Red Zen Marketing

Thoughts & Observations from Mike Compeau 
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breastcancer

 

A Lesson on Product Development from -- a Bra?

All true -- as unbelievable as it sounds.

I once was rejected from a pool of candidates for a job at Avaya because I told the interviewer that when releasing a the most recent version of a previous employer's mobile office suite, the product requirements AND the feature set remained fixed for the final 2/3 of the development cycle prior to release. I'm sure that he was likely an advocate of the Agile Programming development method (hey, I think it's a great method as well and has it's place) and believed that the feature set would remain fluid based on constantly changing user input much later in the process.

Well, having worked in many different industries spanning consumer durables products like ladders and windows, as well as high tech products like software, hardware, and even online Software-as-a-Service, I can say that the real answer to that question of "how late is it acceptable to continue to make changes to your product" actually depends on the product, the customers being served, and the environmental variables involved.  My adversarial interviewer at Avaya wanted to hear his preferred answer parroted back to him, and was unwilling to listen to the reasons why our particular mobile office suite, already quite mature on the old, stale Palm OS platform by then, was not going to be seeing late-breaking feature changes and additions. No matter, for whomever he eventually hired didn't make much of a splash--the project I was interviewing to lead was shelved or fell into obscurity 8 months later as a result of shifting priorities. I guess he didn't see those late breaking "customer requirements" on the horizon, for all his openness to last minute changes. Oops.

Back to bras
So what does all this have to do with bras? Well, as I blogged about earlier,
my wife and her friends have been working on a special benefit project-- designing a bra to benefit the American Cancer Society in our area that is hosting an Unhooked bra design competition to benefit cancer research. My dear wife and pals have spent over 30 hours in total working on creating a very uniquely decorated pink bra using the theme Milk and Cookies

This theme ties in to another nonprofit benefit that is the passion of Jen DeFazio, one of my wife's dear friends, who some years ago conceived of the Stacking the Odds benefit event for breast cancer. In this event, individuals (or teams?) stack Nabisco Oreo cookies to see how many cookies they can stack up upon a base of a single standard Oreo cookie. It's a fascinating premise for a competition and I can hardly wait to see it this year. Anyhoo--the bra design you see below represents how their design finally came together. 

"Um, what about this whole product development angle and bras? You lost me..."
Yeah, understandable-- just bear with me here. (Fitting bra pictures into a marketing blog is not so easy, folks.)  Well, it all comes down to being flexible to changing concepts and circumstances and needs.

The initial concept for the bra design was Jen's. Milk and Cookies -- makes sense; ties in to the Stacking theme nicely. Jen wanted a pink bra to convey the color of the pink ribbon used by Susan G Komen for the Cure and other breast cancer foundations. She also wanted to find someway to tie the milk theme in in a fun, lighthearted way. And, well, the cookies were obvious. I observed seven ladies working on this project the other evening. During that time, they realized that they could not use perishable items.

This posed a problem. Cookies had to be simulated. Hmmm. A quick search on Wikipedia turned up a bit of suitable Oreo cookie art (since removed!) that was reborn as a reversed iron-on for dark brown or black felt. The ladies had wanted to position some sort of vessel behind the D-cups connected to the taps in the tips of the bras, to be able to turn on the milk at will. That seemed untenable as well. Warm milk was, well, icky. Rolling white paint around the interior of the cups seemed to do the trick nicely--indicating the idea of a full milk container. But, well, they weren't going to connect to the taps too well. Hoses and other intricate connectors were postulated--and rejected.

After some debate, and the first day of long hours designing expired, the ladies left for some sleep. A new day and the challenge still faced them. What to do about the milk? Voila! Inspiration at the grocery store-- pink milk in the form of Dean's Strawberry Milk. This was particularly relevant, since Deans Dairy had been a past sponsor of Jen's Stacking the Odds event in eastern Ohio. It was all coming together. Now, the Milk Chug was positioned within the bra, full size Oreo's were mocked up with a half-eaten cookie left with it's crumbs next to the empty milk container, and the bra design we finally mounted on a presentation board embellished with gold ribbon icons.

                   
Click here to download:
A_Lesson_on_Product_Developmen.zip (1445 KB)

Flexibility in the design concept had ensured success. If any of the initial concepts had been held to too stringently, the design would have come off too forced. Creativity and serendipity each had a role to play in creating the final product.

