Idea of the Week - Contest Site Using Tideman Voting Methods

August 20th, 2007 | by David

I was a little late posting this week’s idea due to a very busy weekend. I apologize.

This week’s idea is relatively simple and straightforward, which would make it easy to implement quickly for anyone inclined to do so. (Should you be, let me know!)

As always, if you have your own idea, email me and if I think it’ll generate some discussion, I’ll write about it as well. You’ll be given full credit.

Concept - Tideman, or Ranked Pair voting is a method of voting that can be used to derive an accurate preferred ranking from having voters select between two of the options available. The wiki article I linked to does a good job of explaining how this really works.

If you combined this type of voting with a decent prize, it might be possible to extend this concept into a viable income source.

Operation - The basic idea would remain the same but the subject being “voted” on could be anything, basically. From best blog story, to best photo, to best home video, to best looking person, etc, etc. All of these subjects have been successful at generating interest in the past or as part of other mediums.

For each contest, you would have a “submission” period followed by a fixed “voting” period. Once the results have been tallied the prize would be awarded; rinse and repeat ad infinitum.

Money Making Potential - There are some interesting ways one could generate income from this idea. The ad model - simply placing ads on the site - is of course the first option.

More intriguing though would be to have an insignificant entry fee, say $1 - $5 and a decent prize: $100-$1000. Combine this with a social network based marketing campaign, and the resulting entry fees would more than cover the prize allocations. Quick math says you’d need 200 entries at $5 to cover a $1000 dollar prize. Even at low levels of traffic that’s pretty attainable these days. In fact, having a fee with a little bit of advertising would make the whole pot bigger still. You could also adjust the prize to entry ratio so that you always come out in the black as well, but that might hamper your ability to draw a crowd.

Downsides - The biggest risk with this idea would be establishing a credible readership base right off the bat. That may mean that for the first few weeks, the contests operate at a loss to draw contestants with large prizes that are easily won.

Once the site becomes popular, the usual crackers and schemers will arrive to attempt to influence the voting, and that would need to be dealt with as well.

Finally, this idea has such a low barrier to entry that the winner will be the one that can build the largest community the fastest.

Worth a Shot?

I think this is worth a shot for anyone who has a few hours to spend coding the ranked pair algorithms, along a few grand to present up front in prizes. What do you think? Is this another Hot or Not, or will it die a quick death?

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Friday File - 17 August, 2007

August 17th, 2007 | by David

Another week down. A pretty good mix in the file today, which makes up for last week’s admittedly weaker performance.

Cynthia Rettig over at MIT Sloan gives us a great article on enterprise software, and why, frankly it sucks so badly. I’ll be passing this one along given recent frustrations. Unfortunately, Ms. Rettig offers little in the way of solutions.

Alan Becker faces the horrors of flash animation gone bad, in a highly amusing piece of work. I’m not usually into this stuff, but this one’s worth the time. Brilliant.

Here’s a great bit from Seth Godin on “being the opposite“. Short. Sweet. Insightful.

Finally, Steve Pavlina again, with perhaps the best article I’ve ever read on self improvement. If you’re feeling down, a little beat up or just unhappy with life, you really need to read it.

I’m out for this week. Next week: A new business idea, all about goals and a brand new feature for the currently vacant Thursday spot.

Until then!

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Innovation and the Corporation

August 15th, 2007 | by David

In my current life, I’ve found myself struggling to innovate in an environment that is typical of the modern corporation. Even given that there is a positive value placed on ideas and open thought, and that the industry is conservative and ripe for exploitation; selling, sustaining and executing innovative strategies is all but impossible.

Why is this? I’ve spent a good deal of time mulling this over this past year and have now come to the conclusion that there are certain aspects of the innovative process that can be considered critical points of failure. Any organization that has difficultly getting past even one of these areas will ultimately fail in being innovative.

What’s more, I’ve noticed that the larger a company is, the more likely it is that one of these hurdles will be impossible to surmount. It seems that the more people involved, the less likely consensus can be reached.

The Process of Innovation

First, it’s a good idea to clarify what I mean by innovation. Wikipedia’s entry does a good job of laying out a framework for this discussion.

I view successful innovation as a series of five distinct steps. Each step has different needs and requirements and because of this, the process itself can cause challenges.

