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Disruptive perception
06.18.13
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Section 1

Creativity & imagination

Section 2

Perception

Section 3

5 ways to disrupt perception
Immersion
Challenge conformity
Novelty
Invite constraint
Disparate pairings
CREATIVITY
& IMAGINATION
Creativity & imagination
This is at the heart of our work

Our work is the
output of our
imaginations

Our success and the success we
drive for our clients is directly
linked to our ability to be creative
Creativity & imagination
No one would argue with this
This is not controversial
We get hired for our ability to
be creative, to think generatively
Our ability to apply creativity
to solve problems and create
business opportunities
Creativity & imagination
But if you believe in the power of
creativity and imagination, and if you
want to constantly challenge yourself
and your organization to be ever more
creative and innovative, then you must
think about and challenge your
perceptual capabilities
Make no mistake

All creativity and
imagination begins
with perception
PERCEPTION
“Perception lies at the root of all creativity,
learning how to see is the start of creative thinking.”
Source: Edward Prince Furniture Design: How to Be More Creative - Perception
But how you perceive
something isn’t simply
a product of what your
eyes and ears carry to
your brain, it’s a product
of your brain itself
“Perception

imagination

are linked because the brain uses
the same neural circuits for both
functions.”
Source: Fast Company: “Neuroscience Sheds
New Light on Creativity.”
What is perception?

The conscious mental
registration of a
sensory stimulus
What is perception?

Recognition &
interpretation of
sensory stimuli based
chiefly on memory
Perception
Experience modifies
perception because it
modifies neural connections
The more experience we
have with something, the
more efficient our brains
become at processing
information
Perception
Neuroscientists have observed
that while an entire network of
neurons might process a
stimulus initially, by about the
sixth presentation, the heavy
li ing is performed by only a
subset of neurons. Because
fewer neurons are being used,
the network becomes more
efficient at carrying out its
function.
Source: Fast Company: “Neuroscience
Sheds New Light on Creativity.”
Humans tend
to form whole
perceptions from
partial images
This is part of our natural
ability to quickly interpret
limited information, an ability
essential to making the snap
judgments needed to get
through life
This mental
extrapolation is a great
intellectual skill
At times, however, the filled
in information is illusory, a
product of the mind not reality.
Vision is not the same as perception
Vision is concrete

Observational versus judgmental

Perception is how we ascribe meaning to what we see
Vision is not the same as perception

We have to interpret what’s around us & o en our
unique interpretation can lead to distinctive ideas
Our unique perceptions of the world are in large
part what differentiates us from each other
Eliminate all perceptive differences & the
individual is more or less obsolete
Vision is not the same as perception

But at times, our brains
move to judgement so
quickly, we can miss seeing
what is truly there
“The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes, but in having new eyes.”
Marcel Proust
Disruptive perception

The ideal of seeing
with new eyes is
merely a mental
pause button...
Disruptive perception

conscious inefficiency,
or said another way...
Perception

A very basic rule of
perception says that you
will perceive something in
a way that is consistent
with your prior experience

Once a perspective has
been adopted, it is rare
that new lines of thought
are opened.
“The eye sees only what the mind
is prepared to comprehend.”
Henri Bergson
This doesn’t bode
well for creativity
and creative solutions
In our business,
we have to be able
to see new things,
new opportunities in
existing landscapes

Most problems
are not new
The challenge is to
look at old problems
in new ways
Albert Einstein said
“Creativity is seeing what
everyone else has seen, and
thinking what no one else
has thought.”
Iconoclastic perception
“Iconoclasts see things differently than
other people. Literally. They see things
differently because their brains do not
fall into the efficiency traps as much as
the average person's brain. Iconoclasts,
either because they were born that way
or because they learned how to do it,
have found ways to work around the
perceptual shortcuts that plague other
people.”
Gregory Berns, "Iconoclast: A Neuroscientist
Reveals How to Think Differently"
“Genius o en comes from finding a new
perspective that no one else has taken.”
Michael Michalko: “A Theory About Genius”
Habitual thinking is
a drag on creativity
Disruptive perception

