Bringing brands & stories to life through transmedia creativityErica Hargreave
Transmedia can take many different forms and can require highly varying budgets, some of which are unattainable to smaller brands and many creative projects. In this session, we will be exploring some grassroots transmedia initiatives for brand and storytelling properties, what we have learnt from them and what has made them successful. Our goal is to explore how we can all build digital and transmedia elements into our properties, no matter the budget that we are working with, by looking for creative solutions, learning to recognize the pitfalls, identifying which areas to place value, and understanding how to find and build audience. We will explore questions like, where to start, what to consider, and what makes one project successful in the digital / transmedia space where another fails (no matter the budget)?
Melies Generation est un appel à la reflexion sur le développement d'un écosystème novateur pour les nouvelles écritures, en favorisant l'aspect collaboratif.
1) Transmedia Jams are events that bring together creatives and technologists to rapidly prototype transmedia projects and build community, taking inspiration from music jam sessions.
2) At the first Transmedia Jam, 6 projects were completed across video, social media, and email platforms, with support from 4 technology sponsors.
3) The organizers also created their own transmedia project during the Jam, telling a story across 3 levels - through a documentary, social media interactions with fictional Jam participants, and an email-based story written by the fictional participants.
5 Steps to Delivering Dynamic Presentations #ILTA13Dux Raymond Sy
The document outlines 5 steps to delivering dynamic presentations: 1) Develop a catchy abstract, 2) Consider how attendees learn best, 3) Identify the main points, 4) Address various learning styles, and 5) Engage with the audience. It provides tips for each step, such as using repetition to reinforce learning, addressing different learning styles through visual and auditory techniques, and driving interaction with the audience every 8-10 minutes. The overall goal is to develop a structured and engaging presentation that appeals to all learning styles and keeps the audience involved.
What was the year in media like in 2016? And what should we look out for in 2017? Featuring a compilation of blog posts from 2016 and interviews with some of the most brilliant creators around, this publication features 110 pages of enticing, interesting and challenging content.
The document discusses using sensors and real-world data to power interactive narratives. It describes a soft toy that could tweet based on its orientation as detected by a sensor. It also describes an air quality monitoring device that could influence a character's mood and responses based on real air quality data from Mumbai. The document discusses using audience interaction on social media and email to personalize a virtual reality experience. It outlines how a storytelling platform called Conducttr can use real data as game mechanics or rewards to drive an interactive narrative with choice points that influence the story.
Unleashing energy for change - Helen BevanNHSChangeDay
Most large scale change fails to achieve its objectives
What happens to large scale change efforts in reality?
In order of frequency:
the effort effectively “runs out of energy” and simply fades away;
the change hits a plateau at some level and no longer attracts new supporters; or
the change becomes reasonably well established; several levels across the system have changed to accommodate or support it in a sustainable way.
Money incentives do not create energy for change; the energy comes from connection to meaningful goals...
Patient Engagement: Health Consumer Insights from Gen Xers and Millennials Kathleen Poulos
Patient Engagement: Health Consumer Insights from Gen Xers and Millennials
Pathways to Patient Engagement is a webinar series designed to foster collaboration and discussion between all involved in the healthcare process.
During the initial webinar we explored physician insights and found 40% of the primary care physicians surveyed were not participating in any patient engagement activities.
During this webinar we highlighted feedback from health consumers, specifically Gen Xers and Millennials. We found Millennials to be more patient engagement savvy than their Gen X counterparts.
Review the deck and to get a health consumer perspective on patient engagement.
Bringing brands & stories to life through transmedia creativityErica Hargreave
Transmedia can take many different forms and can require highly varying budgets, some of which are unattainable to smaller brands and many creative projects. In this session, we will be exploring some grassroots transmedia initiatives for brand and storytelling properties, what we have learnt from them and what has made them successful. Our goal is to explore how we can all build digital and transmedia elements into our properties, no matter the budget that we are working with, by looking for creative solutions, learning to recognize the pitfalls, identifying which areas to place value, and understanding how to find and build audience. We will explore questions like, where to start, what to consider, and what makes one project successful in the digital / transmedia space where another fails (no matter the budget)?
