Cheap Marketing Shop

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 15 August 2006

Successful innovation takes PIEER

Posted on 10:56 by Unknown

Seven or eight years ago, I attended a lecture at Atlanta's High Museum of Art. The speaker (whose name I long ago forgot) was a professor of cognitive science at MIT. In many ways, his talk was standard--he showed slides of artworks and had us look at them, then he discussed the paintings and asked us questions. But instead of critiquing the art, he talked about how the audience should look at art. How could we use our mind to get more out of our trip to the museum? In his talk, he laid out five requirements for truly appreciating art.

And while I thought of his lecture whenever I went into a museum after that, I also found the five requirements useful at work. To me, they mapped as well to the disciplines of innovation and product development as they did to art appreciation.

(If any reader recognizes these or, especially, the professor who did the talk--I've searched Google unsuccessfully to date--please let me know. I'd love to cite him by name.)

Here they are, with my paraphrases of the professor's comments:
  1. Persistence - you cannot appreciate art by "wall crawling." You must stand and look at a picture for a long period of time. As you do, more details will become visible and your understanding will grow.

  2. Imagination - you must bring your creative mind to the work of art. What's happening outside the frame of the above painting? How would it look if you viewed the scene from behind? If you were in the painting, where would you be?

  3. Explanation - you must build hypotheses to explain what the picture is trying to say. For example: "This painting is a celebration of community."

    &

  4. Evidence - you must be able to cite examples that support your hypotheses. It's not enough only to say, "This painting is a celebration of community." You must be able to add, "because it has lots of people working together at different tasks."

  5. Resourcefulness - you must use all resources at your disposal to understand a work of art. If you grew up in a farming village, compare this view to a similar view of your village. If you grew up in a city and never saw a scene like this, how does it compare to what you imagined a farm village would look like?
Think about the five requirements. Do they apply to your work? Would a greater application of persistence, imagination, explanation & evidence, and resourcefulness serve you well?

marketing, innovation, product development, art

(painting "Cotton Ginning Time" by Mattie Lou O'Kelley, via the Carl Vinson Institute of Government at the University of Georgia)
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • PGA Tour has lost its sense...of branding
    Sports marketing has been careening toward the cliff of excess for some time now (the wall-to-wall corporate sponsorship depicted in " ...
  • Airships 101 with Doug McFadden
    OK, class, today we're going to talk about blimps, also known as airships, with Doug McFadden, a longtime blimp pilot (and my brother-in...
  • To close, a purchaser must be ready, willing and able
    Why do so many forecast sales never reach closure? Usually, it's because one or more of these three criteria has not been satisfied. (So...
  • Cherish those distant connections
    The new book " Firing Back: How Great Leaders Rebound After Career Disasters ," excerpted in the January Harvard Business Review, ...
  • Management Innovation is the best way to achieve competitve advantage
    I wanted to point out an important post from the consistently excellent Business Innovation Insider , in which Dominic interviews Gary Hame...
  • Friday comix - Procter & Gamble researchers analyze housekeeping at the Millennium Hotel
    "You know, new Spic 'n' Span 3-in-1 can cut 27.5 seconds off the time you spend scrubbing that floor." From today's Wa...
  • A peek inside executive severance agreements
    The outrage over Bob Nardelli 's and Hank McKinnell 's multi-hundred million dollar severance agreements still hangs like a cloud ov...
  • Concrete: innovation hotbed
    One of the next great areas of technological advance may be right beneath your feet. Concrete, the ubiquitous construction material responsi...
  • Fortune 500 Corporate Blog Review: Comcast (#94)
    Another company with no corporate blogs. Neither a dozen Google searches nor a detailed parsing of the Comcast site map turned up anything...
  • Another inspiring thought from Dr. Yunus
    Mr. Muhammad Yunus , the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner, is interviewed in today's New York Times. I was struck in particular by how he ...

Categories

  • adoption
  • alliances
  • awards
  • blogging
  • blogs
  • branding
  • change management
  • communications
  • Harvard Business Review
  • innovation
  • leadership
  • lists
  • management
  • marketing
  • mobile
  • mvno
  • narrative
  • negotiation
  • New York Times
  • obituaries
  • open innovation
  • PDMA
  • presentation
  • private label
  • product development
  • promotion
  • psychology
  • reading list
  • retail
  • sales
  • spoken blogging
  • spoken post
  • sponsorship
  • sports
  • storytelling
  • strategy
  • technology
  • telecommunications
  • Wall Street Journal
  • what-in-hell-is
  • wireless

Blog Archive

  • ►  2007 (69)
    • ►  March (11)
    • ►  February (30)
    • ►  January (28)
  • ▼  2006 (157)
    • ►  December (23)
    • ►  November (36)
    • ►  October (26)
    • ►  September (27)
    • ▼  August (15)
      • Principles of new product marketing - business-to-...
      • What's in a product name?
      • Vacation interlude
      • Successful innovation takes PIEER
      • News flash: you have to observe and listen to cust...
      • The best approach to fighting air terrorism may be...
      • How will musicians get paid in the 21st century?
      • Is revenue sharing the way to improve 3G mobile ha...
      • IBM makes purchase to energize outsourcing offerings
      • Corporate blogging part 4 - blog review
      • Corporate blogging part 3 - blog review preview
      • Satellite phones make a comeback in "Miami Vice"
      • Involving sales during the fuzzy front end: priceless
      • Building business alliances - lessons from "Miami ...
      • The perils of profit sharing
    • ►  July (17)
    • ►  June (13)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile