Posts by Roger Dennis

Innovation without the jargon to give clear tangible results.

Jack White(from band “The White Stripes”) on Creativity

Book only four or five days in the studio and force yourself to record an album in that time. Deadlines and things make you creative. Opportunity and telling yourself “Oh, you have all the time in the world, you have all the money in the world, you have all the colors in the palette you want, anything you want,” I mean, that just kills creativity.

via Makin’ Ads: Jack White on Creativity.

Blogging pause due to earthquake

You may be aware that my hone city – Christchurch – in New Zealand suffered a very large earthquake earlier in the week.  As a result I have not been able to get to my office for a few days now and I’m only working on essential business.  As a result I’m pausing blogging until I can get my professional and personal life back to normal.

The rise of cities over countries

From the blog of Parag Khanna comes an insightful piece about the rise of cities over states as centres of power.  This has been an interesting trend to watch  – witness California wanting to sign Kyoto when Bush didn’t, or Ken Livingston refusing to meet Bush when he visited London (much to the embarrassment of Tony Blair).  Well worth a read:

The 21st century will not be dominated by America or China, Brazil or India, but by the city. In an age that appears increasingly unmanageable, cities rather than states are becoming the islands of governance on which the future world order will be built.

via Parag Khanna.

Why have three day workshops?

An article in the NYT covers the story of a group of neuroscientists on a rafting trip where there is no way to go online.

The rationale for the trip is to debate whether email, phones, IM etc reduce your ability to hit your cognitive peak.  However the most interesting part of the article for me was the piece where one of the scientists makes an observation after a few days:

…the group has become more reflective, quieter, more focused on the surroundings. “If I looked around like this at work, people would think I was goofing off,” he says.

The others are more relaxed too. Mr. Braver decides against coffee, bypassing his usual ritual.

Mr. Strayer, the believer, says the travelers are experiencing a stage of relaxation he calls “third-day syndrome.” Its symptoms may be unsurprising. But even the more skeptical of the scientists say something is happening to their brains that reinforces their scientific discussions — something that could be important to helping people cope in a world of constant electronic noise.

“If we can find out that people are walking around fatigued and not realizing their cognitive potential,” Mr. Braver says, then pauses and adds: “What can we do to get us back to our full potential?”

If you want to tackle a thorny problem, challenge a paradigm or bring to bear some serious intellectual horsepower, taking an hour or two out of your daily schedule isn’t going to do the job.

Taking an afternoon or even day off won’t have much impact either.  However there is plenty of evidence to suggest that multi-day events are very effective at increasing productivity.

(via Your Brain on Computers – Studying the Brain Off the Grid, Professors Find Clarity – NYTimes.com.)

(Article) – Hacking life just got easier

Many of the early pioneers in the software revolution now say that if they were in the same position again, they’d be hacking life.  While this has traditionally been the realm of very expensive labs, this looks to change later this year when George Church, one of the leading researchers in the field, releases a game changer:

His lab’s device will go on sale later this year for about $90,000, and at least a dozen companies, including chemical giant DuPont (DD) and biotech startup Amyris, are considering purchasing it, says Wang.

via Innovator: George Church – BusinessWeek.

Creating a retail experience

If your business involves selling  – in fact selling anything – and you are looking to see where things are heading in the future, you’d do well to spend ten minutes reading this gem of an article about an interesting change in consumer spending:

“I think there’s a real opportunity in retail to be able to romance the experience again,” says Ms. Liebmann. “Retailers are going to have to work very hard to create that emotional feeling again. And it can’t just be ‘Here’s another thing to buy.’ It has to have a real sense of experience to it.”

via Consumers Find Ways to Spend Less and Find Happiness – NYTimes.com.

And if you want evidence of how it actually plays out in real life, then look n further than the Baa Code:

Icebreaker, a clothing company specialising in merino wool garments says it wants to openly show customers its commitment to sustainability and environmental friendly practice. Each garment now sports a “baa code” – a number that retailers and consumers can input at Icebreaker.com to see how the garment was made from start to finish.

Enter the Baa Code from your garment on the IceBreaker website and the resulting page tells you the story about the farm where the wool came from, the famers and so much more.

In short, it creates an experience for the buyer, and an experience that cannot be replicated by another country.  Very clever.

Weak Signals – Doomsday shelters making a comeback (article)

It would be interesting to map the number of disaster movies released with the following article extract.  It points out that in the USA shelters and bunkers are undergoing a revival, and it interests me as it’s a possible weak signal of something happening around how people perceive risk.

Radius Engineering in Terrell, Texas, has built underground shelters for more than three decades, and business has never been better, says Walton McCarthy, company president.

The company sells fiberglass shelters that can accommodate 10 to 2,000 adults to live underground for one to five years with power, food, water and filtered air, McCarthy says.

The shelters range from $400,000 to a $41 million facility Radius built and installed underground that is suitable for 750 people, McCarthy says. He declined to disclose the client or location of the shelter.

“We’ve doubled sales every year for five years,” he says.Other shelter manufacturers include Hardened Structures of Colorado and Utah Shelter Systems, which also report increased sales.

via Doomsday shelters making a comeback – USATODAY.com.