, prioritize the ideas in your notebook using the 5 key questions
  • If you do this EVERY day ... you will ...
    • Improve your own creativity (exercise that creativity muscle)
    • Build confidence that you can create great ideas
    • Get viewed by others as having and endless supply of great ideas
    • Become a key individual to your organization (key in these chaotic times)
  • If, as an organization, make innovation a 24x7 priority ...
    • Your competitors are most likely NOT doing it
    • So .. you WIN if you do it right

 

Listener Question:  Do you have a process to create ideas every day?  If so, why not share your thoughts on the how and benefits you've seen.

 

MP3 for the October 26th Podcast - When is the best time to innovate?



October 21, 2008

Killer Innovations CD - Almost here !!

CDs DVDs on White Background

With the encouragement of the listeners of the podcast, I've been working on creating a CD that you can share with your friends, managers, team members, etc.  The objective is to create something that introduces the "what" and the "how" of innovation without listening to the +100 hours of audio that now makes-up the podcast catalog.

For those of you who have been waiting, the CD is close to being done.  The audio is 99% complete and now I'm setting up duplication so that its easy for you to order.

I tried to fit the audio on to a single CD .... it didn't fit.  So it will be a 2 CD set with about 2 hours of audio content.  The tracks are:

Disk 1

  1. Why innovation?
  2. A better way to innovate
  3. Focus your innovation search
  4. Ideation -- Creating better ideas by asking better questions

Disk 2

  1. Ranking ideas
  2. Execution - Translating ideas into innovations
  3. Epilog: The skill of observation
  4. Epilog: Changing your perspective

 

Stay tuned ... we are close to having it together.  Thanks for the patience ....

Comments for "Killer Innovations CD - Almost here !!"

Will you make available the CDs to download? If so, you could skip the duplication just by setting up the ISO images and distributing them via bittorrent or the like. The duplicated CDs may look nicer because of the label, but I actually want about a dozen CDs to give to friends that would really benefit from them, and the content is what counts for me.

Yes, the CD will be available for download. If you purchase a CD, you will be allowed to "rip it" and re-distribute it.

I want to make it as easy as possible for you to share the content with friends, co-workers and boss's...

All of the content on the site and the CD is licensed under Creative Commons (non-commercial, non-derivative, attribution).

Phil

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Phil is passionate about creativity, innovation and ideas -- and loves to share the tricks and tools he has learned over his career. The podcast and blog are his way of "paying it forward" for the time and investment a mentor made early in his career. If you find the podcast and blog helpful ... "pay it forward" by sharing it with others.

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Podcast Archive (Audio/Video)

2008 Archive


Dec 14, 2008 - Career Advice For Finding The Dream Innovation Job
Dec 7, 2008 - Proving The Value Of Innovation
Oct 26, 2008 - When is the best time to innovate?
Sept 23, 2008 - Adjacent Innovations
Aug 3, 2008 - A Perfect Storm Of Innovation (video)
July 13, 2008 - Lessons Learned From Creating Innovation Teams
June 29, 2008 - Changing Your Perspective Skills
June 1, 2008 - Observation Skills
April 20, 2008 - Creative Economy - Recorded Live
April 13, 2008 - Execution - Translating Ideas to Innovations
March 30, 2008 - Ranking Your Ideas
Feb 24, 2008 - Ideation - Creating Killer Ideas
Jan 21, 2008 - Having A Focus For Your Innovation Search

2007 Archive


Dec 16, 2007 - Current Methods Versus A Better Way To Innovate
Nov 12, 2007 - Why is innovation important
Oct 14, 2007 - Finding and Keeping Innovation Champions
Sept 30, 2007 - Overcoming The Mid-project Blues and a new creativity exercis
Sept 9, 2007 - One Dimensional Innovations
Aug 19, 2007 - The New IQ - Innovation Quotient
July 29, 2007 - Finding Hidden Ideas By Using Five Hats
July 15, 2007 - Fighting Innovation FUD
June 17, 2007 - Prioritizing Your Ideas
May 28, 2007 - Seeing The Big Picture To Innovate
April 30, 2007 - Innovation Failures
April 22, 2007 - Career Advice For The Creative/Innovation Economy
March 25, 2007 - Managing The Innovation Funnel
March 18, 2007 - Measuring Innovation Impact
Feb 17, 2007 - Trend Safari
Jan 28, 2007 - Improv Innovation
Jan 14, 2007 - Making The Innovation Pitch
Jan 1, 2007 - Creating White Space Innovations