Melies Generation est un appel à la reflexion sur le développement d'un écosystème novateur pour les nouvelles écritures, en favorisant l'aspect collaboratif.
1) Transmedia Jams are events that bring together creatives and technologists to rapidly prototype transmedia projects and build community, taking inspiration from music jam sessions.
2) At the first Transmedia Jam, 6 projects were completed across video, social media, and email platforms, with support from 4 technology sponsors.
3) The organizers also created their own transmedia project during the Jam, telling a story across 3 levels - through a documentary, social media interactions with fictional Jam participants, and an email-based story written by the fictional participants.
5 Steps to Delivering Dynamic Presentations #ILTA13Dux Raymond Sy
The document outlines 5 steps to delivering dynamic presentations: 1) Develop a catchy abstract, 2) Consider how attendees learn best, 3) Identify the main points, 4) Address various learning styles, and 5) Engage with the audience. It provides tips for each step, such as using repetition to reinforce learning, addressing different learning styles through visual and auditory techniques, and driving interaction with the audience every 8-10 minutes. The overall goal is to develop a structured and engaging presentation that appeals to all learning styles and keeps the audience involved.
What was the year in media like in 2016? And what should we look out for in 2017? Featuring a compilation of blog posts from 2016 and interviews with some of the most brilliant creators around, this publication features 110 pages of enticing, interesting and challenging content.
The document discusses using sensors and real-world data to power interactive narratives. It describes a soft toy that could tweet based on its orientation as detected by a sensor. It also describes an air quality monitoring device that could influence a character's mood and responses based on real air quality data from Mumbai. The document discusses using audience interaction on social media and email to personalize a virtual reality experience. It outlines how a storytelling platform called Conducttr can use real data as game mechanics or rewards to drive an interactive narrative with choice points that influence the story.
Unleashing energy for change - Helen BevanNHSChangeDay
Most large scale change fails to achieve its objectives
What happens to large scale change efforts in reality?
In order of frequency:
the effort effectively “runs out of energy” and simply fades away;
the change hits a plateau at some level and no longer attracts new supporters; or
the change becomes reasonably well established; several levels across the system have changed to accommodate or support it in a sustainable way.
Money incentives do not create energy for change; the energy comes from connection to meaningful goals...
Patient Engagement: Health Consumer Insights from Gen Xers and Millennials Kathleen Poulos
Patient Engagement: Health Consumer Insights from Gen Xers and Millennials
Pathways to Patient Engagement is a webinar series designed to foster collaboration and discussion between all involved in the healthcare process.
During the initial webinar we explored physician insights and found 40% of the primary care physicians surveyed were not participating in any patient engagement activities.
During this webinar we highlighted feedback from health consumers, specifically Gen Xers and Millennials. We found Millennials to be more patient engagement savvy than their Gen X counterparts.
Review the deck and to get a health consumer perspective on patient engagement.
The document appears to be a presentation by Nubia that includes famous quotations and pictures. It consists primarily of repeated references to "Nubia_group presentation" and mentions websites where the full presentation can be accessed, including slideshare.net and facebook.com/NubiaGroup. The presentation is credited to Nubia and provides contact information for the Nubia_group on Yahoo.
Here are 5 tips on how to stop overthinking. For 5 more tips of this type, click the link: http://vkool.com/how-to-stop-overthinking/
1. Put Things Into A Big Picture
Putting your issue into a large picture will help you think less about it or think more positively about it. You should ask questions like: “Can this matter last for years?”, or: “Is there anyone living without a single issue?” It has been proven that by asking yourself these questions, you can stop overthinking easier.