How do you disrupt your
perception, shake up your
attentional systems, fight
habit and enhance your
creative abilities?
5 WAYS TO DISRUPT
PERCEPTION
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
You must break free of
what you think you
know to be true
We have set ways of viewing the
world and we are experts at si ing
out information to the contrary
Immersion

The cure for this
automated
thinking is doing

Experiencing
things, seeing
things first hand
Immersion

What activities or
information might directly
confront your implicit or
explicit assumptions?
Go outside
Probably something
outside the office field
trips, store checks...
Immersion
Empathy is good. Imagine or experience
things not as yourself but as someone else.
Talk to consumers not just behind the glass
of a two-way mirror, but experience their
habits and rituals with them.
Experience the products and services of
competitive and non-competitive
companies. What can you learn?
Environmental immersion
Renowned architect Frank Gehry wants
his buildings to be experienced, not just
admired. He deliberately breaks architectural
conventions to create work that elicits an
emotional reaction.
Immersion

Vontz Center for
Molecular Studies
“Cancer will be cured
here because the building
will make people think
differently.”
Frank Gehry, Architect
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
Challenge conformity
Every organization has its own
culture, own methods,
unchallenged assumptions,
pivitol strategies and set
way of “that’s the way we
do things around here.”
Document and identify
these core beliefs,
sacred cows, and then
challenge each one.
Or challenge yourself how
you would think differently
about the brand or category
if we didn’t believe what
we believe.
Challenge conformity

ROM bar
A need to be disruptive to get the brand
back into the hearts of the nation.
ROM
The idea was to steal it, to wrench
it away from the nation, to dress it
in an overseas international flag,
that of the states.
The nation rebelled, asking “what
have you done? You’ve given away
our national asset here.”
As such, that disruption, that
desire to break conformity, had a
fantastic effect.
As the campaign grew and
grew and grew, the anger
and the angst and the
passion grew with it.
When the candy bar was
then reclad in the flag of
the nation, everybody loved
it again and sales went
through the roof.
But it was a brilliant piece
of thinking because they
challenged the conformity
of the brand itself and
about the idea of
stereotyping nationality.
Hate is good
There is a very powerful emotion wrapped
up in hating something. Hating is visceral.
Hating is angry. Hating is disruptive. There
is a real usefulness in the velocity and
visceral nature of hating something if you
want to change something.
Only working within a convention will
get you back into the heartland of
habit. And if you are in a habit, then
you will do what was a bit like the last
piece or a bit like the studio over the
road from you.
As an example, pick something pretty
pedestrian, pretty mundane, and see what
happens when you hate something
associated to it.
Conventions
of camping

Escape
Basic
Countryside
If you define what camping is, it’s probably based on three things; escapism, living a pretty basic life, and being in the
countryside. So as a convention, if you hate one of those things, what happens? If you hate it so much you refuse to
accept it within the conventions of camping?
Conventions
of camping

Escape
Basic Glamping
Countryside
Image courtesy flickr user Donna Tomlinson

Image courtesy flickr user wicker-furniture

Glamping is the reinvention of camping. It sets the whole leisure and tourist industry back on fire. It is being outside but
not having to do it in a rough, tough, ants in your sandwich type of way. So when you hate basic, you get to something
not only more interesting but also a viable alternative.
Conventions
of camping

Escape
Basic
Countryside
If you take out countryside, what you get is urban camping, a trend that started to catch on in Europe. Camp in a city.
Challenge conformity

IEA urban camping
Because something was refused and taken out of the equation, it takes you to a really interesting place. You have to
sacrifice; you have to be aggressive in the reduction of one of the core components of the brand or the activity. IEA
has redefined a corner of what was otherwise a very static industry. Camping now, whether it be glamping or urban
camping, is significantly reinvented.
Challenge conformity

Hövding invisible helmet
Hövding challenged the norms
of a crash helmet being a rigid
structure that has been in play
for years and years and years.
By challenging the conformity
of the genre, they came up
with a radically different, very
important alternative.
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
As previously stated...

