Friday, September 19, 2014
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Coming soon: An app to generate ideas
Thanks to R Sridhar's TickleMeThink, chief executives will no more suffer from creative blues.
You have 15 minutes to go into a meeting your boss decided to hold just two minutes ago. Agenda: brainstorming about the new project. What you need are 10 ideas (less for actual application, more to appear prepared). Clearly, there isn’t much time to put on your cerebral hat.
For future reference, you could invest your time in reading Roger von Oech’s A Whack on the Side of the Head to learn a trick or two about thinking creatively spontaneously, or otherwise. For now, here’s an out-of-the-box idea. Try app-ing it. Forget Google. Raid an app store instead for a quick fix. There, you will find the handy stratagem, TickleMeThink, an app that helps anyone get ideas for any situation(s), developed by R Sridhar, innovation coach and founder, Ideas-RS, in conjunction with brand consultancy firm, Landor Associates. The app will be available in Apple’s App Store in about a month’s time and will be priced at $3.99 (approximately Rs 220 at an exchange rate of $1 = Rs 55).
Sridhar describes it as a simple app that will allow users to capture the problem statement in a simple way and help generate ideas to solve it. While he doesn’t have a specific profile in mind for users, he does deem the app a business app. “It can be used extensively by executives looking for solutions to problems in their specific field of expertise, or entrepreneurs wanting to fix business related issues,” says Sridhar. Examples of possible problems for which fixes may be sought include ways to attract talent for a human resources executive or to increase production for a person with manufacturing background.
Users should, however, not expect the app to do the thinking for them. It is merely a means to systematise the creative thinking process in a way. This is how it will work: You feed in a clear, concise problem statement and use the six options that the app provides to look for ideas to fix it. The options include call a friend (go through your phone book and see who on the contact list could help), web search (simple googling), action verb (pick from a list of randomly chosen list of verbs and see what thought it triggers), visuals (works similarly like action verbs), quotes and provocative questions.
TickleMeThink is not a first-of-its-kind app - idea-generation applications like Riffer and Ideas (brainstorming, mindmapping and inspiration) are available at Apple’s App Store and Idea Generator on Android. All of these work similarly in that they do not provide direct suggestions (so no risk in ideas being replicated there). They use word associations, colour coding, visuals, the works to tickle your grey cells.
“Many of the solutions you think up or come across may not be disruptive. But we often tend to overlook the obvious and, in all its simplicity, that may just be the fix you need,” says Sridhar. He shares an example from the time he tested the app. The problem statement was how to retain talented people. He called up a friend, a Physics professor. Sridhar asked him for suggestions but was stumped by the response. The friend in question had a counter question, why are companies so hung up on holding back their employees.
He said, when they had a student, it was assumed he would finish his course with them and then go away to pursue another opportunity. When he came back, they welcomed him, glad for all the additional experience he brought with him. If companies realised that employees would use their company as a stepping stone, it might help them plan their policies differently and, hopefully, better.
Will it work? Possibly. Varda Pendse, director at Cerebrus, a human resource consultancy, says: “Using visuals or action verbs, associations and dissociations for idea generation is a fairly standard and known process. What this app seems to have done is systematised the process for the smartphone/app-driven younger generations.” For starters, that’s a good idea.
Image: Courtesy, yaleseattle.org
Courtesy & Reference:
Reading hidden signals - mind mapping software
PEOPLETony Buzan tellsCATHERINE RHEA ROYthe mind map is a picture outside his head of what is inside his head
As I went through the list of questions I had prepared for the mind-mapping genius Tony Buzan, I struck them off one by one. “You should never cross it out,” he said with a benign smile. “When you cross it out it means that you are done with it and you never want to look at it again. But that's not we are doing. It is about building your memory and feeding your brain. If you strike it out your brain is automatically going to shut it out and it's going to be forgotten and that goes against the fundamentals of learning, doesn't it?”
“Were you a geek in school?” I asked him, “No, in fact I was an athlete, a dancer, an intellectual delinquent, quite a good student but not at the top of my class,” said the sixty something year old, who dredged up details like it was last season.
Tony Buzan warmed up to the concept of mapping his mind over a long period of time. The effectiveness of the mind map in all senses of a person's development and progress surprised Tony and he decided to share it with the world.
“I used to take formal notes in lines of blue, and underline the key words in red and I realised I needed only the key words and the idea. Then to bring in connections I drew arrows and put in images and codes. It was a picture outside my head of what was inside my head — mind map is the language my brain spoke,” explains Buzan who was in the city for a workshop on mind mapping.
If toasters and alarm clocks can come with operation manuals, Tony Buzan set about creating one for our brain, teaching us how to use our brain to its full potential. “Children are trained to think linearly instead of imaginatively, they are taught to read slowly, and carefully, and are discouraged from day dreaming. They are trained to reduce the use and capacity of their brain.”
The global perception of the intelligent student, is a pale, weak child, with thick glasses, and whose best friend is the computer.
The fact is that top students tend to be well rounded Renaissance children who are interested in everything.
Mind maps have penetrated every sphere of activity where the brain needs to be active, which goes beyond academics and finds itself useful at corporate meetings, and planning. “You can use it for your weekly team meetings, goal setting, you save paper, it is a fun exercise, and in the long run you find you are more productive and efficient,” explains Buzan, who has helped several corporate firms get their act together using mind maps.
According to Buzan there is no age to start drawing mind maps, “In fact a cluttered mind map is much better than neat lines on a page. The cluttered mind map is your first draft, which you will have to restructure.” But now Buzan has launched his latest software, iMindMap, which weeds out all this clutter on its own, “The mind mapping software allows you to mind map on screen. You also have the option of converting these mind maps into PDF files or incorporating them with Powerpoint presentations.”
The mind map was created initially as a memory device and subsequently as a multi-use device.
“It is a memory device, a creating tool, helps in problem solving and project management – the possibilities of mind mapping is endless. Buzan's latest mind mapping software is available for free download on www.thinkbuzan.com.
Courtesy & Reference:http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-metroplus/reading-hidden-signals/article2094741.ece
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Learn English online
The British Council has a wide range of free online resources to help adults, teenagers and children learn English. The resources include videos, mobile apps, games, stories, listening activities and grammar exercises.
More information
More information
Friday, September 5, 2014
Teachers' Day
In many countries, Teachers' Days (or Teachers
Day) are intended to be special days for the appreciation of teachers, and may
include celebrations to honour them for their special contributions in a
particular field area, or the community in general. The date on which Teachers'
day is celebrated varies from country to country. Teachers' days are distinct
from World Teachers' Day which is officially celebrated across the world on
October 5.
The idea of celebrating Teachers' Day took ground
independently in many countries during the 20th century; in most cases, they
celebrate a local educator or an important milestone in education (for example,
Argentina commemorates Domingo Faustino Sarmiento's death on September 11 since
1915, while India celebrates Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan's birthday on
September 5 since 1962. This is the primary reason why countries celebrate this
day on different dates, unlike many other International Days in Tamilnadu , this day is called as
"Aciriyar Tinam"
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