Tuesday, April 08, 2008

open space innovation & consumer research

Jack Leith talks about Open Space Innovation - i.e. getting consumers and corporate (marketing/manufacturing/etc) types to interact and form patterns. I like rhythm to this - first consumers then corporates then consumers then corporates again. A few observations:
  • It reminds me a lot of the two-stage emergence bit in archetype production. Complexity requires iteration.
  • Is it possible to do part of all of this virtually? Using a mix of discussion, drawing, etc. (I'm thinking blended facilitation here - but more on that in a week or two)
  • The contact points between the consumers & corporate types is important - esp. the importance of silence, listening & observation. There's an almost ethnographic quality to it.

I reckon this would be fun to do. Anyone fancy having a go in a relatively safe environment?

Thanks: Johnnie*

*Johnnie's Twittering suggests an absolutely top-notch Phoric in the pipeline.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hi Matt

We do this type of thing quite as bit. It's very nerve wracking for our clients - they feel very exposed during those opening moments. They freak out that the facilitation is loose and that they have to play a role in the proceedings versus sit back behind a mirror.

We have done stages remotely/virtually - and this works well, but you sort of lose the immediacy (and the adrenelin) that people get from working in a large group (or maybe that's just me and my attention span).

I love the look on clients faces when they get have an ah-ha moment in sessions like this; something you've been trying to tell them for years; and then some bloke from Ipswich says "I mean - if you just wacked a widget on it, it'd be perfect".