Wednesday, December 10, 2008

The Perfect Brainstorm

Ideas here are not “my own” but they are ideas which I strongly believe in!
Lessons in creativity from IDEO, America’s leading design firm.

The ideas below are inspired from the book The Art of Innovation – Tom Kelly with Jonathan Littman.

You can deliver more value, create more energy, and foster more innovative solutions through better brainstorming. If you want to keep in shape, you have to exercise your brainstorming muscle more often ( than once a month ).


The seven secrets of better brainstorming:


1. Sharpen the Focus:
Good brainstorming starts with a perfect statement of the problem. This can be as simple as a question. A brainstorming without a proper problem statement is like a company without a clear strategy. A good problem statement helps in getting the people back into track easily. It avoids wasting a lot of energy wandering aimlessly.


The problem should not be too open like “how can we make a better feature than a company X”. At the same time the problem should not be too narrow and already presume you know the answer like “how can we provide IM offline messages to mobile via SMS”.
“How can we accelerate the time-to-first result for customers search engine via dial-up modem” could uncover innovations that could potentially yield competitive edge on what you are looking for.


2. Playful rules
One of the worst things that can hamper a brainstorming session in criticizing and debating on ideas that comes up. This can break the energy of the session pretty quickly. The facilitator should be good in turning aside critiques without putting off the critiquers completely. Stick the walls of conference rooms with rules of brainstorming written prominently. The facilitator could ring bell when participants try to turn a brainstorming into a normal meeting


3. Number your ideas

Numbering the ideas that bubble up during brainstorming helps in two ways. First it motivates the participants before and during the brainstorming session. “Let’s try and get 100 ideas before we leave the room” as an example.
Second it’s a great way to jump back and forth from idea to idea without loosing the track of where you are.


4. Build and jump

High energy barnstormers often follow a series of steep “power” curves. The momentum builds slowly, then intensifies and then starts to flatten. The facilitator should nurture an emerging conversation with a light touch in the first phase and know enough to let ideas to flow when it intensifies. When energy fades, the facilitator should switch gears and try to get the next steep curve of energy by introducing small variations.


5. The space remembers

Write the flow of ideas in the medium visible to the whole group. This is not capturing meeting notes but capturing ideas so that the group can see the progression and return to those that seem worthy of more attention. The space should not be small so it makes you to erase ideas to make room for new ones. As you rapidly capture ideas, make a mental note of ones that are worth coming back to during the build and jump. When you return to the spot on the board/wall where the ideas are captured, spatial memory will help people to recall the mind-set they had when the ideas first emerged.


6. Stretch your mental muscles

Time is short and people are busy. It’s worthwhile to burn some time in warm-up. It helps in certain circumstances when the group has not worked together before, when the group has doe not brainstorm frequently or when the group seems distracted by pressure or an unrelated issue.
One type of warm-up is to do some content-related homework. Many a times it has proved that the group that did content-related homework before a brainstorm definitely out performed a group that came that comes to brainstorming session cold.


7. Get physical

Good brainstormings are extremely visual. They include sketching, mind mapping, diagrams and sticky figures. The best brainstorms are often physical. They move beyond the two dimension and push the three. Move around, get things to the table, and get competitive products, promising technologies that could be applied to the problem.


Try these 7 secrets and you will start seeing better results faster.
Follow them meticulously and you will be a “brainstorming” master!

Good luck!

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Bangalore to Pondicherry ( Puducherry)

The nomads again set out for another journey but this time it was a planned one!!!.
Well we have to do it as we have a little one.

Pondicherry was not a very preferred destination for me. We had planned to visit this place a couple of times before and always ended dropping the idea. We had a notion that Pondy (as its widely known) is haven for bachelors who would throng the place to enjoy a bay side drinking spree party. So we thought that it’s not an apt place for a couple or a family vacation. But my hubby was persistent that he has to visit it once. There was another point with which he was able to convince me that it’s a drivable 350 KM from Bangalore. So finally we set out for Pondy.

The routes to Pondy from Banagalore. :
Bangalore-Hosur-Krishnagiri-Chengam-Tiruvanamali-Ginge-Tindvanam-Pondicherry

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We started at morning 9 am. Reached Hosur at 10:30 am and stopped for breakfast. After a quick stop we proceeded on NH4 towards Krishnagiri. While we were close to Krishnagiri, we were watched out to take the turn to the road to Chennai. We had to take the immediate right turn to NH66. If you hit the toll station then it means you have missed the turn. Well, I know this as we very promptly missed to take NH66. If you happen to miss the route then you can go via Tirupattur and meet Tiruvanamali. This road is not that bad but we had to travel an extra 55KM for the mistake.

As we took the Tirupattur route we were completely lost, there were no sign boards and we didn’t know where we were heading to. Then to our rescue came our new Asus P750 with GPS. Just sent an SMS to enable the GPRS needed by the Google Navigator that we had installed just before we started our journey. We could then locate ourselves heading towards NH66. My gizmo freak husbands PDA phone was of great help and he was short of words glorifying the technology and the phone!! He tried Google Maps first which was not as good as the Google Navigator. The all India city map from Satguid that comes from with Asus P750 is of no help once you are outside city limits.

