Idealog

Idealog magazine
 
 

Idealog #25

Interact

8

Editorial

A worthy word

10

Contributors

Sam Eichblatt, Lauren Bartlett and Alan Dove

12

Taking Webstock

Webstock 2010 is nearly upon us. Webstock’s senior VPs reflect on past glories—and those yet to come.

15

Wiggs' way

Lance Wiggs helps with your tricky business problems.

16

Taking stage

Product innovation can often be a case of the confused leading the irrational. No wonder three out of four projects fails. But Robert Cooper, a leader in new product development, consultant to the Global 1000, author and seminar speaker, has a simple fix

18

Agenda

What to do, where and why

Now

23

Game on

“I just don’t know how we did it” says Andrew Hunt, proud parent of a son and an award-winning short film.

24

Show Biz

At just two years old, Twitter is a worldwide phenomenon and changing the way we communicate. Co-founder Biz Stone says it’s a happy accident

26

Superfreaky

Freakonomics was freaky, but Superfreakonomics pushes the envelope even further, analysing the price of prostitution, how terrorists can be tracked through their financial records and most controversially how technological advances could remedy global warming. Stephen J Dubner responds to its “angry” reaction

Idealog Guide

33

Welcome and a warning

This guide helps New Zealanders turn their ideas into world-beating products, businesses and brands. Whether you’ve got an idea of your own, you’re working on other people’s ideas or you’d simply like your company to be more innovative, you’ll find essential answers in these pages

36

No blue sky, brainstorms, buy-in

The first thing to get clear in your mind about the innovation and ideation process is that it is a process, and one you should consciously control.

42

Big fish, bigger ambition

King Salmon turns ideas into action, thanks to Accolade.

44

Failing to plan is planning to fail

Your business plan is a vital part of structuring the early development of your business, and will act as a dashboard to manage your starship Enterprise once she’s operational. Remember you are planning to make the jump to light speed at some point, so plot a sensible course.

48

Think BIC

All ideas are welcome at AUT’s business incubator.

50

Protecting your idea

The dog ate my intellectual property protection. If you find yourself snapping a self-portrait while holding up some sketchy diagrams and today’s paper or posting notes to yourself by registered mail in an effort to prove that your original inspirational ideas are indeed yours, you need help.

54

Why you need the guys in the designer specs

Why is a low-end Lexus more sought after than a top-of-the-line Toyota, given they are made by the same people? Why do you feel all international and summery when you drink Sol and staunch when you drink Lion Red? It’s because everybody judges a book by its cover.

58

Design power

How DNA helped turn an IT breakthrough into a consumer hit.

60

Is there anybody out there?

Every business likes its customers, but not every business can define them—who they are, what they buy, what they read, what they watch, how much money they spend and where.

64

Got a tough problem?

When people need hard stuff built, tested and trialled, they turn to IRL.

66

The moment of truth

The point at which people really get excited about an idea is when they can reach out and touch it, kick its tyres and take it for a spin. This is also a very exciting point for the innovator. Once you have created your prototype, there is every chance you may discover new markets and applications for you innovation as people get hold of it and interact with it in unexpected ways. If things go really well, this may also be your first opportunity to show something concrete to potential partners, investors and customers, to whet their appetites and pry open their wallets.

68

Crunching numbers

It’s just possible your wonderful idea will make you rich. It’s almost certain that it will make you poor first. If you want a quiet life with a steady income, where you always know where the next pay cheque is coming from, commercialising ideas is probably not for you. If you are ready to risk it, talk to an accountant. You’ll need financial structures that are robust enough to cope with tight times—or rapid success. And there are some important tax and liability issues that can be devastating if overlooked.

Features

78

Picture perfect

While the gaming industry works out how to draw yet more pixels faster, a Dunedin company is using its backyard invention to bring the real world to screen in picture-perfect quality. Amanda Cropp meets the snap-happy team behind Areograph

84

The Mersey feat

The Beatles may have brought Liverpool fame, but the city was stuck in the Mersey Beat for decades. Now ambitious new architecture is reigniting interest in Liverpool and the city suddenly is celebrating its past and setting itself up for the future. Envious Aucklander Graham Reid reckons the formula could work in New Zealand’s timid cities, too

88

Own brand

Designer Katie Taylor has done it her way from the beginning of her career, whether it’s design in the Middle East or acrobatics in Russia. She tells Sam Eichblatt about tenacity, life away from home and surviving London in a recession

94

Saving science

With our major export sectors under pressure, the science sector could become the saviour of our economy—but first, says Jehan Casinader, it seems we need to save science.

Workshop

103

Meet the neighbours

Esther Goh on a Gothamesque view of Auckland

103

Where no man has gone before

Jacques Attali offers a vision of the past that entrepreneurs and innovators can relate to. But what of the future? Market democracy, he reckons, is coming to an end.

104

Get real

Ben Fahy on brand authenticity. Plus an excerpt from the book

105

A more frequent Foo

Paul Reynolds on the forerunner of Foo

106

Banking on the unexpected

Mike Cranna on improbable profit

107

Where the wild things are

Neil Pardington’s exhibition The Vault explores those parts of museums that usually remain unseen

107

Can touch this

Games and mobile gadgets are interactive. So why are desktops still so uncomfortable?

109

Social tsunami

Real-time communication has its own real challenges

110

Eat, drink and be merry

There’s a ready solution to the retail recession: ’tis the season to be jolly

111

Digital dawn

Avatar is being released in 256 screen formats. Think there might be a future in post-production?

112

Parting shot

Show time

Plus

29

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