The networks that govern
both perception and
imagination are one in
the same
But they can be
reprogrammed by
deploying your
attention differently
Our brain’s natural inclinations
toward efficiency drive mechanized behavior of perceptual
shortcuts to save energy.
Perceiving things in the usual way
requires little by way of energy.
Novelty
To perceive things
differently, we must fuel our
brains with stuff it has not
experienced before.
A novel stimulus jolts
attentional systems.
Radical directly proportional
to fresh insights.

1. Novelty
“If you’re trying to be more creative, one of the most important
things you can do is increase the volume and diversity of the
information to which you are exposed.”
Wall Street Journal: “How to be Creative” by Jonah Lehrer
Novelty
can take
many forms
Novelty can take many forms

New insights or look
at existing research in
new ways to drive
new insights.
Novelty can take many forms

“Form teams with people with
diverse thinking styles more
likely to arrive at good
decisions. Their diversity
challenges each other’s
habituated beliefs.”
Daniel Goldman
Novelty can take
many forms
Doing a new and
unfamiliar activity
Novelty can take many forms

Exposure
to new
information
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
Invite constraint

We o en talk about
white space and
endless possibilities,
but the truth is the
creative process is
borne of constraint.
“I suspect that the welcoming of constraints is,
at bottom, the deepest secret of creativity.”
David Gentleman: “The Invisible Grail”, 2003
Invite
constraint

Your product now may be
only be used by those
under the age of 21

The #1 raw material in
your product is no
longer available

You may no longer use
your brand name to sell
your product or service

You must triple the
price of your brand

You must cut the
price of your
brand in half

You may no longer
promote your product
within your number
one channel

You may no longer
use your brand’s
primary equity color
“I suspect that the welcoming of constraints is, at bottom,
the deepest secret of creativity.”
Douglas R. Hofstadter, scientist and polymath

Image Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
Invite constraints

Mars Rover
NASA’s challenge was to safely
land the Mars probe onto the
surface of the planet. NASA had no
problem getting to Mars or getting
to the atmosphere, but the last 200
yards were actually the hardest.
How do you slow down and control
descent onto the surface of the
planet while controlling everything
from mission control back on
earth?
So for the marvelous technology
that got us to Mars’ atmosphere,
the last 200 yards was delivered by
a winch, a mechanism that has
been with us for centuries.
Sometimes, the answer is right
there in front of you.
Image Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
Invite constraints

Preem
Landor worked in Sweden with a petroleum
retailer whose business was suffering quite
significantly with the advent of the incoming
big international petrol companies.
Through the segmentation process with
them we discovered that half the audience
had a series of unmet needs and was an
audience that wasn’t being talked to
whatsoever—the entire female population.
One of the things that people familiar with
petrol retailers know is that you don’t make
any money now on pumping gas; you make it
in the C-stores. So if you do believe that you
want to seriously attract the missing half of
the audience, what do you do? You design
for women, not men. That’s the constraint.
Preem
As we worked back through the
experience into the C-store,
making it such that the dwell time
for the typical female customer
would be longer, purchases
increased. (Sales went up 33% a er
the redesign)
Changes included taking all the
porn off the top shelf of all the
magazine racks, taking out all the
donkey burgers, and putting in
things which were much more
suitable for food to take home for
the family.
Outside, the pumps were better lit
for ease and safety.
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
Five most important
skills for innovators:
Harvard Business Review

Associating
Questioning
Observing
Experimenting
Networking
Disparate pairings

Most powerful overall
driver of innovation
is associating
Associating:

Making connections across seemingly unrelated questions, problems, ideas, or categories
Disparate pairings
O en helpful to look at the best
of the best at a certain thing and
imagine how it might transform
your company.
Get inspired by Amazon’s access
to inventory
Nordstrom’s approach to
customer service
Disney’s approach to experience
management
Disparate pairings

+

=

Image courtesy wikimedia commons user Thegreenj

Locks

Personal audio

iPod
Disparate pairings

+
Jewelry

Gin
Disparate pairings

+
Sports cars

Whiskey
Disparate pairings

+
Drugstores

Department stores
Images courtesy flickr user daxoneil
Image courtesy flickr user daxoneil

