Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Remote Control for Your Life


Your phone is becoming a digital remote control - just point it at stuff to get info about it sent to your phone.

Here's one of the recent Google Android open source winners who invented a new twist on reading bar codes with your camera phone (though his video example of scanning a CD bar code seems a little antiquated. I mean, who buys CD's anymore? Sheeesh.). This takes the mobile bar code revolution happening in Japan one step further. A handful of start-ups are even working on technology that recognizes the shapes of objects making bar codes obsolete.

It's really fun to see all the innovations taking place with mobile technology. Check out BioWallet, another Android winner.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Innovating Through a Sticky Problem


You can innovate anywhere, on anything. Take the peanut butter jar. That's a pretty mundane item; it's been around forever. And we've also been frustrated forever because you can never quite get that last ooze of peanut butter with your knife way down in the corners of the jar.

Well, someone came up with a pretty good idea to make the peanut butter jar better. Why not put lids on both sides so you can open the bottom and get the last bit out?

Just goes to show you can make anything a little better when you apply some creativity and reinvent from scratch.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The Frontal Lobe is a Marketer's Best Friend.


Among the most important differences that separate us from the animals are 1) A frontal lobe and 2) Opposable thumbs. Learning to use your frontal lobe is, in my opinion, the most powerful marketing tool you have.

Your frontal lobe manages imagination and predicting the future. It's your frontal lobe that predicts that anchovy ice cream is a bad idea. You don't have to taste anchovy ice cream to know it's a bad idea, you just know it is because your frontal lobe tells you it is.

· Steve Job's frontal lobe predicted that people want simple, beautiful technology.
· Herb Kelleher's frontal lobe predicted that people want a low-cost, no-frills airline.
· Art Fry's frontal lobe predicted that people need a way to stick notes anywhere.
· Dean Kamen’s frontal lobe predicted that urbanites everywhere would ditch their cars for a Segway scooter. He should stop taking his frontal lobe so seriously.

I'm not claiming to be a Steve Jobs or a Herb Kelleher, but my frontal lobe is telling me that mobile marketing will one day be bigger than web marketing. It will be the third screen of media. It's targeted. It's efficient. It's permission-based. It's timely (point of sale). It's viral. It's personal. It's measurable. And as long as the mobile operators keep spammers and other marketing mercenaries out, it will be widely accepted by consumers (it already is in Asia and Scandinavia).

That's why I'm using my frontal lobe to predict how mobile marketing and research can energize the campaigns of my clients. And since my clients and I all have opposable thumbs too, we've already accomplished some good work in this area.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Personal Space Issues


Growing up in the west (Utah), I like my space. In the west we don’t wedge ourselves so tightly into subway cars that you know who ate pastrami for lunch. We don’t jockey for position in crowded streets or share tables with strangers in crowded cafes. We’re more into endless horizons, spacious homes and the open road.

Apparently, not everyone understands the concept of the “personal space bubble”.

While hiking through Bryce Canyon National Park this weekend I found myself totally alone on a cliff, breathing in a 300-mile view of red-rock hoodoos and Douglas Fir. Even though the cliff was 1000’s of feet long, a passing group of German tourists ignored all the vacant parts and surrounded me at pheromone distance, seemingly oblivious to any awkward space problems and my evil glare that would have said “I hope you develop a nasty tongue rash” if I knew how to glare in German.

Oh well. Let’s just chalk it up to Europe being a crowded place with space bubble deflation issues and a finicky Utah boy who prizes solitude.