My intent in this course is to be eminently practical and purpose-driven in honing our innovation toolset, and this week is no different. Similarly to our intent to understand very tactically and specifically what makes innovations work& and the spaces of opportunity, this week we will specifically overlay a framework created by Larry Keeley to understand if there are additional grounds for innovation in our concept.
I see Keeley's model as another of those seemingly simple -- but very powerful -- means by which we can understand and hone our thinking, especially when used in this general phase of creating our innovation concept.
What can be especially powerful about this overlay is that it has a tendency to expand thinking beyond 'concept-level' and more into 'platform-level.'
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
To Read | Chapters 16 and 17 (Keeley, et al.) Documents and assets as noted/linked in the Lesson (optional) |
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To Do | Identifying the Ten Types
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If you have any questions, please send them to my axj153@psu.edu [1] Faculty email. I will check daily to respond. If your question is one that is relevant to the entire class, I may respond to the entire class rather than individually.