Image courtesy flickr user Pauton Chung
Images courtesy flickr user Todd Huffman

Disparate pairings

London Olympics Logo
NEED
PERMI
SSION
Image courtesy flickr user tableatny

Image courtesy flickr user Tiws
London 2012 Olympics
In past years, there was a sense of
conformity in how the different games and
cities presented themselves.
It was the desire of the IOC to make the
games a legacy for the young people of
London and stay top of mind for the 6
relevant years. How do you engage them
while staying true to traditional sporting
values?
Wolff Olins adopted the code and
language of the streets by using graffiti as
an inspiration. The resulting design was
disruptive and different, and demanded
conversation.

Image courtesy flickr user Ben Sutherland
+

=

Disparate pairings

Siberian Airlines
Disparate pairings

Siberian Airlines
What do we do with Siberian Airways that can
resonate with the new generation of Russia and their
point of view?
The idea of freshness was brought in because
typically, in and out of Russia, perceptions of
travel were that it was a pretty grey experience.
Actually it’s a pretty grey in a lot of places, but
particularly Russia. So what can we do to add a
sense of freshness and vitality to it?
And can we combine it with something which
actually has a sense of style and modernity,
some lifestyle that people would find attractive?
S7
If you put fresh and fashion
together you end up with not
Siberian Airlines, but S7—
something that is absolutely bright
and cheerful and fashionable and
breaks the codes of the category.
Now they feel proud and walk
with a strut that is more akin
to being a lifestyle brand than
just an airline brand. The
lounges feel more like going
into a boutique than they do
just a furniture show room
you tend to get in lounges
these days.
Disparate pairings

UKTV
Disparate pairings

SOLIDARITY

+
UKTV’s personality was defined as the “Imaginative
Challenger,” which is already a paradox. How do you
bring together an idea of “what if” and a wandering
curious spirit with an emphatic sense of challenging
the status quo and norm?

=
The resulting identity combines the opportunity of a
cloud with strong, emphatic type. It is disruptive and
challenging to the sector.
5 ways to disrupt perception