2. Take Action
You should set deadlines for every task you do so that you will not have much time to overthink about anything. You had better take one step at a time until you complete the work. This will help prevent you from feeling overwhelmed. Taking one step at a time will make you busy with your tasks, thereby stop overthinking.
3. Admit That You Could Not Control Everything
Only saints could control everything. You are human being, so you cannot control everything in life. Sometimes you will have to accept things to go their own ways.
Even famous people or the ones that you admire cannot keep everything under their control. Failure is not something terrible. Failure is actually a good lesson that you can learn from. Failure is the mother of success. Therefore, you ought to stop thinking that you can control everything in life.
4. Make Friends With People Who Do Not Overthink
Social environment can affect the way you think. When you communicate with people who can easily forget things that make them sad, you can learn from them to do so. On the contrary, when you communicate with people who are oversensitive, or overthink about things, you can be impacted. The people around you can apparently affect the way you think. Therefore, you should choose who to make friends with, and who to be around when you are in trouble.
5. Workout
Workout can help in removing your negative thoughts, releasing tensions, and getting rid of anxiety. Swimming, walking, and riding bicycle are the best exercises that you should do to avoid overthinking. When you do workouts, you tend to focus on the movement of your body, thereby you will not think much about other things.
In conclusion, you should remember that you are not a saint, so there may be a lot of things that you cannot do. Do not put too much pressure on yourself, and make your brain work too hard without finding any solution after all. Those 5 tips on how to stop overthinking are very helpful, so you should try them if you are suffering from this issue.
Whether it's prescription or street drugs, when the demise includes a celebrated face, it attracts consideration regarding evil spirits that neither cash nor notoriety can tame. These 16 stars lost their lives to overdoses, yet their legacy lives on in the collection of work they deserted.
Slides de la Master Class organisée le vendredi 4 octobre dans le cadre de la Transmedia Week organisée par TIU à Paris.
Storycode Paris est un rendez vous mensuel où auteurs, producteurs et créateurs de projets transmedia ou /et de documentaires interactifs se retrouvent pour échanger à propos de leurs expériences.
Storycode Paris est une association créée par Gerald Holubowicz (Chewbahat) Benjamin Hoguet (Djehouti) Florent Maurin (thePixelHunt) Louis Viller (Webdocu.fr) et Adrien Aumont (KissKissBankBank).
Learning resources compiled by S.Rengasamy for Social Group Work for the students doing their graduation course in Social Work in the colleges affiliated to Madurai Kamaraj University
Godwin's Law states, "As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1." Lately, no internet discussion about Donald Trump can be complete without at least one reference to Hitler. I've been asked by several people to evaluate these comparisons, so I designed these slides to accompany a recent lecture comparing Donald Trump and Adolf Hitler, noting similarities, differences, and nuances.
If this subject interests you, check out the lecture on my YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TA_cZxMu2b0
The document provides tips for designing and delivering effective presentations. It discusses the importance of design principles like contrast, alignment, proximity and using visuals like photos and charts to engage audiences. Specific tips include limiting text on slides, using no more than two font styles, constraining the number of words and bullet points per slide. For delivery, it recommends practicing your presentation, engaging the audience, speaking conversationally and finishing strongly by reiterating your key messages. The overall message is that effective presentation requires considering both design and delivery techniques to communicate clearly and hold audience attention.
This document is a presentation about designing effective PowerPoint slides. It provides tips over several slides on how to design slides with a killer title and opening slide, use of color schemes and images, getting the text right, using the principles of contrast, repetition, alignment and proximity (CRAP), incorporating video, sharing the presentation online, and recapping the key tips. The presentation emphasizes the importance of visual design over text-heavy slides and using techniques like strong images and video to engage the audience in a way words alone cannot. It provides examples throughout to illustrate its tips.
SDOA 3.2 The Language of Design and Corporate StakeholdersFlorian Vollmer
SDOA – Service Design and Organizational Activation. Enhanced lecture course Gatech 2012, Industrial Design. This presentation is part of the "breadth" part of the lecture series - designed to give service design students an understanding of business-relevant tools and concepts. Includes references to materials from DMI 2011.
