Famous innovators from the past have included people like Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, and Buckminster Fuller, but innovation is alive and well in the present.
Take, for example, someone like Ann Makosinski, who designed a flashlight powered by body heat when she was 15, or Shubham Banerjee, who, at 12, used a Lego Mindstorms kit to create a machine that prints in Braille, a tactile writing system used by people who are blind.
If you’ve ever tried to make something work better in your own environment, such as in your home or at school, you’ve already taken the first steps toward becoming an innovator.
The truth is, anyone who understands the innovation process can become an innovator. Get ready to learn about The Henry Ford Model I’s Actions of Innovation, and how you can apply them to create useful innovations of your own.
Let’s review what innovation means. We’ll use some examples, starting with bicycles.
You’re going to see three different artifacts from Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation. Guess what makes each one an improvement on an existing product.
In the 1850s, Gail Borden found a way to reduce milk to a condensed form and preserve it for later use.
Take a guess: Why was this an important innovation?
Select one of the two options below.
This was the first illuminated traffic signal with three light colors: red, green, and amber.
Take a guess: How did this signal improve on previous ones?
Select one of the two options below.
The Radarange microwave oven was first introduced in 1967. It was 15 inches tall and 23 inches wide.
Take a guess: What makes this microwave innovative?
Select one of the two options below.
These innovations all made significant contributions to existing products and addressed a need:
As you learn more about innovation, you’ll start to understand how innovators arrive at their ideas and bring them to life.
As you saw in the previous activity, sometimes even a small innovation can have a profound impact on our everyday lives. If more people learned to innovate, we would see more positive change around the world.
Fortunately, the process of innovation is not a mystery—it can be learned. Model I breaks it down into five Actions of Innovation that can help you discover, develop, and refine ideas. Think of the Actions as a set of guideposts rather than a strict step-by-step process. It often makes sense to start with Uncover, but the Actions do not have to follow a particular order.
Take a minute and draw the following Actions of Innovation diagram in your Design Journal. Write down a description for each Action using your own words.
Select the Actions
to learn more.
Uncover, Define, Design, Optimize, and Implement are essential to innovation. The Actions do not guarantee success, but they can increase your chances. It’s important to understand that failure is part of innovation. As a result, you will likely have to repeat some of the Actions several times before producing the desired outcome.
Innovator who introduced more than 800 plant varieties to American agriculture
Let’s take a closer look at how the Actions work, starting with Uncover and Define.
Select Uncover and Define to see examples.
The design of a solution should be based on a thorough understanding of the problem. Once there is a prototype of the solution, it needs to be optimized based on user feedback.
In the following video you’re going to meet Jessica O. Matthews, who identified a similar problem that Ann did but developed a different solution. As you watch the video, make note of how Jessica applied the Actions.
After you’ve watched the video, think about the following questions:
Select Design and Optimize to see answers to the questions.
Once a viable prototype is developed, an innovator needs to step beyond design and start thinking like a businessperson or entrepreneur. This includes figuring out:
Select Implement to see an example.
Innovators like Jessica Matthews must be creative in coming up with unique approaches to power generation. But an innovative idea can’t simply be creative—it also has to be realistic. In the real world, there are always criteria and constraints that determine if a solution is feasible.
In the case of the Soccket, the design solution had to supply sustainable, battery-powered lighting so that children could do their homework at night. This was one of the criteria for the product.
There were also constraints that limited what could work as a solution. For example, these children were located in underdeveloped parts of the world where there was no easy access to electricity. So, the solution had to be able to function “off the grid.”
Criteria and constraints should be identified as you define the problem in the innovation process.
In your Design Journal, write down the definitions of criteria and constraint.
Here’s a chance for you to try the following Actions: Define, Design, and Optimize. You’ll need to quickly devise a solution based on the needs of a small town named Omitonia.
After you’ve gone through the activity, respond to the following questions in your Design Journal:
Let's revisit some of the innovations you've seen. As you learn more about these products, think about how the innovators might have used the innovation process to develop their ideas and designs.
If you’re curious to know how Ann Makosinski built a flashlight powered by body heat, watch the Innovation Nation video, Hollow Flashlight Girl.
Discover how Shubham Banerjee turned his Braille printer, known as the Braigo, from a Lego-based prototype into a market-ready product.
Remember Buckminster Fuller? Take another look at the Dymaxion House and reflect on how he demonstrates the Actions of Innovation.
Draw an Actions of Innovation diagram in your Design Journal and label it “Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion House.” Then, jot down your answers to the following questions next to the relevant Actions:
You should now be able to explain the essential actions of the innovation process to anyone who asks. When you face an innovation challenge, you should be ready to talk about how you might:
You’ll gain a deeper understanding of each Action of Innovation as you continue in this course—and soon, you’ll be able to apply them whenever you have ideas and insights of your own.
If it helps, use the acronym UDDOI to remember the Actions. You can also use U D2O It, which looks like “You Do It”!
Select the actions to learn more.
This course is not designed for small mobile devices. For best performance, please use a device that has a screen resolution larger than 785 pixels wide, such as an iPad or laptop computer.