1 Immersion
2 Challenge conformity
3 Novelty
4 Invite constraint
5 Disparate pairings
Thank you
Landor.com

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Disruptive perception

  • 2. Hello, Let’s chat Section 1 Creativity & imagination Section 2 Perception Section 3 5 ways to disrupt perception Immersion Challenge conformity Novelty Invite constraint Disparate pairings
  • 4. Creativity & imagination This is at the heart of our work Our work is the output of our imaginations Our success and the success we drive for our clients is directly linked to our ability to be creative
  • 5. Creativity & imagination No one would argue with this This is not controversial We get hired for our ability to be creative, to think generatively Our ability to apply creativity to solve problems and create business opportunities
  • 6. Creativity & imagination But if you believe in the power of creativity and imagination, and if you want to constantly challenge yourself and your organization to be ever more creative and innovative, then you must think about and challenge your perceptual capabilities
  • 7. Make no mistake All creativity and imagination begins with perception
  • 9. “Perception lies at the root of all creativity, learning how to see is the start of creative thinking.” Source: Edward Prince Furniture Design: How to Be More Creative - Perception
  • 10. But how you perceive something isn’t simply a product of what your eyes and ears carry to your brain, it’s a product of your brain itself
  • 11. “Perception imagination are linked because the brain uses the same neural circuits for both functions.” Source: Fast Company: “Neuroscience Sheds New Light on Creativity.”
  • 12. What is perception? The conscious mental registration of a sensory stimulus
  • 13. What is perception? Recognition & interpretation of sensory stimuli based chiefly on memory
  • 14. Perception Experience modifies perception because it modifies neural connections The more experience we have with something, the more efficient our brains become at processing information
  • 15. Perception Neuroscientists have observed that while an entire network of neurons might process a stimulus initially, by about the sixth presentation, the heavy li ing is performed by only a subset of neurons. Because fewer neurons are being used, the network becomes more efficient at carrying out its function. Source: Fast Company: “Neuroscience Sheds New Light on Creativity.”
  • 16. Humans tend to form whole perceptions from partial images
  • 17. This is part of our natural ability to quickly interpret limited information, an ability essential to making the snap judgments needed to get through life
  • 18. This mental extrapolation is a great intellectual skill At times, however, the filled in information is illusory, a product of the mind not reality.
  • 19. Vision is not the same as perception Vision is concrete Observational versus judgmental Perception is how we ascribe meaning to what we see
  • 20. Vision is not the same as perception We have to interpret what’s around us & o en our unique interpretation can lead to distinctive ideas Our unique perceptions of the world are in large part what differentiates us from each other Eliminate all perceptive differences & the individual is more or less obsolete
  • 21. Vision is not the same as perception But at times, our brains move to judgement so quickly, we can miss seeing what is truly there
  • 22. “The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.” Marcel Proust
  • 23. Disruptive perception The ideal of seeing with new eyes is merely a mental pause button...
  • 25.
  • 26. Perception A very basic rule of perception says that you will perceive something in a way that is consistent with your prior experience Once a perspective has been adopted, it is rare that new lines of thought are opened.
  • 27. “The eye sees only what the mind is prepared to comprehend.” Henri Bergson
  • 28. This doesn’t bode well for creativity and creative solutions
  • 29. In our business, we have to be able to see new things, new opportunities in existing landscapes Most problems are not new The challenge is to look at old problems in new ways
  • 30. Albert Einstein said “Creativity is seeing what everyone else has seen, and thinking what no one else has thought.”
  • 31. Iconoclastic perception “Iconoclasts see things differently than other people. Literally. They see things differently because their brains do not fall into the efficiency traps as much as the average person's brain. Iconoclasts, either because they were born that way or because they learned how to do it, have found ways to work around the perceptual shortcuts that plague other people.” Gregory Berns, "Iconoclast: A Neuroscientist Reveals How to Think Differently"
  • 32. “Genius o en comes from finding a new perspective that no one else has taken.” Michael Michalko: “A Theory About Genius”
  • 33. Habitual thinking is a drag on creativity
  • 34. Disruptive perception How do you disrupt your perception, shake up your attentional systems, fight habit and enhance your creative abilities?
  • 35. 5 WAYS TO DISRUPT PERCEPTION
  • 36. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings
  • 37. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings
  • 38. You must break free of what you think you know to be true
  • 39. We have set ways of viewing the world and we are experts at si ing out information to the contrary
  • 40. Immersion The cure for this automated thinking is doing Experiencing things, seeing things first hand
  • 41. Immersion What activities or information might directly confront your implicit or explicit assumptions?
  • 42. Go outside Probably something outside the office field trips, store checks...