Innovation product design planning process 1 powerpoint presentation templatesSlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages:
1) Defining market needs and selecting topic criteria.
2) Generating and selecting optimal ideas/solutions.
3) Selecting the best ideas for innovation.
4) Shaping the concept according to possible directions.
5) Estimating risks of the concept.
6) Implementing concepts into realizations projects.
7) Encouraging a culture of creativity in organizations.
Portfolios Matter: Building the Portfolio to Win the JobLynn Teo
This document provides tips for building an effective portfolio to help win a job. It emphasizes demonstrating thinking, skills and quality of work through the portfolio. The key tips discussed are to consider the audience, order work samples to engage and impress the reviewer, frame problems to showcase analytical skills, show the design process and value of artifacts, provide behind-the-scenes context, specify your role and contributions, focus on high quality over quantity, demonstrate design systems, and use a polished walkthrough to showcase skills through storytelling. The overall message is that the portfolio should tell the story of who you are as a professional and convince the reviewer of your fit and qualifications for the role.
On June 19, 2012, designers from the bay area gathered at Jobvite HQ for the UX Resume and Portfolio Bootcamp. This session, Portfolios Matter: Building the Portfolio to Win the Job, was presented by Lynn Teo, chief experience officer at McCann Erickson.
This document provides an excerpt from slides for a 2-3 day professional training on design thinking and innovation management. The slides cover the basics of design thinking, including its origins and nature, how it is portrayed in the media, and how it relates to strategic thinking. Design thinking is presented as a way to take an outside-in perspective focused on customer needs and experiences to drive value creation and innovation. The training is intended to help participants better understand design thinking and apply it to innovating without unrealistic expectations. The facilitator also provides strategy advisory and training on other topics beyond design thinking.
The document summarizes information about the Second International Media Conference in Saint-Petersburg called NevaCamp 2010. The conference will be held from May 28-30, 2010 in Saint-Petersburg, Russia and focus on the future of the web and IT. Over 500 representatives from the IT, web development, and media industries will attend and participate in activities like brainstorming sessions, presentations, and networking to generate new ideas and form project teams. Sponsorship opportunities are available at different levels from $1,000 to $10,000, with increased benefits provided to sponsors at higher tiers. Contact information is provided for those interested in sponsorship or attending the conference.
Summer School on Management of Creativity in an Innovation Society. Montreal & Barcelona
Please, give feedback in 2 minutes to this presentation:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/6P2GDDQ
Thank you!
Innovation decision making new product development strategy 1 powerpoint ppt ...SlideTeam.net
The document describes an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) identifying market needs, 2) defining topics and selection criteria, 3) searching for and generating ideas/solutions, 4) selecting the best ideas, 5) shaping concepts according to possible directions, 6) estimating risks of concepts, and 7) implementing concepts into projects. It emphasizes reaching a healthy innovation culture through training creative thinking and applying creativity with structure for success.
How to make create innovation decision making new product development process...SlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) defining market needs and topics for innovation, 2) searching for optimal ideas and solutions, 3) selecting the best ideas, 4) shaping the selected concepts, 5) estimating risks of the concepts, 6) implementing the concepts into real projects, 7) encouraging creativity in companies. The process involves activities like market research, stakeholder analysis, brainstorming, screening ideas, workshops to develop concepts, and risk analysis.
The document appears to be a presentation by Nubia that includes famous quotations and pictures. It consists primarily of repeated references to "Nubia_group presentation" and mentions websites where the full presentation can be accessed, including slideshare.net and facebook.com/NubiaGroup. The presentation is credited to Nubia and provides contact information for the Nubia_group on Yahoo.
