Archive for April, 2009

Why Generative Design Pushes Mass Customization to the Next Level – Part 1

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Image by Patrick Chia

The oxymoron mass customization has been buzzing around for some years now. As far as I know the first big mass customization wave passed through back in the mid 90s. (Although the term was discussed before by e.g. futurist Alvin Toffler in the 70s . Toffler also coined the term “Prosumer” in the 80s by the way).

Mass customization was/is praised as the holy grail of customer satisfaction. But has the mass customization management system made it to become a widespread mainstream business model yet? Not really, maybe only within in a handful of branches (e.g. automotive sector).

But why not?

Let’s make a step back to Joseph Pine’s definition of mass customization in 1993:

In the mass customization management system, the goal is to develop, produce, market, and deliver affordable
goods and services with enough variety and customization that nearly everyone finds exactly what they want.

I think we should put some stress on the phrase “enough variety” to answer the question why mass customization isn’t so widespread yet. “Enough variety” does not necessarily refers to hundreds of product options to choose from.

“Enough variety” means that prosumers always feel good (receiving an additional benefit) when changing parameters or pushing triggers of a product configurator. Whatever they do, they should never feel overburdened while co-creating/co-designing a custom product.

In practice “enough variety” is often misunderstood: prosumers are often confronted with so many customization choices that they feel puzzled and uncertain about their custom creations. Offering an overwhelming variety of product options can even reduce the perceived benefit. This phenomena is known as the “Paradox of Choice”.

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Barry Schwartz (author of the book with the same name) on the Paradox of Choice:

.watch Barry Schwartz key lecture on youtube

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So how can we define “enough variety” then?

Frank Piller, Fabrizio Salvador and Martin de Holan from MIT Sloan School of Management argue in a recently published paper that the right amount of variety can be defined with what they call a “solution space“:

A mass customizer must first identify the idiosyncratic needs of its customers, specifically, the product attributes along which customer needs diverge the most. (This is in stark contrast to a mass producer, which must focus on identifying central tendencies so that it can target those needs with a limited number of standard products.) Once that information is known and understood, a business can define its “solution space,” clearly delineating what it will offer — and what it will not.

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The lessons we should learn for today:

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1.  Find out what you will not offer.
2. Offer a level of customization-attributes that make sense.

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Read next time:

- Fluid Forms generative design approach to define the solution space -> the Design Space
– Explanation of generative art and generative design

Short summary of the workshop for entrepreneurs in Vienna

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

That’s a short summary of the http://www.we-workshops.at/ organized by http://www.impulsprogramm.at/ and http://www.departure.at/

we09_teaser

DAY ONE

SESSION 1:
A discussion about the long and difficult way towards a successful business within the creative industry with
Christoph Katzler :: http://www.foruse.info/
Helge Schania :: http://www.wujsympathisant.com/
Jakob Dunkel :: http://www.querkraft.at/
Georg Lauteren:: http://www.zero-inch.com/
moderated by Thomas Rottenberg :: http://derstandard.at/

SUM UP:
__every start-up is based on radical self-exploitation
__in average it takes about 10 years, until the business is really successful

SESSION 2:
Carl Frech, co-founder of http://www.metadesign.de/ founder of http://carlfrech.com/ and http://intuity.com/
initiator of http://gestaltbildung.com/

SUM UP:
__awesome, very motivating and picturesque presentation named “In the beginning is easy”. (That’s right in my opinion, the beginning was really easy, compared to managing a somehow mature business.)

SESSION 3 & 4:
Gerald Murauer from http://www.fh-wien.ac.at/ & Martin Sirlinger from http://www.buerofuertransfer.at/ gave some hints for writing a business plan.

DAY TWO

was about marketing and PR presented by Gerald Murauer again and by Beatix Roidinger from www.juicypool.com

DAY THREE

was about legal terms with Meinrad Ciresa from http://www.ciresa.at/ and about taxes with Wolfgang Steirer from http://www.steirer-mika.at
I used the morning to meet Thomas Hauser though, at the lovely http://www.lux.restaurant.at ;-)

DAY FOUR

SESSION 1
Stefan Possert used to work for companies like http://www.buerox.at/, http://www.razorfish.com/, http://www.fork.de/ and http://www.universalmusic.com/ before he was frustrated, disappointed, angry and motivated enough to start his own baby http://www.zero-inch.com/ together with others. He told the listeners to remember Murphy’s law when starting a new venture. It was quite surprising to recognize, (for Stefan as well I guess) that he moved from some kind of a punk towards a data-mining-guru during his life-time. He told us, that he is tracking and saving all data he can get from the users on zero-inch.

SESSION 2
Michael Breitenbrücker used to be CEO and co-founder of www.last.fm but he left the start-up just when Joi Ito and other investors came in as. That was probably not such an good idea, because last.fm got sold for $280 million in 2007. At the moment he’s on the way with his next venture http://www.rjdj.me/ which is a new format and platform for reactive music sequencing. Some RJDJ-tools can be downloaded to the iPhone from the AppStore . His advice for creative founders was 1st focus, 2nd product, 3rd feedback and 4th business. He claimed that software becomes music. (For Fluid Forms software becomes products, so someone has to be wrong ;-) ). He had some really nice quotes like “If you piss long enough against the wind, it suddenly works.” (Not sure, but I think he said the quote was from DJ Krush)

DAY FIVE

SESSION 1
DI Dr. Eberhard Dürrschmid, founder and CEO of http://www.greentube.com/ had some nice quotes as well. “I don’t need it good, I need it Tuesday.”  (initially by Warner Bros.)  He gave really detailed insights about the work his company is doing.

