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reach out workshop:

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Apple and the iPod nano. Body Shop and Anita Roddick. Cockerell and the hovercraft ... i) Think of a famous leader that everyone knows about (sport, media, business, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: reach out workshop:


1
reach out workshop
  • reaching out
  • Day 1
  • Manchester, 15-19 January 2007

2
1. Published workshop objectives
  • i) To build the ____a.____ of the reach out
    network to be self-sustaining by
  • - Equipping members with the skills and
    ____b.____ to develop and manage their own
    projects (training and development)
  • - Raising self-awareness of participants in
    order to equip them as young ____c.____ (training
    and development)
  • - Providing members with the opportunity to
    ____d.____ with UK and international partners
  • ii) ____e.____ the success of the reach out
    network to date 
  • - Running an ____f.____ with strategic partners
    and British Council representatives

3
2. Personal workshop objectives
  • - Think of your main dream, goal, ambition, aim
    or hope for this workshop (just one!).
  • - You will now be given a Post-It note with a
    number on it to represent your personal
    objective.
  • - Mingle with the other participants and exchange
    your personal objective with theirs.
  • - The facilitator (Adam) will help you with
    clustering, agreeing and sharing personal
    objectives.

4
3. What sort of innovator are you?
  • Complete the multiple choice diagnostic task to
    find out what sort of innovator you are.
  • Then consider the following questions
  • a. Do you agree with the result of the task?
    Why?
  • b. If you dont agree with the task, what type
    of innovator would you prefer to be and why?
  • c. What type of innovator would you not like to
    be? Why?
  • d. Can you guess what types of innovator the
    other people in your group are?
  • e. Do you prefer working with people who are
    like you? Why?
  • f. Is it better for a team to have a mix of
    innovators or all the same? Why?
  • The facilitator will now ask you to organise
    yourselves into new groups.

5
4.1 Famous innovators
  • Apple and the iPod nano
  • Body Shop and Anita Roddick
  • Cockerell and the hovercraft
  • Dyson and the centrifugal vacuum cleaner
  • Edison and the lightbulb
  • Mohamed Al Fayed

6
4.2 Famous innovators behaviours
  • Spotting an opportunity
  • Reflective, complex and inspired, but seemingly
    whacky
  • Eccentric tinkering, with very limited resources
  • Self-belief and willingness to put money where
    mouth is
  • Willingness to take personal and professional
    risk
  • Accidental discovery
  • What do the people involved all have in common?
  • What about market research in all this?

7
5. What stops you from being creative?
  • Is it
  • - the political system
  • - your age and gender
  • - society and culture
  • - your education or job
  • - culture or race
  • physical environment?
  • Try the pyramid discussion your facilitator will
    give you.

8
6. Approaches to creative thinking and the
development of innovative products
  • You are going to see two slides on the above
    topic. Take a few notes as you listen under the
    following subtitles
  • Endorsement/Agreement
  • Clarification/Question
  • Challenge/Disagreement

9
6.1 Principles to support creative thinking
  • i. Working with mixed teams
  • - different types of thinkers and skills
  • ii. Problem-solving
  • - different types of learners and tasks
  • iii. Comfort zones
  • - different types of environment and stimuli
  • iv. Taking risks
  • - different types of speech and behaviour

10
6.2 An innovations methodology
Filtering and selection of ideas
Development of selected ideas
Facilitated ideas generation
  • Quantity
  • Creative thinking outside comfort zones
  • Various stimuli for different thinkers
  • Two approaches
  • The Rough
  • The Smooth

Tools
CONVERGENCE
11
6.3 Approaches to developing ps
  • a New Markets (45 of ps development work)
  • - Selling existing ps to new markets
  • - Market research, increased sales overall
  • b Product Extension (45)
  • - Developing existing ps for existing audiences
  • - Customer research, incremental innovation
  • c The Next Big Thing (10, extra RD resource
    often)
  • - Developing completely new ps, radical
    innovation
  • - Professional expertise and insights into
    customer behaviour

12
6.4 Developing the Next Big Thing
  • Traditional customer market research (surveys,
    focus groups) cannot tell you what the Next Big
    Thing is
  • Specifying the Next Big Thing on traditional
    customer market research produces a much higher
    risk of failure
  • Big UK companies like Tescos dont conduct
    traditional research anymore they observe
    customer behaviour instead
  • They generate customer insight and then either
    better fit current ps to those behaviours,
    extend their current ps, or develop the Next Big
    Thing
  • The process of generating an insight values the
    professional expertise of staff, particularly
    staff close to the front-line

13
7. Myths that block innovation
  • Every society has a set of shared social beliefs.
    Those beliefs create stereotypes of people, and
    myths about people. Every individual stereotypes
    every other person and every group of people.
    Some people even stereotype themselves.
  • Societies inhibit/limit the creativity and
    innovation of individuals.
  • Professor Kendal, Truthorpe University
  • But why? Whats your insight?

14
8. Leaders, leadership, leading innovation
  • i) Think of a famous leader that everyone knows
    about (sport, media, business, acting, politics,
    etc) and write down 6 adjectives to describe
    them. Then read your adjectives to the rest of
    the group to see if they can guess the leader.
  • ii) What are the common and unique adjectives in
    the room?
  • iii) From all the adjectives, which 6 would
    describe someone good at making presentations to
    people? What about negotiating a contract?
  • iv) Choose the most suitable adjectives to
    describe yourself as a leader. Compare those
    adjectives to others in your group.
  • v) Now look at the set of tasks the facilitator
    gives you. Who is most suited in your group to
    lead on those tasks?

15
9. Insights and ideas generation
  • RingWell, a mobile phone company, needs YOUR
    help!
  • RingWell has realised that it is not selling many
    mobiles to older parents (45-60 years old). In
    fact, not many companies do. Ringwell wants to
    move into this new market before the competition.
  • In your group, discuss older parents to discover
    some insights into their behaviour and (non-)use
    of mobile phones. Then, develop your product idea
    and explain the benefit to the customer.
  • Insight Product Idea Customer benefit
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