Here are 5 tips on how to stop overthinking. For 5 more tips of this type, click the link: http://vkool.com/how-to-stop-overthinking/
1. Put Things Into A Big Picture
Putting your issue into a large picture will help you think less about it or think more positively about it. You should ask questions like: “Can this matter last for years?”, or: “Is there anyone living without a single issue?” It has been proven that by asking yourself these questions, you can stop overthinking easier.
2. Take Action
You should set deadlines for every task you do so that you will not have much time to overthink about anything. You had better take one step at a time until you complete the work. This will help prevent you from feeling overwhelmed. Taking one step at a time will make you busy with your tasks, thereby stop overthinking.
3. Admit That You Could Not Control Everything
Only saints could control everything. You are human being, so you cannot control everything in life. Sometimes you will have to accept things to go their own ways.
Even famous people or the ones that you admire cannot keep everything under their control. Failure is not something terrible. Failure is actually a good lesson that you can learn from. Failure is the mother of success. Therefore, you ought to stop thinking that you can control everything in life.
4. Make Friends With People Who Do Not Overthink
Social environment can affect the way you think. When you communicate with people who can easily forget things that make them sad, you can learn from them to do so. On the contrary, when you communicate with people who are oversensitive, or overthink about things, you can be impacted. The people around you can apparently affect the way you think. Therefore, you should choose who to make friends with, and who to be around when you are in trouble.
5. Workout
Workout can help in removing your negative thoughts, releasing tensions, and getting rid of anxiety. Swimming, walking, and riding bicycle are the best exercises that you should do to avoid overthinking. When you do workouts, you tend to focus on the movement of your body, thereby you will not think much about other things.
In conclusion, you should remember that you are not a saint, so there may be a lot of things that you cannot do. Do not put too much pressure on yourself, and make your brain work too hard without finding any solution after all. Those 5 tips on how to stop overthinking are very helpful, so you should try them if you are suffering from this issue.
Whether it's prescription or street drugs, when the demise includes a celebrated face, it attracts consideration regarding evil spirits that neither cash nor notoriety can tame. These 16 stars lost their lives to overdoses, yet their legacy lives on in the collection of work they deserted.
Slides de la Master Class organisée le vendredi 4 octobre dans le cadre de la Transmedia Week organisée par TIU à Paris.
Storycode Paris est un rendez vous mensuel où auteurs, producteurs et créateurs de projets transmedia ou /et de documentaires interactifs se retrouvent pour échanger à propos de leurs expériences.
Storycode Paris est une association créée par Gerald Holubowicz (Chewbahat) Benjamin Hoguet (Djehouti) Florent Maurin (thePixelHunt) Louis Viller (Webdocu.fr) et Adrien Aumont (KissKissBankBank).
Learning resources compiled by S.Rengasamy for Social Group Work for the students doing their graduation course in Social Work in the colleges affiliated to Madurai Kamaraj University
Godwin's Law states, "As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1." Lately, no internet discussion about Donald Trump can be complete without at least one reference to Hitler. I've been asked by several people to evaluate these comparisons, so I designed these slides to accompany a recent lecture comparing Donald Trump and Adolf Hitler, noting similarities, differences, and nuances.
If this subject interests you, check out the lecture on my YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TA_cZxMu2b0
The document provides tips for designing and delivering effective presentations. It discusses the importance of design principles like contrast, alignment, proximity and using visuals like photos and charts to engage audiences. Specific tips include limiting text on slides, using no more than two font styles, constraining the number of words and bullet points per slide. For delivery, it recommends practicing your presentation, engaging the audience, speaking conversationally and finishing strongly by reiterating your key messages. The overall message is that effective presentation requires considering both design and delivery techniques to communicate clearly and hold audience attention.
This document is a presentation about designing effective PowerPoint slides. It provides tips over several slides on how to design slides with a killer title and opening slide, use of color schemes and images, getting the text right, using the principles of contrast, repetition, alignment and proximity (CRAP), incorporating video, sharing the presentation online, and recapping the key tips. The presentation emphasizes the importance of visual design over text-heavy slides and using techniques like strong images and video to engage the audience in a way words alone cannot. It provides examples throughout to illustrate its tips.