WRAP UP SESSION
During the wrap up Mr. Valentinitsch www.valentinitsch.at told the audience some stories about his design work of pregnancy tests or his fascination about 3D-printing and the personal fabricator.

Optics as a Design Element

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Design innovations often comes from research into what make a material, production method or physical effect special. After reading a book about optical illusions, Stefan Sagmaister come up with his Mountains of Madness CD cover…

Recently I saw the following on FFFFound.com

and the following use of the Anamorphosis optical effect from lachaert & d’hanis.

via DesignBoom

Blogging is an Expression of Freedom

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Are you aware of blogging as practicing freedom of speech? Yesterday I was.

I visited the Afro Asian Institute of the University of Graz to listen to the keynote lectures of Sihem Bensedrine (Tunesia) and Wael Abbas (Egypt).

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What that has to do with design? ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, but it’s my personal freedom to speak about whatever I want to (as long as I stick to some basic socially accepted rules)

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Founder of online newspaper Kalima (covering stories which are forbidden to talk about in Tunesia), Sihem Bensedrine is one of the figure-heads of the resistence against the dictatorship of Tunesia’s President Ben Ali.

Fighting for her human rights and for freedom of speech she felt victim of oppression  many times.

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Wael Abbas (Abbas on YouTube) is a multi-awarded Egyptian journalist, blogger and human rights activist. One video he published on the Internet helped to arrest two police officers who brutally proceeded against an Egyptian bus driver.

His accounts on Youtube, Facebook and Yahoo are blocked regularly by the Egyptian government.

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It was fascinating to hear how they harness the power of social media to tell the world and their fellow countrymen about oppression, torture and governmental injustice taking place in their countries.

It also reminded me how lucky I am being allowed to write (almost) everything I want to…

The Laser Cut Diaries – Review Laser Cut Session April 09

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Back in the office with loads of footage from last week’s laser cut session it’s time for a short resume.

It was a great experience for me to meet that bunch of inventive people (read who was @ the laser cut session, more laser cut session geeks) dedicated to product design and creative coding. There was so much to learn for my about generative visuals, coding with processing, design and prototyping with a laser cutter (what the heck is a laser cutter?).

I tried hard to capture my impressions to give you a glimpse of what happened in Upper Austria. My fingers are still bleeding from pushing the triggers of my video and photo cameras. But I was brave and accomplished to upload a few pics of the laser cut session for you.

Stay tuned for more pics, great video interviews with designers and further background information…

… and enjoy the idyllic atmosphere of Upper Austria’s lake region which gave us so much inspiration to create great new stuff:

pics: courtesy of Florian Puschmann

Laser Cut Diaries – Design Impressions Day 3

Friday, April 10th, 2009

On the 3rd day material and generative design experiments went on. And the “shrimp lampshade” began to materialize (check out more pics on our flickr account:

The Laser Cut Diaries – 2nd Day’s Crew

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Day 2 of our laser cut workshop was joined (among others) by Franz Piffl, Stefan Kainbacher, Tobias Kestel and Stefan Schmid.

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Tobias Kestel: The calm product designer from Graz is the iniciator of White Elefant DesignLab and always on the quest to reach the limits of the materials he works with. Together with Florian Puschmann he won the competition CRYSTALLIZED – Swarovski Elements Call for Tender with  with the customizable lamp Crystalswitch.

Tobi, listening to the laser cut blues:

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Stefan Kainbacher: Coding VJ from Vorarlberg enriches the crew with his artistic artwork. Check out some of his awesome visuals:

.find more from Stefan on vimeo, Neon Golden,

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Franz Piffl: Brother Design and Microgiants are the two companies Franz’s creative energy flows in. Franz is working on a pendant lampshade during the laser cut session.

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Stefan Schmid: documentary filmer Stefan Schmid joined the crew the take some nice shots of the laser cut session. Watch Stefan’s video Uganda Ruanda.


The Laser Cut Diaries – Design Impressions Day 2

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

The cutter’s session second round already saw some advanced experiments with materials and different design approaches.

One of these experiments was foredoomed: Engraving sausages (to prepare them for the bonfire barbecue at the lake) with the Speedy 500 ended in a snow-storm in the cutter room and a deadlock of the laser cutter.

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Some design impressions of the 2nd day:

 

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The Killer Sausages (before deadlocking the laser cutter):

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The Mess:

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Jörg cleaning up and fixing the machine:

The Laser Cut Diaries – First Day’s Design/Coding Crew

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Besides Hannes, Stephen and me, yesterday’s first laser cut starter session was also joined by Günther Dressel, Florian Puschmann and Michal Piasecki.

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Günther Dressel is a smart coder and Head of Development at the well known product-configurator consultancy cyLEDGE.

Günther talk-shopping with Hannes

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Florian Puschmann, a  young product-designer from Graz, spent the last few weeks together with his congenial Partner Tobi Kestel and other creative minds from Austria on Hawaii to experiment with liquid lava. Last week he and Tobi won the Swarovski’s Crystallized Contest. Tobi will join the laser cut session today. I’m curious about what they will concoct the next couple of days.

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Florian in his fire-proof White Elephant suit on Hawaii

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The Crystalswitch

Crystalswitch ambient light

dfdf.

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Michal Piasecki, the freelance designer from Warsaw (Poland) is known for his blog Peer Produced Space and his digital design work. He is one of the iniciators of Workshops Factory.

Michal sharing knowledge with Stephen and Günther

The Laser Cut Diaries – Design Impressions Day 1

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Getting to know each other (the workshop crew and the Speedy 500 Laser Cutter) we started with first easy material experiments yesterday:

We are quite happy with the outcome. It’s funny to see how Hannes and Stephen bubble over with new product ideas…