It was in my Social Marketing class today that I learned a real hard lesson in life. The class, taking on an innovative stance of field work regarding the subject matter, decided to reserve a date two months from now in the Ateneo academic calendar and work our way into making that date a huge success.
The challenge: Lead a team of 20+ people in the classroom as well as tieup with different non-governmental organizations, people’s organizations, social enterprises, and Ateneo-accredited organizations and conceptualize a marketing plan in order to come up with a major social developmental marketing event for the benefit of the organizations involved.
The reward: Letters of recommendations from all three professors handling the class, letters of recommendations from most, if not all, of the organizations involved, huge opportunities for networking, a lead in initiating positive change, and personal growth and self-development, among others.
As such, I decided to volunteer for the position as I saw this as a nice venue to further improve myself and actually provide a little bit of my skills and capacities for a larger lot of those who might actually need it. Plus, I craved for the challenge. Certainly, I was more than passionate to convince my group to step up and commit to such an endeavor. But, it was not just us who wanted the position but two groups as well.
After hours of deliberation, one backed out and two groups remained. We were at a loss at how the selection would go, only to find out that it would all end up with a major decision — heads or tails. We chose heads.
We lost.
That’s life for us. Sometimes, the world never really merits the other factors that play into a certain fate and, as such, a little luck goes a long way. Come to think of it, so many innovations of our time are merely results of lucky strikes along the way. The invention of the Penicillin is crowd favorite in this arena owing itself to how Alexander Fleming’s culture was contaminated by fungi which sourced the drug’s essential component. There’s also the potato chip by George Crum who accidentally (or, intentionally as to piss of a customer who kept complaining about his potatoes) sliced the potato so thin that it turned thin and crispy as a potato chip should be. From ice cream cones to X-rays, from microwaves to popsicles, from pacemakers to Viagra, the list goes on and on and on.
As much as we don’t (or perhaps, do) like to admit it, we all need to take luck into accord simply because of the fact that, without it, life would not have been as challenging (and perhaps, fun) as it is now.
But, at some point, not everything need be dependent on luck. Certainly, a bit of brain adds up to the luck of the draw. The ice cream cone is nary accidental rather is creative. It’s inventor supposedly used rolled-up thin waffles in order to make up for the lack of plates to put his ice cream in. The same is true with the invention of the sandwich whose inventor was so busy gambling that he did not want to be bothered eating food so he sandwiched it between two slices of bread so he could eat it simultaneous with his stint. Chocolate chip cookies are also products of an out-of-the-box strategy to compensate for the lack of resources. Its inventor, wanting to make chocolate cookies but were short of chocolate, crumbled the available chocolate to chips which, upon baking, did not melt.
Most often than not, businesses become too centered on what (they think) the customer wants and not on what the customer needs. These then becomes tools of dictate of what the customer thinks he/she need (by focusing its market on the want and making it appear as a need) and taking focus away from what the customer actually needs. Certainly, there is nothing wrong with doing so, simply because it earns most companies the right profit for their efforts. But, to simply rely on what the customer and the business think that the customer wants leaves little or no room for innovation. New things are not bound to happen with this mode of operation.
What then is a nice manner of acquiring leeway towards innovation? Listening closely to what people know they need in any manner of doing so. Crowdsourcing.
Just recently, L’oreal had its hands on such a wonderful strategy. (I’ll get back on this the time I confirm the event’s name) By recruiting ideas through a competition among top university students, L’oreal has had entries flowing in from so many places, several of which are either not on L’oreal’s current line or not available in the market at all. That’s the power of the people at its finest.
Of course, Viagra was something accidental altogether, but we wouldn’t have enjoyed much of the benefits of it without ice cream cones and chocolate chip cookies to get us sugar rushed for it.
Would you like some fries with that?