SDOA 3.2 The Language of Design and Corporate StakeholdersFlorian Vollmer
SDOA – Service Design and Organizational Activation. Enhanced lecture course Gatech 2012, Industrial Design. This presentation is part of the "breadth" part of the lecture series - designed to give service design students an understanding of business-relevant tools and concepts. Includes references to materials from DMI 2011.
Innovation product design planning process 1 powerpoint presentation templatesSlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages:
1) Defining market needs and selecting topic criteria.
2) Generating and selecting optimal ideas/solutions.
3) Selecting the best ideas for innovation.
4) Shaping the concept according to possible directions.
5) Estimating risks of the concept.
6) Implementing concepts into realizations projects.
7) Encouraging a culture of creativity in organizations.
Portfolios Matter: Building the Portfolio to Win the JobLynn Teo
This document provides tips for building an effective portfolio to help win a job. It emphasizes demonstrating thinking, skills and quality of work through the portfolio. The key tips discussed are to consider the audience, order work samples to engage and impress the reviewer, frame problems to showcase analytical skills, show the design process and value of artifacts, provide behind-the-scenes context, specify your role and contributions, focus on high quality over quantity, demonstrate design systems, and use a polished walkthrough to showcase skills through storytelling. The overall message is that the portfolio should tell the story of who you are as a professional and convince the reviewer of your fit and qualifications for the role.
On June 19, 2012, designers from the bay area gathered at Jobvite HQ for the UX Resume and Portfolio Bootcamp. This session, Portfolios Matter: Building the Portfolio to Win the Job, was presented by Lynn Teo, chief experience officer at McCann Erickson.
This document provides an excerpt from slides for a 2-3 day professional training on design thinking and innovation management. The slides cover the basics of design thinking, including its origins and nature, how it is portrayed in the media, and how it relates to strategic thinking. Design thinking is presented as a way to take an outside-in perspective focused on customer needs and experiences to drive value creation and innovation. The training is intended to help participants better understand design thinking and apply it to innovating without unrealistic expectations. The facilitator also provides strategy advisory and training on other topics beyond design thinking.
The document summarizes information about the Second International Media Conference in Saint-Petersburg called NevaCamp 2010. The conference will be held from May 28-30, 2010 in Saint-Petersburg, Russia and focus on the future of the web and IT. Over 500 representatives from the IT, web development, and media industries will attend and participate in activities like brainstorming sessions, presentations, and networking to generate new ideas and form project teams. Sponsorship opportunities are available at different levels from $1,000 to $10,000, with increased benefits provided to sponsors at higher tiers. Contact information is provided for those interested in sponsorship or attending the conference.
Summer School on Management of Creativity in an Innovation Society. Montreal & Barcelona
Please, give feedback in 2 minutes to this presentation:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/6P2GDDQ
Thank you!
Innovation decision making new product development strategy 1 powerpoint ppt ...SlideTeam.net
The document describes an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) identifying market needs, 2) defining topics and selection criteria, 3) searching for and generating ideas/solutions, 4) selecting the best ideas, 5) shaping concepts according to possible directions, 6) estimating risks of concepts, and 7) implementing concepts into projects. It emphasizes reaching a healthy innovation culture through training creative thinking and applying creativity with structure for success.
How to make create innovation decision making new product development process...SlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) defining market needs and topics for innovation, 2) searching for optimal ideas and solutions, 3) selecting the best ideas, 4) shaping the selected concepts, 5) estimating risks of the concepts, 6) implementing the concepts into real projects, 7) encouraging creativity in companies. The process involves activities like market research, stakeholder analysis, brainstorming, screening ideas, workshops to develop concepts, and risk analysis.