  • 43. Immersion Empathy is good. Imagine or experience things not as yourself but as someone else. Talk to consumers not just behind the glass of a two-way mirror, but experience their habits and rituals with them. Experience the products and services of competitive and non-competitive companies. What can you learn?
  • 44. Environmental immersion Renowned architect Frank Gehry wants his buildings to be experienced, not just admired. He deliberately breaks architectural conventions to create work that elicits an emotional reaction.
  • 45. Immersion Vontz Center for Molecular Studies “Cancer will be cured here because the building will make people think differently.” Frank Gehry, Architect
  • 46. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings
  • 47. Challenge conformity Every organization has its own culture, own methods, unchallenged assumptions, pivitol strategies and set way of “that’s the way we do things around here.”
  • 48. Document and identify these core beliefs, sacred cows, and then challenge each one.
  • 49. Or challenge yourself how you would think differently about the brand or category if we didn’t believe what we believe.
  • 50. Challenge conformity ROM bar A need to be disruptive to get the brand back into the hearts of the nation.
  • 51. ROM The idea was to steal it, to wrench it away from the nation, to dress it in an overseas international flag, that of the states. The nation rebelled, asking “what have you done? You’ve given away our national asset here.” As such, that disruption, that desire to break conformity, had a fantastic effect.
  • 52. As the campaign grew and grew and grew, the anger and the angst and the passion grew with it. When the candy bar was then reclad in the flag of the nation, everybody loved it again and sales went through the roof. But it was a brilliant piece of thinking because they challenged the conformity of the brand itself and about the idea of stereotyping nationality.
  • 53. Hate is good There is a very powerful emotion wrapped up in hating something. Hating is visceral. Hating is angry. Hating is disruptive. There is a real usefulness in the velocity and visceral nature of hating something if you want to change something. Only working within a convention will get you back into the heartland of habit. And if you are in a habit, then you will do what was a bit like the last piece or a bit like the studio over the road from you. As an example, pick something pretty pedestrian, pretty mundane, and see what happens when you hate something associated to it.
  • 54. Conventions of camping Escape Basic Countryside If you define what camping is, it’s probably based on three things; escapism, living a pretty basic life, and being in the countryside. So as a convention, if you hate one of those things, what happens? If you hate it so much you refuse to accept it within the conventions of camping?
  • 55. Conventions of camping Escape Basic Glamping Countryside Image courtesy flickr user Donna Tomlinson Image courtesy flickr user wicker-furniture Glamping is the reinvention of camping. It sets the whole leisure and tourist industry back on fire. It is being outside but not having to do it in a rough, tough, ants in your sandwich type of way. So when you hate basic, you get to something not only more interesting but also a viable alternative.
  • 56. Conventions of camping Escape Basic Countryside If you take out countryside, what you get is urban camping, a trend that started to catch on in Europe. Camp in a city.
  • 57. Challenge conformity IEA urban camping Because something was refused and taken out of the equation, it takes you to a really interesting place. You have to sacrifice; you have to be aggressive in the reduction of one of the core components of the brand or the activity. IEA has redefined a corner of what was otherwise a very static industry. Camping now, whether it be glamping or urban camping, is significantly reinvented.
  • 59. Hövding challenged the norms of a crash helmet being a rigid structure that has been in play for years and years and years. By challenging the conformity of the genre, they came up with a radically different, very important alternative.
  • 60. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings
  • 61. As previously stated... The networks that govern both perception and imagination are one in the same
  • 62. But they can be reprogrammed by deploying your attention differently
  • 63. Our brain’s natural inclinations toward efficiency drive mechanized behavior of perceptual shortcuts to save energy. Perceiving things in the usual way requires little by way of energy.
  • 64. Novelty To perceive things differently, we must fuel our brains with stuff it has not experienced before. A novel stimulus jolts attentional systems. Radical directly proportional to fresh insights. 1. Novelty
  • 65. “If you’re trying to be more creative, one of the most important things you can do is increase the volume and diversity of the information to which you are exposed.” Wall Street Journal: “How to be Creative” by Jonah Lehrer
  • 67. Novelty can take many forms New insights or look at existing research in new ways to drive new insights.
  • 68. Novelty can take many forms “Form teams with people with diverse thinking styles more likely to arrive at good decisions. Their diversity challenges each other’s habituated beliefs.” Daniel Goldman
  • 69. Novelty can take many forms Doing a new and unfamiliar activity
  • 70. Novelty can take many forms Exposure to new information
  • 71. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings
  • 72. Invite constraint We o en talk about white space and endless possibilities, but the truth is the creative process is borne of constraint.
  • 73. “I suspect that the welcoming of constraints is, at bottom, the deepest secret of creativity.” David Gentleman: “The Invisible Grail”, 2003