With this round around journey we reached Tirunamamali at 2pm. As my daughter was hungry and we stopped at a hotel for idlis. As idlis were not served at lunch time, we just packed meals and left. Half past two we drove down to a shady tree across the road to gulp the packed food. Arunachalam Temple was in our list but planned to visit it on the way back.
Close to 4pm we reached Gingee, the fort town. One cannot miss the scenic view of the ancient Gingee Fort as we get a view of them on either side of the highway as we enter the town. With a short photo shoot of the fort we headed towards Tindivanam.

We reached Pondicherry at 5:30 as planned. As we enter this French colony we can see high raised dividers on the road. Our booking at Lotus Comfort was confirmed at 12 noon. This is a new hotel on Sardar Vallabhai Patel Road. Its location is good as it’s a 5 mins walk to the promenade and French colony. The rooms are small but with all amenities and well maintained.

Places to visit in Pondicherry:
The next day we set out to see the promenade. The promenade at Pondicherry would be a disappointment for those who want to splurge into the bay and enjoy. The view of the waves relentlessly surging to reach the rocks is just spectacular. Every tide of the sea has a tale to say, but ebbs away shying away from the invading world. A drive across the promenade is memorable.



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Next we set out to Chunnambar Back Waters. This was a much awaited destination as my one year old daughter is extremely fond of playing in water. It’s around 8 km from the city, on the Cuddalore road.

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This is an interesting place as we had to take a boat ride to reach the sun kissed beautiful beach. Yo
u may not fine much of a crowd here. The sea here is very fierce and you can find few guards watching you!! Pranathi was so excited that we had a tough time putting her swim suite. This is surely one of the best Indian beaches I have visited. Clean and not too crowded, just the one you are looking for.
On the way back visited the Anglo French Textile. It’s a good place to shop for cotton material.
Aurobindo Ashram Auroville seem to be a good place to visit. We did not visit either of them. One is suppose to keep silence in the Ashram and kids are not allowed.
The Aurobindo Paper Mill is another interesting place. Its situated on SV Patel road a few feet after Hotel Lotus Comforts. You can find a variety of hand made paper of good quality. You can also pick up some simple gift items from this place, all paper work!!!.

Foodies:
The French area has a few good places to dine. The Promenade is the best place for fine dine. It offers b
uffet as well as ala carta. If you go for buffet don’t miss the special desserts on the shelf. It’s a hotel of Hidesign group.
Pizza Hut again in the French area is good. But don’t expect a French touch to your pizzas. Pi
zza hut pizzas taste the same everywhere!.
Anand Bhavan in the market area is a good place for south Indian breakfast and snacks.
The restaurant attached to the Executive Inn is also a good place for buffet breakfast. They also h
ave good rooms.

Places to visit around Pondicherry:
Chidambaram, the city of temples is 70 Kms from Pondy. But the more interested and fascinating
destination for lens men like my husband is Pichavaram. Pichavaram the second largest Mangrove forest in the world, near the temple town of Chidambaram , is one of the unique Eco-tourism spots in South India.



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It’s a natural 500+ years old mangrove forest. The boat ride across the mangrove needs to be booked at the counter. As a single boat needs minimum 7-11 members you may have to wait for sometime. However if you can shell out some extra money then even a group of 5 can be arranged. The trip in the mangrove is appr 30 mins where he could show you a few canals and brief you with geography and history of the place. Again extra bucks can give you a longer ride deeper into the canal giving you ample opportunity for photography.
The government restaurant at Pichavaram provides one of the best lunches. We had a sumptuous lunch here for just Rs 35.
At 4 PM the Chidambaram temple doors open. It’s not the right time to enter here as the main temple in this temple complex opens its door at 4:45PM, just keeping us waiting. I was really disappointed here not due to the wait hours but every pujari is upto making contacts. As this temple run privately every pujari is busy asking you, where do you come from, give me your address so that we can send you the Prasad every month at your door step. Give them the address then comes the surprise: Rs 50/month. You can pay for one month upto one year!
The booking for accommodation at Chidambaram needs to be early as there are a few ones. Hotel Saradharam is a good hotel to stay.

Mahabalipuram is another bay bait for weekenders from Chennai. The shore temples are enchanting. However we didn’t visit there as we had already visited during our Chennai trip. But it’s a better option to visit if Pichavaram doesn’t fascinate you.



Back to Bangalore.

We started back from pondy at 9:30am. We reached Tiruvanamalai at 12pm. Tiruvanamalai, famous for its Arunachalam Temple is on NH66 between Bangalore and Pondy. Its very nice temple to visit and worship. The hill at the backdrop of the temple is good to view. We were out of the temple at 2 pm and set out to Bangalore with no more stops!. We were done and very tired due to the scorching heat. We reached home at 5pm.

We took back tons of memories and photos and the last word we had about the trip was “We love PPT (Pondy, Pichavaram and Tiruvanamalai) and will visit it again”.