Innovation decision making new product development process 1 powerpoint prese...SlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) defining market needs and topics for innovation, 2) searching for optimal ideas and solutions, 3) selecting the best ideas, 4) shaping the selected concepts, 5) estimating risks of the concepts, 6) implementing the concepts into real projects, 7) encouraging creativity in companies. The process involves activities like market research, stakeholder analysis, brainstorming, screening ideas, workshops to develop concepts, and risk analysis.
Innovation decision making new product development process 1 powerpoint prese...SlideTeam.net
The document describes an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) identifying market needs, 2) defining topics and selection criteria, 3) searching for and generating ideas/solutions, 4) selecting the best ideas, 5) shaping concepts according to possible directions, 6) estimating risks of concepts, and 7) implementing concepts into projects. It emphasizes reaching a healthy innovation culture through training creative thinking and applying creativity with structure for success.
Innovation decision making new product development strategy 1 powerpoint ppt ...SlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) defining market needs and topics for innovation, 2) searching for optimal ideas and solutions, 3) selecting the best ideas, 4) shaping the selected concepts, 5) estimating risks of the concepts, 6) implementing the concepts into real projects, 7) encouraging creativity in companies. The process involves activities like market research, stakeholder analysis, brainstorming, screening ideas, workshops to develop concepts, and risk analysis.
Innovation decision making new product development process 1 powerpoint ppt s...SlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) defining market needs and topics for innovation, 2) searching for optimal ideas and solutions, 3) selecting the best ideas, 4) shaping the selected concepts, 5) estimating risks of the concepts, 6) implementing the concepts into real projects, 7) encouraging creativity in companies. The process involves activities like market research, stakeholder analysis, brainstorming, screening ideas, workshops to develop concepts, and risk analysis.
Innovation decision making new product development strategy 1 powerpoint pres...SlideTeam.net
The document describes an innovation process with 7 stages:
1) Defining market needs and selection criteria
2) Searching for and generating ideas/solutions
3) Selecting the best ideas to develop further
4) Shaping the selected concepts according to innovation directions
5) Estimating the risk of the developed concepts
6) Implementing the concepts into real projects
7) Encouraging creativity in companies through training and a supportive culture.
Innovation decision making new product development strategy 1 powerpoint pres...SlideTeam.net
The document describes an innovation process with 7 stages:
1) Defining market needs and selection criteria
2) Searching for and generating ideas/solutions
3) Selecting the best ideas to develop further
4) Shaping the selected concepts according to innovation directions
5) Estimating the risk of developed concepts
6) Implementing selected concepts into projects
7) Encouraging creativity in companies through training and culture
Innovation decision making new product development process 1 powerpoint ppt t...SlideTeam.net
This document outlines an innovation process with 7 stages: 1) defining market needs and topics for innovation, 2) searching for optimal ideas and solutions, 3) selecting the best ideas, 4) shaping the selected concepts, 5) estimating risks of the concepts, 6) implementing the concepts into real projects, 7) encouraging creativity in companies. The process involves activities like market research, stakeholder analysis, brainstorming, screening ideas, workshops to develop concepts, and risk analysis.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
From the NZ Wars to Liberals,
Richard Seddon, George Grey,
Social Laboratory, New Zealand,
Confiscations, Kotahitanga, Kingitanga, Parliament, Suffrage, Repudiation, Economic Change, Agriculture, Gold Mining, Timber, Flax, Sheep, Dairying,
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝟏)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐏𝐏 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐧 𝐄𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐫:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
6. emergent
groan zone
thinking
the brief
selection
Going Straits of
Cloud of Funnel Concept
large Necessity
Potential of Focus
convergent
evaluation
thinking
divergent
brainstorming
thinking
mapping
22. SRI: value creation
artist citizen
develop a value proposition
arrange a “wateringhole”
pitch
entrepreneur
re-iterate
23. SRI “value proposition”
artist citizen
N - A- B- C
Customer/Market NEEDS
Compelling APPROACH
Client BENEFITS
entrepreneur
Worldwide COMPETITION
24. “Watering Holes”
support and encouragment for the
champion
brainstorming
new ideas - new perspectives
a source of knowledge
