j A o J e N n A

Caro's Adventures in Moldova!

Friday, May 18, 2007

making it stick

Chip Heath spoke yesterday at the Stanford d.school's CIA-KGB class. Amazing how simple ideas heard together or heard in a new framework all of a sudden can become profound. It is easy for some to question books / concepts like Made to Stick or Malcolm Gladwell's Tipping Point and wonder if they can really take these principles and create a tipping point or a sticky idea ... it seems easier to formulate hypothesis via ex post analysis -- particularly given circumstantial noise and deviation; however, I really think Prof Heath is onto something with his book.

He introduced three of his six key principles for "sticky ideas" to our class:
- Simple
- Concrete
- Stories

As we think about ReelImpact, clearly the challenge is how to communicate to a passive or even uninterested audience that business is creating good -- to pull them in through the story -- the human interest of the lives being changed and dire circumstances being mitigated. To do this in a concise, disciplined, sticky way will certainly be challenging. But I really like the mental model that Made to Stick lays out and hopefully it will help point us in the right direction.

I particularly like "simple" ... all good ideas should immediately resonate -- often with an existing emotional connection. For instance, despite our name "ReelImpact: Capturing the Power of Business to Create Social Value", what has resonated most with people is when we say, "we're doing the Inconvenient Truth for Social Business". Immediately they get it ... media, documentary, changing perceptions / raising awareness, connecting to emotional concerns.

Yet ultimately the success of our message will be in the power of the story we can tell. Us telling a story and us enabling others to tell their story. The amazing thing is how many stories are out there -- how many people have something to say and are not sure how to say it.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

reflections

This is my first time blogging on the site, so let me say hello: I'm Jason K, a first year MBA student at GSB and a member of the PMP Executive Committee. We had the pleasure of seeing Reel Impact 'in action' for the first time at our retreat this morning and it has huge potential.

Our group was made up of the 'greenies' and we set to task tackling a huge problem: Most people rarely think about where the products they purchase come from and the impacts of their purchases. We decided to study the orange juice that we had for breakfast, from the source of growing and processing in Brazil, shipping to the US, reprocessing in America, and then shipping nationwide and to our plate. Although I had thought about this issue before, putting it within the framework of a presentation or media blurb forced the group to be concise and simple in our presentation. As a result we made a human supply chain, and with each member of the group representing one step of the process. Our solution was to have an ecolabel on products (or a service where one could text for this information) that was easily accessible to the consumer.

Eventually, if these labels were to take hold, there might be opportunities for the OJ company to find efficiencies in their supply chain and reduce total global impact (and thus achieve a better ecolabel rating). For example, there might be more (but smaller) reprocessing plants all over the US so that the product can be shipped in concentrate form more energy efficiently. Or, more oranges can be sourced locally. [We actually discussed this exact topic in Jin Whang's Supply Chain class earlier this quarter..]

I think it worked too well. The OJ consumption rate at lunch went wayyyy down.

Return to New Orleans

Here is a clip from our mini-social innovation challenge. We challenged students to brainstorm issues that they are familiar with or have interest in .... and consider how to use business to create change.

One member of this group was recently in Dallas and was impacted by the mass of billboards asking New Orleans residents to return from their post-Katrina exile. Here's a view into this group's experience this morning.


live from the 750

30 or so students are gathered here at the Stanford 750 club this morning to plan activities, clubs, and objectives for next year's Public Management Program. a key feature was ReelImpact.

we presented our ideas and then staged a mini-Social Innovation Challenge which we will launch to the broader community in the fall. the group broke into teams to identify specific social issues that business could address or is already addressing. we talked about solutions and then presented ways in which media could be used to broadcast the story of effecting that change.

the problems, the solutions, the ideas that arose were surprising to us all -- powerful stuff in less than 1 hour.

stay tuned for more blogging from the retreat participants...and video from our mini-challenge.