  • 74.
  • 75. Invite constraint Your product now may be only be used by those under the age of 21 The #1 raw material in your product is no longer available You may no longer use your brand name to sell your product or service You must triple the price of your brand You must cut the price of your brand in half You may no longer promote your product within your number one channel You may no longer use your brand’s primary equity color
  • 76. “I suspect that the welcoming of constraints is, at bottom, the deepest secret of creativity.” Douglas R. Hofstadter, scientist and polymath Image Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
  • 77. Invite constraints Mars Rover NASA’s challenge was to safely land the Mars probe onto the surface of the planet. NASA had no problem getting to Mars or getting to the atmosphere, but the last 200 yards were actually the hardest. How do you slow down and control descent onto the surface of the planet while controlling everything from mission control back on earth? So for the marvelous technology that got us to Mars’ atmosphere, the last 200 yards was delivered by a winch, a mechanism that has been with us for centuries. Sometimes, the answer is right there in front of you. Image Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech
  • 78. Invite constraints Preem Landor worked in Sweden with a petroleum retailer whose business was suffering quite significantly with the advent of the incoming big international petrol companies. Through the segmentation process with them we discovered that half the audience had a series of unmet needs and was an audience that wasn’t being talked to whatsoever—the entire female population. One of the things that people familiar with petrol retailers know is that you don’t make any money now on pumping gas; you make it in the C-stores. So if you do believe that you want to seriously attract the missing half of the audience, what do you do? You design for women, not men. That’s the constraint.
  • 79. Preem As we worked back through the experience into the C-store, making it such that the dwell time for the typical female customer would be longer, purchases increased. (Sales went up 33% a er the redesign) Changes included taking all the porn off the top shelf of all the magazine racks, taking out all the donkey burgers, and putting in things which were much more suitable for food to take home for the family. Outside, the pumps were better lit for ease and safety.
  • 80.
  • 81. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings
  • 82. Five most important skills for innovators: Harvard Business Review Associating Questioning Observing Experimenting Networking
  • 83. Disparate pairings Most powerful overall driver of innovation is associating
  • 84. Associating: Making connections across seemingly unrelated questions, problems, ideas, or categories
  • 85. Disparate pairings O en helpful to look at the best of the best at a certain thing and imagine how it might transform your company. Get inspired by Amazon’s access to inventory Nordstrom’s approach to customer service Disney’s approach to experience management
  • 86. Disparate pairings + = Image courtesy wikimedia commons user Thegreenj Locks Personal audio iPod
  • 88.
  • 90.
  • 92. Images courtesy flickr user daxoneil
  • 93. Image courtesy flickr user daxoneil Image courtesy flickr user Pauton Chung
  • 94. Images courtesy flickr user Todd Huffman Disparate pairings London Olympics Logo
  • 95. NEED PERMI SSION Image courtesy flickr user tableatny Image courtesy flickr user Tiws
  • 96. London 2012 Olympics In past years, there was a sense of conformity in how the different games and cities presented themselves. It was the desire of the IOC to make the games a legacy for the young people of London and stay top of mind for the 6 relevant years. How do you engage them while staying true to traditional sporting values? Wolff Olins adopted the code and language of the streets by using graffiti as an inspiration. The resulting design was disruptive and different, and demanded conversation. Image courtesy flickr user Ben Sutherland
  • 98. Disparate pairings Siberian Airlines What do we do with Siberian Airways that can resonate with the new generation of Russia and their point of view? The idea of freshness was brought in because typically, in and out of Russia, perceptions of travel were that it was a pretty grey experience. Actually it’s a pretty grey in a lot of places, but particularly Russia. So what can we do to add a sense of freshness and vitality to it? And can we combine it with something which actually has a sense of style and modernity, some lifestyle that people would find attractive?
  • 99. S7 If you put fresh and fashion together you end up with not Siberian Airlines, but S7— something that is absolutely bright and cheerful and fashionable and breaks the codes of the category. Now they feel proud and walk with a strut that is more akin to being a lifestyle brand than just an airline brand. The lounges feel more like going into a boutique than they do just a furniture show room you tend to get in lounges these days.
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  • 102. Disparate pairings SOLIDARITY + UKTV’s personality was defined as the “Imaginative Challenger,” which is already a paradox. How do you bring together an idea of “what if” and a wandering curious spirit with an emphatic sense of challenging the status quo and norm? = The resulting identity combines the opportunity of a cloud with strong, emphatic type. It is disruptive and challenging to the sector.
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  • 104. 5 ways to disrupt perception 1 Immersion 2 Challenge conformity 3 Novelty 4 Invite constraint 5 Disparate pairings