visit
Ideators need a standard, compact way for articulating ideas quickly while innovation leaders need a stream of consistent, standardized ideas, expressed in a comparable way. And this is exactly what the Universal Idea Model is bringing in the innovation process.
The idea can be named using a simple pattern like
A/An
<OBJECT> THAT <DOES SOMETHING>
while the summary can be constructed as a short paragraph, using the following format:A/An <OBJECT:
the form that the idea could take if implemented
>
FOR <A CLASS OF USERS:
name the personas — users or customers>
THAT <DOES SOMETHING:
the major function of the idea>
IN ORDER TO <ACHIEVE A GOAL:
the outcome of its core function>.
USERS BENEFIT BY <GETTING SOMETHING BACK:
describe the value the get>
WHEN <IN A SPECIFIC SITUATION:
describe the conditions under which they benefit from the idea>
.
The
<OBJECT>
in the above structure is the shape that the idea could take if implemented — the envisioned form factor e.g. an app for smart devicesThe
<CLASS OF USERS>
is a named group of users that are expected to get the most value from this idea, e.g. consumersThe
<DOES SOMETHING>
element captures the operation or the function that the <OBJECT>
performs, e.g. provides real-time price insights and product informationThe
<ACHIEVE A GOAL>
element summarizes what the idea is trying to achieve through the <DOES SOMETHING>
— the core function, e.g. to inform the consumer about a special, in-budget, nearby offer.The
<GETTING SOMETHING BACK>
element summarizes the type of value the users are getting from the idea — how it generates value to the users, e.g. to inform the consumer about relevant product opportunities within their budget.The element
<IN A SPECIFIC SITUATION>
summarizes the environment in which the users benefit from the idea, e.g. by discovering in-budget offers for products they need while in a physical store.The following are real product ideas captured in my personal backlog using the Universal Idea Model.This is an idea about a system able to identify and recommend relevant and/or valuable participants for a business meeting (or project, or other business activity or collaborative engagement).
One way to describe this idea is through a lengthy, unstructured, detailed description — starting with the problem, then describing the concept, and finally explaining the value. This might read like the following:While the above 231-word long paragraph provides a good description of the problem, the solution, and the benefit, it is too long (for an ideator to type, and for a stakeholder to engage with and quickly get the … idea). Especially if ideation is happening at scale, e.g. having a steady flow of ideas in an innovation context, this free-form idea description proves to be ineffective.Moreover, the above description tends to be technical, e.g. it is talking about NLP, scores, factors, active directories, etc. — this makes it less inclusive as non-technical users might find it more difficult to follow.Using the Universal Idea Model, the ideator abstracts the concept, avoids the technicalities and unnecessary —when at an early stage — details, saves time, and gains clarity on the idea itself by summarizing it in the following way:Business meetings are expensive to organize and run. In many cases, they are noisy with no actionable output — due to the non-optimal synthesis of the list of participants: People that should be present are not invited; for some of the participants the reason for being invited may not be clear. In many cases, there are too many people in the room making the actual discussion and collaboration inefficient and less actionable.
In such scenarios, when a user is setting up a business meeting or a session, an ‘intelligent’ system may capture and ‘understand’ the context of the meeting using NLP and then query the active directory of the organization along with a skills database and a shared calendar to find the most relevant and available people in the context of the particular meeting. In one example, these candidate participants may be recommended based on a candidate score calculated for each candidate participant — based upon a variety of factors, including (1) the particular candidate participant’s relevance to the meeting topic, (2) the extent to which the particular candidate participant has positively contributed to previous meetings, and/or (3) whether the candidate participant has attended meetings that are particularly relevant to the topic.
Recommending meeting participants in this manner can reduce the potential for inviting low-value participants to meetings, as well as identifying and recommending potentially valuable meeting participants who would not otherwise attend.
A
digital assistant
THAT
recommends the most relevant participants for a business meeting.
An
AI-powered service
FOR
business users
THAT
is able to capture the context of a meeting and recommend the most suitable participants
IN ORDER TO
organize a better meeting with the right people in the room.
USERS BENEFIT
by instantly finding the right experts and decision-makers to invite
WHEN
they are setting up a business event.
A
blockchain-powered content center
THAT
can retroactively score content and distributors based on their trustworthiness.
A
decentralized system
FOR
online users,
THAT
systematically samples and processes cohorts of News and social posts
IN ORDER
TO
identify ‘Fake News’ or misleading information and score content, social media and content distributors in terms of reliability - while notifying online users for their unconscious participation via sharing fake content.
USERS BENEFIT
by realizing both their exposure and their unintentional contribution to the problem of Fake News
WHEN
they use social media to discover, consume, and share content.
An
Augmented Experience
THAT
allows retailers to offer personalized offers to their customers in physical stores
An
Augmented Reality app
FOR
consumers
THAT
synthesizes product and pricing information as an augmented reality experience
IN ORDER TO
offer personalized offers to the consumer - in the form of special prices, loyalty schemes, or discounts.
CONSUMERS BENEFIT
by discovering better offers, in a personalized manner WHEN they are exploring products in a physical retail store.
RETAILERS BENEFIT
by optimizing their loyalty schemes and enabling a seamless, personalized in-store experience
WHEN
they are trying to drive sales through physical stores.
Note that in this example, there are two statements regarding the benefit for the user — one for the consumers and one for the Retailers.A
smart DnD assistant
THAT
understands the special character of the occasion and recommends or sets a certain 'notification mode'
An
O/S-level software component
FOR
smartphone users
THAT
is able to identify certain social occasions as ‘noise sensitive’
IN ORDER TO
minimize the disturbance from mobile ringtones and app notifications.
USERS BENEFIT
from a generalized socially responsible use of smartphones
WHEN
in a place or occasion that requires focus or quietness.
The Universal Ideas Model can be used via or verbally, in workshops and brainstorming sessions. Ideally, it should evolve as a part of a shared innovation language — allowing teams across the organization to exchange . A centralized database of ideas captured using this model can make the discovery and utilization of ideas, easier and most efficient. Most importantly, it can increase the chances of discovering great, high-potential ideas and innovation opportunities.
Cover Photo by Per Lööv on Unsplash)Also published at