Health Foo Camp and ideas at the fringes

From the 15-17 July I spent the weekend in Boston at another wonderful Foo Camp.  For the uninitiated, a Foo Camp is a three day, invite only unconference. My translation of this is that it’s focused creative chaos which leads to cognitive overload.  There’s some background about Foo Camps on wikipedia here, the origin of Health Foo here and full coverage of the weekend here.

However I was also interested to learn more about the organisation that sponsored the event, and more specifically, the people inside that organisation.  Health Foo was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ,  the largest philanthropy devoted solely to the public’s health in the USA.  To put that in context, according to Wikipedia the foundation has USD$7.5 billion in assets, and annually grants  grants about USD$400 million a year. The team inside the Foundation that supported Foo is called Pioneer and Paul Tarini is the lead in Pioneer for Health Foo.  When it came to introductions, Paul described his role as looking for oddballs.  That piqued my interest and over the weekend I sat down with him and discussed with him exactly what he meant.

Pioneer was started eight years ago when the incoming President of the Foundation adopted a portfolio approach for most of the teams in the organisation. It was decided that there should be one team that had a high risk portfolio and that team was Pioneer. Paul was the second director of that team.  He likens their role to that of a venture capital fund in that it finds unconventional projects and supports them.  Paul comments that “…we have much more license to fail than those other teams.”   They’ve worked on some fascinating concepts; for example six years ago they were supporting a project to use prediction markets to anticipate flu outbreaks.

Teams like Pioneer are rare in any organisation, let alone in philanthropy.  Most leaders simply fail to recognise the need to explore the periphery of their sector to find new and novel offerings. They incentivise everyone by operation goals, and this kills innovation.  Clearly at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation there is recognition of the need to look to the edges, and Pioneer fulfills that role.  However you still need to measure the investment and I asked Paul about how Pioneer justifies it’s existence.

His response was that individual projects have their own metrics to assess how they are progressing.  Additionally, there is an annual survey of stakeholder audiences, and in this survey is a component that measures the reputation of the Foundation for idea generation and innovation.  Finally, they monitor the spread of ideas to other teams as a gauge of success.

I was also interested in why the Foundation was interested in Foo Camps.  Paul’s response reflects the nature of his role and his understanding of where the most interesting innovation is to be found: “we believe new ideas often occur when two different disciplines intersect and begin to wrestle with each other; FOO camps are well-suited to foster such interaction.”

Paul Tarini (with Jane McGonigal who was also at Health Foo)

Really Bad Workshops – presentation resourcess

Got the fever to create an awesome workshop and want to blow the socks of your audience with your presentations? I mentioned some resources in the book and here’s two more places to look:

1. Presentation Zen – there’s both a blog and a book.

Blog : http://www.presentationzen.com/presentationzen/

Book : http://tinyurl.com/2mbm26 (on Amazon)

2. Duarte – This is the team behind some very slick presentations that you might have seen some of their work running alongside some of the TED conference speakers. There’s both a blog and, well, you get the idea…

Blog: http://blog.duarte.com

Book : http://tinyurl.com/6zv3gs (also from Amazon)

Free eBook Released – Really Bad Workshops (and how to avoid them)

Some years ago I was given a copy of a wonderful e-book by Seth Godin called “Really Bad PowerPoint (and how to avoid it)”. At the time I was working for a large corporation in London and subjected to weekly doses of death by PowerPoint. This little book was an eye opener as it addressed a very specific corporate sin – bad communication.

It was small, digestible and contained many pearls of wisdom that guided me in my presentation style. In essence it helped me put the power back in PowerPoint.

A few years – and a few organisations later – I began to reflect on another corporate sin: the bad workshop.  If you’ve experienced bad PowerPoint then it’s likely that you have also experienced a bad workshop.  The difference is that while a bad presentation might last for minutes (if you’re lucky), a bad workshop can drag on for hours (if you’re lucky).

However it’s not hard to create better workshops, and so I put virtual pen to virtual paper and wrote a eBook.  To be more precise I’ve written the shortest eBook (18 pages) with the longest title (24 words): Really Bad Workshops (and how to avoid them). Ten Tips to Make Workshops Work. By Roger Dennis (with acknowledgement to Seth Godin). It’s based on my experience running corporate workshops around the world for both the public and private sector.

If you use Twitter it’s virtually free and you can pay with a tweet for the book.  If you don’t use Twitter, it’s still virtually free.

You can download it here.

Five Discovery Skills that Distinguish Innovators — HBS Working Knowledge

The Harvard Business School Working Knowledge site has published an extract from “The Innovator’s DNA”, the latest book from Clayton M. Christensen (with Jeff Dyer and Hal Gergersen). They outline the five discovery skills that distinguish the Steve Jobses and Jeff Bezoses of the world from the run-of-the-mill corporate managers.

The key concept is that research supports the idea that innovative tendencies are not genetic. Rather, they can be developed. The authors identify five discovery skills that distinguish successful innovators: associating, questioning, observing, networking, and experimenting.

Reading the extract it felt like someone had just described my day job.  Read more here : Five Discovery Skills that Distinguish Great Innovators — HBS Working Knowledge.

(off topic) Cathedral Square 48 Hour Design Challenge

Over the weekend I worked with a team from Arup and Opus on the 48 Hour Design Challenge (to redesign parts of the Christchurch CBD after the recent earthquakes).  We worked to redesign Cathedral Square and I blogged some of our thinking, progress and end results here.

Last night we were rapt to win the award for the design of this site and hope that some of our thinking will be used by the City Planning team.