2006 Archive


Dec 19, 2006 - Tools And Tricks To Overcome Creativity Block
Dec 10, 2006 - India China And The Creative Economy
Dec 2, 2006 - Innovation Gravity
Nov 22, 2006 - Creating Insanely Simple Innovations
Nov 6, 2006 - Brain On Auto-Pilot
Oct 15, 2006 - 10 Infrastructure Requirements For The Creative Economy
Oct 1, 2006 - High Performance Innovation Teams
Sept 16, 2006 - Creative Economy Speech at Reuters
Aug 27, 2006 - Corporate Corruption Of Innovation
Aug 14, 2006 - Resource Constraints On Innovation
July 29, 2006 - The Role of Innovation
July 15, 2006 - Five Fears of Innovators and External Innovation Networks
July 3, 2006 - Best Time To Innovate and Proactive Ways To Find Ideas
June 25, 2006 - Overcoming Innovation Block and How To Prevent Innovation
June 19, 2006 - Creative Failure Methodology and Becoming An Innovation Evangelist
June 10, 2006 - Listening Skill and Rules Of Future Forecasting
June 4, 2006 - Observation Skills and Contradictions
May 23, 2006 - Transition To The Creative Economy
April 30, 2006 - Personal Barriers To Creativity
April 22, 2006 - Return Of The Lone Inventor and Wicked Innovations
April 10, 2006 - Importance of the Innovation Process
April 2, 2006 - Show 50 - Listener Feedback
March 26, 2006 - Rest and Relaxation for Better Innovation
March 18, 2006 - American Inventor and Listener Questions
Feb 28, 2006 - Improve Innovation Efficiency
Feb 20, 2006 - Innovation Toolkit and Prosperity Denial
Feb 11, 2006 - Innovation of Design and Finding a Mentor
Feb 4, 2006 - Start-up Innovation
Jan 22, 2006 - Management Model Innovation
Jan 8, 2006 - CES Innovations
Jan 1, 2006 - Outcome Driven Innovation and Innovation Budgets

2005 Archive


Dec 18, 2005 - da Vinci Method and Outcome Based Innovation
Dec 13, 2005 - Productivity from Innovation and Innovation Education
Dec 5, 2005 - Innovation Rules and Virtual Anthropology
Nov 23, 2005 - Creating a Pipeline of Innovation and Tryvertising
Nov 13, 2005 - Cost Benefit Analysis of Innovations
Nov 6, 2005 - Futurecasting and Listener Contributions
Nov 1, 2005 - Team Diversity for Brainstorming
Oct 24, 2005 - Innovation Timing
Oct 17, 2005 - Innovation Mentoring
Oct 12, 2005 - Stealth Innovations
Oct 3, 2005 - Katrina Innovations
Sept 25, 2005 - Overcoming Your Idea Critics
Sept 19, 2005 - Building on the Innovation of Others
Sept 12, 2005 - Using Customers as a Source of Ideas
Sept 5, 2005 - Creating an Innovation Culture
Aug 28, 2005 - Idea Quota and Twinsumer
Aug 21, 2005 - Fast Prototyping
Aug 14, 2005 - Redefining the Innovation Opportunity
Aug 7, 2005 - Biology Based Innovations
July 31, 2005 - Emergent Innovations
July 24, 2005 - Innovation Success Rate
July 17, 2005 - Collaboration for Innovations
July 10, 2005 - Financial Criteria for Killer Innovations
July 3, 2005 - Storytelling & Weak Signals
June 26, 2005 - Measuring Innovation & Applying Killer Questions
June 20, 2005 - Structured Innovation Part 2 & Innovation Rate
June 14, 2005 - Structured Innovation & Perspective
June 6, 2005 - Scenario Planning & Computer Gaming
May 30, 2005 - Transforming the organization & alt industries
May 21, 2005 - Incremental Innovation & Sci-Fi
May 15, 2005 - Interview with Brain Reactions
May 7, 2005 - 2nd Generation Tools & Human Scale
May 1, 2005 - KI Workshop Warm-up and Differentiation
April 23, 2005 - 1st Generation Innovation Tools
April 17, 2005 - 10 Types of Innovation
April 13, 2005 - Ranking Ideas
April 10, 2005 - KI Workshop
April 3, 2005 - Killer Questions
March 26, 2005 - Innovating the 'experience economy'
March 22, 2005 - Barriers to innovation
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