BNET Video

Special Reports

Now Playing:

Guy Kawasaki: What Makes Innovation?

Silicon Valley Entrepreneur Discusses the Art of Innovation

At Cisco Live in San Francisco, Silicon Valley entrepreneur Guy Kawasaki, author of "Reality Check," talks about the four qualities of innovation that he believes all successful products need. They are: deep, intelligent, complete, and elegant.

Comment

See Full Transcript

Tags: Innovation, Guy Kawasaki, Leadership, Strategy, Management, Cisco, Reality Check

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
Guy Kawasaki: What Makes Innovation?

At Cisco Live in San Francisco, Silicon Valley entrepreneur Guy Kawasaki, author of "Reality Check," talks about the four qualities of innovation that he believes all successful products need. They are: deep, intelligent, complete, and elegant.

music What makes innovation? First quality of innovation is that the product is deep, lots of features, does lots of stuff. You have anticipated what people need before they know they need it. They will not run out of power. Great products, great services are deep. This is an example of a deep product. This is a fanning sandal made by Reef. Every sandal in the world has one primary function, protect your feet. This sandal has twice the functionality. That area that circle that's the middle clip, the purpose of that metal clip is to open beer bottles.

laughter This sandal has twice the functionality and depth of any other sandal in the world. I is for intelligence. Great products, great services when you look at it you say wow somebody was thinking. Somebody was thinking. Somebody is solving my pain. A lot of you are using these flips, those minnows, right. Somebody was thinking. Somebody said well people want a cheap HD video device that basically no cables USB device, you stick it in, you don't have to think about it, there's basically one button, you turn it on, boom, you are done, right. Panasonic. Panasonic looked at people's homes and said, wow, like my house? We have lots of batteries. We have a frigging jar full of batteries with lots of flashlights. None of which work because there's no batteries for them. Why is that? Because the flashlights that we have don't take the size batteries that we have. Panasonic figured out that's a problem. So they created a flashlight that takes three sizes of battery. Triples the probability that you have the right size battery. C stands for complete. Great products are complete. Great services are complete. When you buy a Lexus, you are not merely buying the steel and the glass and the rubber and the leather. You are buying the totality of the experience. When you buy great software it's not just the digital download, or the DVD or the cable it came on, it's the documentation, it's the online forum, it's the online support. It's the string of enhancements, it's all the good stuff. Great products are complete. And the last thing E. Great products and services are elegant and beautiful. People care about the user interface. So when you go home, and you whip out the notes for this session, remember I want to you jump curves. But ask yourself are we creating something that's deep, intelligent, complete and elegant? Because those are the four primary qualities of something that is successfully jumping curves. Roll the dice.

==== Transcribed by Automatic Sync Technologies ====