April 2, 2012
"The Tata Nano may not have changed the world, but frugal innovation will."

Good Economist story monitoring the trend of “reverse” innovation, “trickle-up” innovation or “frugal” innovation, however you like to describe it. This has been a story of growing importance in the past few years, and there are a ton of good examples here, from multinational companies such as General Electric to smaller startups such as Embrace, which sells low-cost infant warmers for premature babies.

[Story via Erik Van Crimmin]

December 16, 2011

Year-end round-up from Visualizing.org, the joint effort from GE and Seed Media to show off the great and the good of data visualization. Some of the data swoops by a little quickly (I confess, I wondered what on earth country rocker Keith Urban had to do with the death of Osama Bin Laden. Turns out he really wasn’t involved at all, whereas Keith Urbahn, chief of staff for Donald Rumsfeld, most certainly was.) Thankfully, you can also check out the full projects at your leisure.

September 15, 2011
"Along the way it seems like someone overlooked the notion that a medical procedure is a most emotional thing to go through as human being. Devices are devoid of emotion. They’re scary. They have no look on their face. When you encounter an MRI or a mammography device, it doesn’t tell you you’re going to be ok or make you feel good about what may happen. It makes you wonder ‘am I going to die now?’ We wonder: why is that? Aren’t we in charge? Folks in design and our brothers and sisters in engineering should guide the direction these devices take."

— Bob Schwartz, general manager of global design at GE Healthcare, speaking at the recent Transform conference at Mayo Clinic and extolling the benefits of thoughtful design for healthcare products. Schwartz rounded off the session (a joint presentation with GE CMO, Beth Comstock) recounting the story of a little girl who emerged from being scanned in one of GE’s redesigned machines to ask her mother: “can I do it again?” Great.

April 27, 2011
Back in August 2010, innovation expert and professor at the Tuck School of Business, Vijay Govindarajan wrote a provocative piece on his Harvard Business Review blog. What, he mused with co-author Christian Sarkar, might be a new way to tackle the issue of 5 billion people living in slums? Applying some of the thinking around reverse, or “trickle-up” innovation that Govindarajan had developed while advising Jeff Immelt at GE (see this report, How GE is Disrupting Itself), they wanted to apply a new lens to an old problem. The rest, in hindsight, is somewhat predictable: The concept met with a whole boatload of enthusiasm, persuading the two authors to try and move their idea off the drawing board and into reality. And so, the $300 House competition was born. Some eight months later, the deadline for entries to the competition is now looming; there’s $25k prize money while winners also get a two week trip to Alabama to build prototypes. Yes, all the usual caveats apply. Billions of the world’s poor may still be living in slums for some time to come. A $300 house might remain a fantasy. But the idea has challenged people to approach the problem in a different way, and has brought together a heavyweight group of interested parties. It’ll certainly be worth monitoring the submissions and activities of the initiative once the deadline has passed. And, as Govindarajan himself says, the dollar figure is beside the point. “This is about thinking audaciously.”

Back in August 2010, innovation expert and professor at the Tuck School of Business, Vijay Govindarajan wrote a provocative piece on his Harvard Business Review blog. What, he mused with co-author Christian Sarkar, might be a new way to tackle the issue of 5 billion people living in slums? Applying some of the thinking around reverse, or “trickle-up” innovation that Govindarajan had developed while advising Jeff Immelt at GE (see this report, How GE is Disrupting Itself), they wanted to apply a new lens to an old problem. The rest, in hindsight, is somewhat predictable: The concept met with a whole boatload of enthusiasm, persuading the two authors to try and move their idea off the drawing board and into reality. And so, the $300 House competition was born. Some eight months later, the deadline for entries to the competition is now looming; there’s $25k prize money while winners also get a two week trip to Alabama to build prototypes. Yes, all the usual caveats apply. Billions of the world’s poor may still be living in slums for some time to come. A $300 house might remain a fantasy. But the idea has challenged people to approach the problem in a different way, and has brought together a heavyweight group of interested parties. It’ll certainly be worth monitoring the submissions and activities of the initiative once the deadline has passed. And, as Govindarajan himself says, the dollar figure is beside the point. “This is about thinking audaciously.”