Often in product development we fail to be open to serendipity because we become too focused on our initial thoughts of where we are headed. Like the Avaya head of R&D, we have our preconceived notions of the answers we're looking for and fail to ask new questions that might illuminate the situtation, or fail to open our eyes in mundane circumstances -- like the Jen in the grocery store -- to see new possibilities that enable new creative solutions.

Where do you need to open your eyes to new possibilities in your business. Where could your customers help you see differently?

Yes, I can help... 

Mike Compeau
Red Zen Marketing
www.twitter.com/mikecompeau
724-734-1624

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Filed under  //   breast cancer   humor   marketing   NPD   photo essay   product development   project management   Stacking the Odds   Susan G Komen for the Cure  
Posted by Mike Compeau 

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How to spend an evening laughing and protecting breasts (new and improved)

Get 7 women to decorate a bra for the American Cancer Society and Susan G Komen for the Cure

Then just sit back and watch, and listen.

                                                                                                         
Click here to download:
How_to_spend_an_evening_laughi.zip (8385 KB)

My wife and her friends from First National Bank, Hermitage, PA, spent this evening in creative abandon. The reason was the "Unhooked" competition to be held on June 5 at the Tiffany Banquet Center in nearby Brookfield, Ohio, as a benefit to raise money for the American Cancer Society's fight against cancer, and specifically with this event, to raise awareness of breast cancer.

Thus, this team, with avid (rabid?) leader Jen DeFazio at the helm, descended upon our home; a cadre of like-minded ladies to set about on an awesome mission. Now, understand, Jen has been working hard raising breast cancer awareness for a number of years, having conceived and organized the very novel "Stacking the Odds" Oreo cookie-stacking competitions in western PA and eastern OH to benefit the Susan G Komen Race for the Cure organization in years past. So it was natural that Jen and her troop were looking to inject this theme into their bra design entry for the first annual local ACS "Unhooked" competition this year. Their theme pick was a natural...

2009 Bra Design Theme: Milk and Cookies

As the photographs in this series show, the standard very large white 'D' cup bra was first RIT dyed in pink dye last evening to provide a willing and ample canvas. Next, the ladies signed "Mother", "Sister" and other cancer-impacted relations on the side panels along with afixing various metallic terms of endearment to embellish and adorn. Though a Twitter dialog was established during the day with @KomenForTheCure to make inquiries, no positive response was received in time to provide for use of the Susan G Komen logo on the bra, so this planned feature had to be omitted from the right cup. 

It was hoped by the ladies that this would not unduly unbalance the presentation.

The left cup featured the " Stacking the Odds" logo to provide awareness for the 2009 Oreo stacking competition, currently planned for November 7, 2009 in Hermitage at the High School (room location TBA). Special milk cups were prepared (that's paint in there, people) to provide the illusion of that vital sustenance--these are to be afixed within the concave portion of the cups, with the clever and functional spigots to be attached, thus illustrating the critical role breasts play in life.


To interject the Stacking the Odds cookie theme, over 2 dozen faux black/white baked chocolate cake and milk-creme-filled cookies looking very much like Nabisco Oreo cookies were affixed to the bra straps like so many jewels in the crown of this endowed pink lady. These were made of three layers of felt, with the top dark brown/black layer including an iron-on pattern to resemble a famous cookie.

Alas Podcast fans: No audio was recorded during this event--it would not likey have been appropriate for a family oriented blog, in any case.
Enjoy the photos, and interpolate related to the good times as you are apt to do anyway.


If you need assistance with bra decorating, contact me for names and email addresses of the guilty parties shown.


(Yes, I can help you with that...)

Mike Compeau
Red Zen Marketing

mike.compeau@compeau.net
www.twitter.com/mikecompeau

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Filed under  //   breast cancer   humor   photo essay   Susan G Komen for the Cure  
Posted by Mike Compeau 

Comments [0]

How to spend an evening laughing and protecting breasts

Watch 7 women decorate a bra for the American Cancer Society and Susan G Komen for the Cure

See new entry here

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   breast cancer   humor   Stacking the Odds   Susan G Komen for the Cure  
Posted by Mike Compeau 

Comments [0]