market domain, technology, business models, customers
a source of resources
£££, Jungle Guides, colleagues, coaches
a place to bring interdisciplinary skills
25. “Watering Holes”
support and encouragment for the
champion
Brainstorming
new ideas - new perspectives
a source of knowledge
market domain, technology, business models, customers
a source of resources
£££, Jungle Guides, colleagues, coaches
a place to bring interdisciplinary skills
rehearsal
38. five stories
artist citizen
story story
platform story
user story
impact story
entrepreneur
money story
39. artist citizen
frank.boyd@unexpectedmedia.com
entrepreneur
Editor's Notes
It ’s a truism that our communications environment is changing. It was ever thus: all ‘old’ media were new media once1. But there is something special about our present situation at the beginning of the 21st century. The combination of digital convergence, personal computing and global networking seems to have ratcheted up the pace of development and is giving rise to radical shifts in the environment. Because we are living through this upheaval, it is difficult to take the long view of it. Our problem is not that we are short of data, or even of information; au contraire, we are awash with it, as companies and governments turn to consultants and market researchers for enlightenment or guidance. But the resulting glut of information doesn’t seem to be making us much wiser. Indeed our current state might be best described as one of ‘informed bewilderment’. My task is to try to sketch the current media landscape in which we are developing Crossover as a project and try to anticipate what creative businesses now need to do to in order to survive the transition from analogue and physical to the digital world and to flourish in both terms: creatively and as businesses.
Labs provide an opportunity for experimentation with content and applicatons Some 25 Labs since 1997, for independents, for the BBC, in the UK, other European countries and in Australia. Outcomes include projects, new ideas, new ways of working, networking, businesses.
The creative businesses of the future will be agnostic so far as distribution channels are concerned; their creative and commercial activity will no longer be confined to a single “silo”. We will see a much greater level of innovation and a more holistic approach to the creation and development of content. Convergence will no longer primarily be about technology platforms, but about the creation of the content itself, and the monetization of that content. Right now, on-line production, for example, still draws heavily on the skills of specialist companies, but this is changing as on-line becomes more mainline and integrated. The creative businesses of the future will no longer be defined by any particular sector of media; they will simply be companies with really good creative people working across as many areas as they can.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
understand new media ecology share language and culture across sectors interdisciplinary collaboration develop innovative projects re-imagine public service explore of new business models network buyers and producers
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
30 projects, 12 commissions Universal feedback was that the process was as/more important than the outcome BBC commissioners love it as a way of working with indies Great way of developing real mutual understanding: quality time leads to quality ideas Knowledge and understanding, fun Definitely go for it next year. Want to scale up but to retain quality of interaction and quality of outcome. Wants to have national brief but difficulty with regional funding. Want to lock down RDAs to work with over the next month or so.
Telly happy to work in this environment
Study by MRI 68% say that they ’ve done this. 35% of 16-25 year olds state that they do it regularly. 49.4% of TV usage is exclusive 17.4% of internet usage is done while watching TV.
It ’s a truism that our communications environment is changing. It was ever thus: all ‘old’ media were new media once1. But there is something special about our present situation at the beginning of the 21st century. The combination of digital convergence, personal computing and global networking seems to have ratcheted up the pace of development and is giving rise to radical shifts in the environment. Because we are living through this upheaval, it is difficult to take the long view of it. Our problem is not that we are short of data, or even of information; au contraire, we are awash with it, as companies and governments turn to consultants and market researchers for enlightenment or guidance. But the resulting glut of information doesn’t seem to be making us much wiser. Indeed our current state might be best described as one of ‘informed bewilderment’. My task is to try to sketch the current media landscape in which we are developing Crossover as a project and try to anticipate what creative businesses now need to do to in order to survive the transition from analogue and physical to the digital world and to flourish in both terms: creatively and as businesses.