ESSAYS
ANDY HOOD, HEAD OF EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES AT AKQA
ground-breaking kit, and one even Theodore Sturgeon would probably have appreciated. “This is the closest thing to what I
wanted to work with when I was in college,” says Hood. “It’s amazing. Oculus are a company rooted in gaming - some of them are legends of gaming technology - and the Oculus Rift has largely been seen as a piece of experiential technology. It provides all the thrills and the sense of escapism that you get from virtual reality experiences. But VR is so much more than that. The presence and the physical connection you feel with an object that’s rendered properly in VR are tangible. Which makes me think that VR isn’t just about thrills and escapism. It’s actually about access, whether that’s to something far away, something you can’t afford, something that doesn’t exist yet or which the laws of physics prevent. This is very powerful. Once access becomes the guiding principle, you can start to apply VR to all kinds of solid, functional problems that have nothing to do with thrills and escapism. At that point you’ve got something that can really add value.” The same applies to
be applied. Maybe not at street level - maybe in business. But we haven’t seen them yet, and that’s because we’re focusing on the obvious rather than thinking about the value. “What we need to do with these
technologies is take a step back and interrogate what they’re really for. And to do that we need a culture of experimentation in our organisations and the organisations we partner with. This means removing the
formality that surrounds projects and enabling teams to take theories and ideas and put them quickly and cheaply into demonstrable execution that you can test and share, because the learnings are what success looks like here.”
ARBITRARY IS THE
Google Glass, says Hood. “The reason you feel awkward wearing Google Glass is because nobody else is. And the reason nobody else is, is because the number of killer applications that make this a must-have is very small. I can’t help thinking that it’s because a lot of the apps you do see focus on taking pictures and video. These are the low hanging fruit - the things people first do when they put Google Glass on. But we should look at the form of Google Glass, rather than the tech: the fact that it’s hands-free and voice controlled. There are a number of areas where this can
FAIL BETTER Start-up culture, notes Hood,
ENEMY OF INNOVATION”
has no fear of failure. In fact it embraces it. “Failing here doesn’t have the negative connotations it does elsewhere. Start-up culture speaks of needing to fail fast and fail often. We can do a lot
by changing the language we use. If learning itself is a success metric, we can do these small experiments and demonstrate incremental success, rather than a series of small failures. This is much easier to build on.” It’s a strategy the big boys in
business – including IBM - have recognised, setting up their own labs and experimenting with new developments. But, stresses Hood, you need to do more than pay lip-service to the idea of a lab. This isn’t a playroom with a 3D printer, an Oculus Rift and a
35 issue 23 january 2015
PS4 where staff can go and be made to feel like they’re on the cutting edge. “It’s a process of continual
experimentation, learning and collaboration. A lab is something to be shared with other organisations. We can’t understand how to apply emerging technologies to solve business problems and create new opportunities for consumers if we don’t understand the people who have those problems and the businesses that need to solve them. We need to be constantly, proactively looking at tech so we have these things ready when the opportunity presents itself.” The alternative leaves companies contributing pointlessly to the already deafening digital noise. “Constant experimentation means
we’re not just buying it and leaving it on the shelf but are using, developing, prototyping and understanding it to create our own unique point of view. Because it’s not really the technology that you apply to a business problem. It’s your point of view on the tech. That’s what enables you to use it in the right way.”
Finally, says Hood, ensure those
experiments are open to everyone and share the insight. “You need to get your point of view across to the employees or the consumers who have these problems. Opportunities to use this tech can come from anywhere at any time. The most horrible thing is when you find out after the fact that there was an opportunity for just the insight and the tech you had, but because the people involved didn’t know, you missed it. This enables us not to do arbitrary things with new tech and pollute the place with stuff that exists for its own sake, rather than adding value. Arbitrary really is the enemy of innovation.”
akqa.com
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47 |
Page 48 |
Page 49 |
Page 50 |
Page 51 |
Page 52 |
Page 53 |
Page 54 |
Page 55 |
Page 56 |
Page 57 |
Page 58 |
Page 59 |
Page 60 |
Page 61 |
Page 62 |
Page 63 |
Page 64 |
Page 65 |
Page 66 |
Page 67 |
Page 68