The Innovation Cycle

The Challenge of Innovation

Innovation becomes difficult because most organizations are unwilling or unable to recognize and support the cycle as it’s described above. Often, where there is a stated “culture of innovation”, there is support for only one or two components. But each step in the cycle creates different strains and pressures on the organization, and it is easy to interpret the normal process of innovation itself as failure.

Points of Failure

As I mentioned earlier, points of failure tend to come in certain varieties. The unfortunate part of this is that seeing risk to innovation requires some rather unorthodox thinking of its own. It’s been my experience that people either get it right away, or they don’t.

Failure to Recognize the Benefit of Innovation - Perhaps the biggest reason for failure is the inability of managers and the corporation in general to see any value in innovation, either given a specific circumstance or at all.

It’s curious that some managers will have a positive opinion on growing new markets and engaging new types of customer yet will be unable to allow new processes, platforms and ideas to provide solutions.

The misunderstanding of benefits translates directly into misconceptions of risk and reward; the expectation that innovation can be measured and analyzed to a sufficient degree prior to the innovation taking place! Along with this, there is often an overconfidence in current processes and technologies. Not understanding innovation results in seeing current best practices as being the result of complex algorithms that must remain unchanged as opposed to being a collection of individual haphazard temporary measures that they often are. Not understanding innovation results in thinking that the organization is an untouchable technological leader - nobody can match our spending and current platform - as opposed to not understanding that certain customers are willing to pay a lot less for good enough.

Insistence That Innovation Must be Restrained - What often happens when a champion is allowed to innovate is that they are forced to do it with rigid limitations in place. Innovation of a new product or process has never come from capitalizing on the current way of doing business, but from inventing and experimenting with new ways of doing things.

It’s for this reason that innovation must always be conducted in isolation from regular activities if it is to be successful. If you take a look back at the cycle diagram, there is an expectation that innovative ideas will be allowed to undergo a revision process. In other words, odds are that the innovators may not get it right the first time, and may need to tweak their ideas for them to be successful. For example, perhaps the product was launched to the wrong target market, or perhaps the original process wasn’t efficient enough for the customer. Innovations need to be able to find the right balance, and this can only be done through isolation.

Often, innovations present risks that are deemed unacceptable. To mitigate this, the innovators are forced to reduce scope, thus reducing the reward. In the end, the innovation is seen at best, as a marginal improvement for great cost.

Finally, attempts at innovation that aren’t isolated are eventually brought into direct conflict with higher priorities. When an idea of how to make something better and the reality of addressing a pressing client issue conflict, it’s obvious which option resources will be applied to - rightly so. The effect however is that the innovation dies from being consistently under resourced.

Impossible Expectations of Success - Companies without a history or culture of innovation have a difficult time accepting the risk/reward equation that innovation requires. As a result, there is often an expectation that the innovation itself will do its best to reduce its exposure.

When this happens, potential high reward targets are discarded for lower paying, yet safer options. While this is good business sense in general, it defeats the whole idea of innovation. Instead, innovative efforts should be measured holistically. The sum of many investments should allow for a few hits, but also for some misses. By encouraging misses, one encourages innovation and, by extension, hits.

Expecting That Innovation Just Happens - Finally, perhaps the worst thing that corporations do is to expect that innovations just happen. Often, executives look for people within their organizations to innovate, and expect the rest to be magically created from this champion’s aura.

What these executives miss is that they must be the force driving the innovation. They must be the ones to isolate the process. They must be the ones to champion the act alone, and not focus on the result. They must recognize that it’s not enough to be a leader today, but essential to be a leader tomorrow.

Innovative leaders do this in three ways: Budgeting for innovation, isolating and developing innovators and taking calculated risks on the resulting new products and ideas themselves. In the technology field, two of the better examples of this leadership are Apple and Google. The former runs as sort of a serial innovator, putting the weight of the entire company into a particular new idea. The latter encourages distributed innovation, allowing each new product to show its merit in a limited space and grow into something larger when it is proven.

Both companies receive tremendous benefit from the innovative spirit that is explicit in the culture.

Corporate Innovation

Innovation requires a unique way of thinking that isn’t within every organization’s comfort zone. It requires an assumption of risk with the expectation of high reward. Often, a culture simply isn’t able to innovate successfully.

Until the present environment is one that avoids the common traps mentioned here, innovators are safer to restrain their actions. Create the culture that allows for innovation first, and you’ll be better able to build the next big thing.

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